The Asian Age

Nasa launches Lunar Loo challenge

$20,000 for innovators presenting winning toilet design

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Washington, June 26: Everyone poops. Including astronauts, who have since the early space era found ways to do their business in near-zero gravity — from the Apollo missions when waste management was, in Nasa’s words, “a plastic bag which was taped to the buttocks to capture feces,” to the more advanced toilets of the Internatio­nal Space Station that use fan-driven suction systems.

Now the US space agency is calling on the world's inventors to develop a toilet that works not just in microgravi­ty, but also lunar gravity on a future lunar lander spacecraft, as part of its plans to return to the

Moon by 2024 under the Artemis mission.

The winning design will receive $20,000, with $10,000 for second place and $5,000 for third. Children under the age of 18 are also

encouraged to apply in a “junior” category where the prizes are public recognitio­n and Nasa-themed merchandis­e.

“This challenge hopes to attract radically new and different approaches to the problem of human waste capture and containmen­t,” Nasa wrote in a challenge that was posted on (https://www.herox.com/L unarLoo).

The toilet should work on the Moon’s gravity, which is about a sixth of the Earth’s — so urine and feces will fall, though there will be less of a plop.

It should occupy no more than 0.12 cubic meters (4.2 cubic feet) and operate with a noise level of less than 60 decibels — roughly equal to a bathroom ventilatio­n fan on Earth.

Most important of all, it should be able to collect urine and feces simultaneo­usly, accommodat­ing a liter of the former and 500 grams (17.6 ounces) of the latter, including in diarrhea form.

The specificat­ions add that it should be able to deal with up to 114 grams of menstrual blood per crew per day and “allow for easy cleaning and maintenanc­e, with 5 minute turnaround time or less between uses.” The system must also be able to store the waste or toss it outside the vehicle.

During the Apollo missions, urine expelled into space “froze into a shower of glistening ice crystal,” author Craig Nelson poetically noted in his book “Rocket Men.”

 ?? — AP ?? Nasa astronaut Chris Cassidy and NASA Flight Engineer Bob Behnken during a spacewalk outside the Internatio­nal Space Station on Friday.
— AP Nasa astronaut Chris Cassidy and NASA Flight Engineer Bob Behnken during a spacewalk outside the Internatio­nal Space Station on Friday.

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