Dose Limits and Countermeasures for Mitigating Radiation Risk in Moon and Mars Exploration
Daria Boscolo, Marco Durante
Abstract
After decades of research on low-Earth orbit, national space agencies and private entrepreneurs are investing in exploration of the Solar system. The main health risk for human space exploration is late toxicity caused by exposure to cosmic rays. On Earth, the exposure of radiation workers is regulated by dose limits and mitigated by shielding and reducing exposure times. For space travel, different international space agencies adopt different limits, recently modified as reviewed in this paper. Shielding and reduced transit time are currently the only practical solutions to maintain acceptable risks in deep space missions.
Topics & Concepts
Mars Exploration ProgramAstrobiologyElectromagnetic shieldingCosmic raySpace explorationSpace (punctuation)Environmental scienceSpace radiationExtraterrestrial lifeLow earth orbitDeep space explorationSolar SystemNASA Deep Space NetworkExploration of MarsInternational Space StationRadiation exposureSpacecraftOrbit (dynamics)Aerospace engineeringPhysicsSatelliteAstronomyComputer scienceEngineeringMedicineNuclear medicineQuantum mechanicsOperating systemRadiation Therapy and DosimetryRadiation Dose and ImagingRadioactivity and Radon Measurements