[ Cape Canaveral, July 10th 2011, © rke, english below ] – A Cap Canaveral, la NASA nous a présenté, dans la salle TV, un kit manuel qui peut convertir de l’urine en eau potable. Les soldats américains utilisent déjà cette technologie similaire pour filtrer les parasites, les bactéries, les virus et autres contaminants fluides sales, y compris l’urine. De plus, les astronautes de la Station spatiale internationale (ISS) peuvent déjà boire de l’eau d’une machine de recyclage baptisée pee-recycling, mais son approvisionnement est limité. Le kit présenté est d’un fonctionnement beaucoup plus simple, car il n’a pas besoin d’alimentation externe. Le système a été mis au point par la société Bionetics Corporation (www.bionetics.com) et sera utilisé ces prochains jours par les astronautes d’Atlantis.
The Osmotic Bag The key to NASA's recycler is a bag-within-bag. The blue liquid is a potassium-rich solution made to test the experiment's filtration abilities. |
STS 135: a new way to convert urine into drinkable
A textbook-sized kit that can convert urine into drinkable water accompagne NASA's the actually space shuttle mission Atlantis in the space. Soldiers already use similar technology to filter out parasites, bacteria, viruses and other contaminants from dirty fluids, including urine, but NASA's adapted baggie system has yet to prove itself in space.
« This could be a first step toward recapturing the humidity from our sweat, from our breath, even from our urine, and recycling it and making it drinkable », said NASA project scientist and experiment leader Howard Levine, who made a reference to water-recycling "stillsuits" used on a desert world in the science fiction series Dune.
A Houston, j'ai découvert les toilettes telles qu'elles sont dans la Station spatiale internationale ISS. Mais je ne les ai pas essayées. Photos : rke |
NASA's recycler will use a sugary solution injected into a semi-permeable inner bag, which is nested inside an outer bag. Dirty fluid that's pumped into the outer bag will slowly pass through the inner bag and into the sugary solution, leaving behind its contaminants. On Earth, the double-sack system makes about a liter of sports drink-like fluid in four to six hours.
One of the four astronauts aboard space shuttle Atlantis will test the recycler — with an experimental fluid, not their own urine.
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