ü Every Monday from 3 February – 21 April (10 Classes over 12 Weeks). No classes on 10 March and 17 March
ü Classes from 2–3:15 p.m. Eastern Time (all sessions will be recorded and available for replay; course notes will be available for download)
ü This course provides students with the basis of knowledge and complement of skills necessary for awareness and application of human spaceflight physiology to the exploration of space. The course will further student’s understanding between space physiology and all the other fields of endeavor within space systems.
ü New joint course with the International Institute for Astronautical Sciences (IIAS)
ü All students will receive a joint AIAA/IIAS Certificate of Completion at the end of the course.
OVERVIEW
The
course provides an overview of the physiological changes and adaptations that
occur during each phase of spaceflight: ascent, early orbit, long-term flight,
extra vehicular activities, and reentry. It also describes the counter measures
in current use. Data from previous and current U.S. and Russian programs are
discussed, in addition to current commercial spaceflight ventures. The
physiological/life support requirements for spacecraft design are considered,
as well as the techniques and potential impacts of crew selection, training,
in-flight medical care, and contingencies. Aspects of human participation
during exploration class missions/colonization are reviewed. A medical/life
sciences background is not required.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
Upon completion of the course students will be able to:
- Describe those attributes of human physiology requiring protection during space flight with specific reference to the cardiovascular, fluid and skeletal systems.
- Describe the impact of the physiological effects of long duration space flight.
- Describe the evolution of exercise countermeasure systems
- Identify the primary radiation hazards to human physiology
- Explain the role of Activin-A and myostatin as potential mitigation measures.
- Describe the space environment, and describe protection techniques for humans against solar flares, galactic cosmic rays and microgravity.
- Review and list the limitations placed on medical support during exploration class missions.
- Briefly discuss future physiological challenges for missions beyond Earth orbit, including extended stays on the lunar surface and manned missions to Mars. Explain the rationale for human phenotyping, genetic manipulation and human hibernation in the context of long duration missions.
AUDIENCE: Aerospace professionals, graduate students, upper-division undergraduate students
COURSE FEES (Sign-In
To Register)
- AIAA or IIAS Member Price: $995 USD
- Non-Member Price: $1,195 USD
OUTLINE
Class
1: Historical Perspectives from John Paul Stapp to present day
Class 2: Human systems adaptation: The Cardiovascular System and Fluid and
Electrolyte changes
Class 3: The Skeletal System and bone loss
Class 4: Neurovestibular system and space motion sickness
Class 5: The Muscular System and countermeasures
Class
6: The nervous and immune systems
Class 7: Radiation and its effects on the body and mitigation measures
Class 8: Psychological Considerations/Astronaut ‘select-in’ and ‘select-out’ medical criteria
Class 9: Exercise countermeasures. Operational Space Medicine & Emergency
Rescue Support
Class
10: Space Life Sciences Research/ Exploration Class Missions & Human
Adaptation. Future applications in LSS, including pantropy, bioprinting,
genetic selection & manipulation, holographic technology.
INSTRUCTOR
Dr. Erik Seedhouse is an associate professor in Spaceflight Operations at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, an instructor at the International Institute for Astronautical Sciences and a science advisor for the Proteus Ocean Group. In 1996, Erik earned his Ph.D. at the German Space Agency’s Institute for Space Medicine. While studying he found time to win Ultraman Hawai’i and the European Ultraman Championships as well as completing Race Across America. Due to his success as the world’s leading ultra-distance triathlete Erik was featured in dozens of magazine and television interviews. In 1997 GQ magazine named him the ‘Fittest Man in the World’. In 1999, Dr. Seedhouse took a research job at Simon Fraser University. In 2005, he worked as an astronaut training consultant for Bigelow Aerospace. Between 2008 and 2013 he served as Director of Canada’s manned centrifuge and Flight Director for hypobaric operations. In 2009 he was one of the final 30 candidates in the Canadian Space Agency’s Astronaut Recruitment Campaign. He holds a sky-diving license, pilots license, is a certified PADI Divemaster and in his spare time works as an occasional film consultant to Hollywood, a professional speaker, triathlon coach, author, and climbs some of the world’s highest mountains as part of his 7 Summits project.
Classroom hours / CEUs: 12 classroom hours, 1.2 CEU/PDH
Course Delivery and Materials
- The course lectures will be delivered via the IIAS GoToMeeting Webinar Service.
- All sessions will be available on-demand within 1-2 days of the lecture. Once available, you can stream the replay video anytime, 24/7. All slides will be available for download after each lecture.
- No part of these materials may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted, unless for course participants. All rights reserved.
- Between lectures, the instructors will be available via email for technical questions and comments.
Cancellation Policy: A refund less a $50.00 cancellation fee will be assessed for all cancellations made in writing prior to 7 days before the start of the event. After that time, no refunds will be provided.
Contact: Please contact Lisa Le or Customer Service if you have questions about the course or group discounts (for 5+ participants).