Aviation Life Support Systems Parts

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Filter By: Tors Personnel Parachute Harnes
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Part Number
NSN
NIIN
814AS200-1 Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
013574397
814AS600-1 Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
013856722
829AS102-17XXL Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
013856722
829AS123-17XXL Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
013856722
829AS142-1SS Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
013574397
829AS142-3SL Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
011303120
CLO-2000-3SL Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
011303120
MIL-DTL-6645 Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
013574397
MIL-DTL-6645 Tors Personnel Parachute Harness
013856722
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Aviation Life Support Systems

Picture of Aviation Life Support Systems

In human spaceflight, a life support system is a group of devices that allow a human being to survive in space. US government space agency NASA, The life support system may supply air, water and food. It must also maintain the correct body temperature, an acceptable pressure on the body and deal with the body's waste products. Shielding against harmful external influences such as radiation and micro-meteorites may also be necessary. Components of the life support system are life-critical, and are designed and constructed using safety engineering techniques.

A crewmember of typical size requires approximately 5 kg or 11.0231 lb(total) of food, water, and oxygen per day to perform the standard activities on a space mission, and outputs a similar amount in the form of waste solids, waste liquids, and carbon dioxide. The mass breakdown of these metabolic parameters is as follows: 0.84 kg of oxygen, 0.62 kg of food, and 3.52 kg of water consumed, converted through the body's physiological processes to 0.11 kg of solid wastes, 3.87 kg of liquid wastes, and 1.00 kg of carbon dioxide produced. These levels can vary due to activity level, specific to mission assignment, but will correlate to the principles of mass balance. Actual water use during space missions is typically double the specified values mainly due to non-biological use (i.e. personal cleanliness). Additionally, the volume and variety of waste products varies with mission duration to include hair, finger nails, skin flaking, and other biological wastes in missions exceeding one week in length. Other environmental considerations such as radiation, gravity, noise, vibration, and lighting also factor into human physiological response in space, though not with the more immediate effect that the metabolic parameters have.

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