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Lessons learned from Mir--a payload perspective
Authors:Uri John J  Nygren Richard W  Cardenas Jeffery A
Institution:

aISS Payloads Office, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX 77058, USA

bNASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX 77058, USA

cUniversity Space Research Association, Houston, TX 77058, USA

Abstract:Among the principal objectives of the Phase 1 NASA/Mir program were for the United States to gain experience working with an international partner, to gain working experience in long-duration space flight, and to gain working experience in planning for and executing research on a long-duration space platform. The Phase 1 program was to provide the US early experience prior to the construction and operation of the International Space Station (Phase 2 and 3). While it can be argued that Mir and ISS are different platforms and that programmatically Phase 1 and ISS are organized differently, it is also clear that many aspects of operating a long-duration research program are platform independent. This can be demonstrated by a review of lessons learned from Skylab, a US space station program of the mid-1970s, many of which were again “learned” on Mir and are being “learned” on ISS. Among these are optimum crew training strategies, on-orbit crew operations, ground support, medical operations and crew psychological support, and safety certification processes.
Keywords:Mir  International Space Station  Research
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