Paper
31 December 2008 Constraints in measuring body mass during simulated microgravity
Kazuhito Shimada, Yusaku Fujii
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 7130, Fourth International Symposium on Precision Mechanical Measurements; 71302B (2008) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.819623
Event: Fourth International Symposium on Precision Mechanical Measurements, 2008, Anhui, China
Abstract
The authors proposed "Space Scale" concept for measuring astronaut body mass in spacecraft on orbit. For the development of the flight hardware, accuracy/precision/operability verification tests under simulated microgravity are mandatory. We tested our device on a business jet flying parabolas to simulate microgravity. In addition to design constraints from microgravity, human factor engineering aspects also had to be dealt with. Methods (1) Mass was calculated based on (Mass) = (Force) x (Acceleration). (2) For Flight Test Series #1, a metal dummy mass of 9.37kg was used on parabolic flight tests. (3)For Flight Test Series #2, human subject mass was measured. (4) To eliminate acceleration noise from cabin vibration and air turbulence, data were rigorously filtered post-flight. Results With Flight Test Series #1, mass of the dummy was successfully derived with the standard uncertainty of 2.1 % for single measurement, and 0.7 % for the mean value of 12 measurements. Each measurement duration was less than 3sec., with rubber cord length reduction of 1 m. Conclusion The parabolic flight environment was a noisy acceleration field. Future studies should look more into human factor engineering aspects.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kazuhito Shimada and Yusaku Fujii "Constraints in measuring body mass during simulated microgravity", Proc. SPIE 7130, Fourth International Symposium on Precision Mechanical Measurements, 71302B (31 December 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.819623
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Measurement devices

Human subjects

Safety

Space operations

Calibration

Content addressable memory

Metals

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