Space habitat (facility)
A space habitat (or habitation module) in a basic sense is any facility fulfilling habitational purposes. It is not to be confused with an extended space habitat, an arrangement of or infrastructure for multiple habitation facilities, in the sense of a space settlement. Space stations or theoretical extraterrestrial stations, such as a Moonbase or Mars habitat, include or are basic space habitats.[citation needed]
The ISS was planned to get a now canceled dedicated Habitation module.[1]
Space tourism is expected to place dedicated habitats into space. The Axiom Orbital Segment will be a commercial habitation extension of the ISS for purposes such as tourism, but also commercial research.[2]
Particularly inflatable space habitats have been in development. Based on the earlier NASA TransHab design,[3] inflatable habitats have been developed and tested in orbit by the now inactive company Bigelow Aerospace.[4]
See also[]
- Bioastronautics
- Controlled ecological life-support system
- Closed ecological system
- Earth systems engineering and management
- Human analog missions
- Human presence in space
- Life support system
- List of Mars analogs
- Mars analog habitat
- Mars habitability analogue environments on Earth
- Planetary surface construction
- Space architecture
- Space infrastructure
- Terrestrial analogue sites
- Underground construction
- Underwater habitat
References[]
- ^ Tariq Malik (2006-02-14). "NASA Recycles Former ISS Module for Life Support Research". Space.com. Retrieved 2020-11-27.
- ^ "NASA selects Axiom Space to build commercial space station module". SpaceNews.com. 2020-01-28. Retrieved 2020-11-27.
- ^ Covault, Craig (September 27, 2004). "Bigelow's Gamble". Aviation Week & Space Technology. Retrieved November 27, 2020 – via Spaceflight Now.
- ^ Mike Wall (18 August 2015). "Inflatable Habitats: From the Space Station to the Moon and Mars?". Space.com. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
- Space technology
- Space stubs