surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to mars

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1 Surviving in space: the Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned challenges of a manned mission to mission to Mars Mars Lecture 3 Lecture 3 Modeling the Interaction Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and Spacecraft & Humans, and Assessing the Risks on a Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars Mission to Mars

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Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to Mars. Lecture 3 Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars. Back to the Moon… Then, On to Mars. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

1

Surviving in space: the challenges Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to of a manned mission to MarsMars

Lecture 3Lecture 3Modeling the Interaction of the Modeling the Interaction of the

Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and Assessing the Risks Humans, and Assessing the Risks

on a Mission to Marson a Mission to Mars

Page 2: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

2

Back to the Moon…Then, On to Mars

• President Bush has committed the US Space Program to going to Mars…

• The first step will be a return to the Moon to develop and test the techniques needed eventually to go to Mars…

• Crew radiation exposure has been identified as one of the major problems that must be dealt with to make this possible…

Page 3: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

3

Radiation Exposure Guidelines

• Recall that astronauts will be held to the same exposure limits in terms of risk to health that ground-based atomic workers are!

• Nominally, for chronic exposure threats the biggest risk is radiation-induced cancer, and the current exposure guideline is to keep the Excess Lifetime Risk (ELR) to under 3%...

Page 4: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

4

Mars Reference Mission

Page 5: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

5

Reference Mars Vehicles

Page 6: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

6

Page 7: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

7

Exposure Regimes• Trans-Mars & Trans-Earth Vehicle

– Normal Crew Compartment– “Storm Shelter” within Vehicle– Spacesuit EVAs

• Martian Surface– Within Surface Habitat– Possible “Storm Shelter” within Habitat– EVA Vehicle– Spacesuit EVAs

Page 8: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

8

DEEP SPACE GCR DOSESTrans-Mars & Trans-Earth

• Annual bone marrow GCR doses will range up to ~ 15 cGy at solar minimum (~ 40 cSv) behind ~ 2cm Al shielding

• Effective dose at solar minimum is ~ 45-50 cSv per annum

• At solar maximum these are ~ 15-18 cSv• Secondary neutrons and charged particles are the

major sources of radiation exposure in an interplanetary spacecraft

• No dose limits yet for these missions

Courtesy of L. Townsend, US NCRP

Page 9: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

9

Annual GCR Doses

Al Shield

(g cm-2)

Skin Bone Marrow

Annual Effective

Dose (cSv)

Annual Dose

(cGy)

Annual Dose

Equiv.

(cSv)

Annual Dose

(cGy)

Annual Dose

Equiv.

(cSv)

1970-71 Solar Maximum

1 6.2 27.4 5.7 16.7 17.9

5 6.4 24.6 5.8 15.6 16.7

10 6.5 21.8 5.8 14.6 15.4

Courtesy of L. Townsend, US NCRP

Page 10: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

10

Solar Min Annual GCR Dose

Al Shield

(g cm-2)

Skin Bone Marrow

Annual Effective

Dose (cSv)

Annual Dose

(cGy)

Annual Dose

Equiv.

(cSv)

Annual Dose

(cGy)

Annual Dose

Equiv.

(cSv)

1977 Solar Minimum

1 18.4 79.8 16.4 44.5 48.8

5 18.3 66.9 16.3 40.5 43.7

10 18.0 56.2 16.1 37.0 39.3

Courtesy of L. Townsend, US NCRP

Page 11: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

11

GCR Risks• Clearly, annual doses < 20cGy present no acute health

hazard to crews on deep space missions• Hence only stochastic effects such as cancer induction

and mortality or late deterministic effects, such as cataracts or damage to the central nervous system are of concern.

• Unfortunately, there are NO DATA NO DATA for human exposures from these radiations that can be used to estimate risks to crews

• In fact, as noted yesterday, it is not clear that the usual methods of estimating risk by calculating dose equivalent are even appropriate for these particles

Courtesy of L. Townsend, US NCRP

Page 12: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

12

From NASA 1996Strategic Program Plan

Page 13: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

13

10 YEAR CAREER EFFECTIVE DOSE LIMITS (Sv)

(NCRP Report 132)

Age at Exposure (y) Female Male

25 0.4 0.7

35 0.6 1.0

45 0.9 1.5

55 1.7 3.0

Courtesy of L. Townsend, US NCRP

Page 14: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

14

Dose v. Shielding DepthFor Various Materials

From NASA CP3360, J.W.Wilson et al., eds.

Page 15: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

15

Cosmic Rays and Nuclear Physics

• NASANASA Sponsors Nuclear Modeling to Obtain Nucleus-Nucleus EVENT GENERATORS for use in Monte Carlo Transport Codes…

• Like FLUKAFLUKA…– We have embedded DPMJETDPMJET 2.5 & 3

(for E > 5 GeV/A)– as well as RQMDRQMD

(for 100 MeV/A < E < 5 GeV/A)

Page 16: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

16

…And, There is an OngoingNASA-Sponsored Program to Improve the

Accuracy of the Event Generators• There is a Dual Program to Both Model and

Measure Cross Sections…– The Focus is on the E < 5GeV/A Region…– Several Approaches are being taken…– The NASA-FLUKA Team is developing a new

Hamiltonian QMD Formalism (HQMD).• These Improvements will Directly benefit many

Cosmic Ray Applicatons…– Air Shower Calculations…– Galactic Transport Calculations…– Experimental Corrections…

Page 17: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

17

FLUKA rQMDFragmentation Yields

Page 18: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

18

FLUKA Simulations

“GOLEM” Voxel Phantom in FLUKA

Page 19: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

19

FLUKA MIR TPEC Simulations

Neutron Fluences

(Note the albedo fluences outside of the phantom…)

Charged Particle Fluences

Page 20: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

20

NASA Revised Standard for Radiation Limits Revised standard applies a 95%

confidence level to the career limit of 3% risk of lifetime fatal cancer Approved by NASA Medical

Policy Board 95% confidence is conservative

Takes specific risk probabilities of individuals into account

Narrows range of increased risk

Epidemiology, DDREF (Dose and Dose Rate Effectiveness Factor), quality (QF) and dosimetry uncertainties part of evaluation

“Lack of knowledge” leads to costs and restrictions

ISS Mission Nominal Fatal Cancer Risk

% Fatal Risk per

0 1 2 3 4 5 6

Pro

babi

lity

0.0000

0.0025

0.0050

0.0075

0.0100

0.0125

0.0150

Risk DistributionD = 100 mGy E = 252 mSvQ = 2.52R0 = 1.0 %

95% C.I. = [0.41, 3.02%]

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 21: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

21

4-6 crew to Low Earth OrbitCrew Exploration Vehicle: Launch EnvironmentLEO EnvironmentEarth entry, water (or land) recovery

4-6 crew to lunar surface for extended-duration stayCEV:Earth-moon cruise – 4 daysLow lunar orbit (LLO) operations- 1 dayUntended lunar orbit operations – 4-14 daysLow lunar orbit operations – 1 dayMoon-Earth cruise – 4 days

Lunar Lander: Lunar surface operations 60-90 days

Crew TBD to Mars VicinityTransit vehicle: Earth-Mars cruise – 6-9 monthsMars vicinity operations – 30-90 daysMars-Earth cruise – 9-12 months

4-6 crew to lunar surface for long-duration stayLunar Habitat: Lunar surface operations 60-90 days

Crew TBD to Mars surfaceSurface Habitat

2030+

2020

2025+

2014

2015-2020

NASA ESMDSlide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 22: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

22

1.E-05

1.E-04

1.E-03

1.E-02

1.E-01

1.E+00

1.E+01

1.E+02

0 40 80 120 160 200 240

Time, h

Do

se

Rat

e,

cS

v/h

Al thickness,

g/cm2:

0135

10152030

1 rem/h

August 1972 Solar Particle Event

Depth Alum Poly

5 61.1 39.1

10 20.9 10.7

20 4.57 1.83

BFO Dose, rem (cSv)

Slide Courtesy ofF. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 23: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

23

GCR and SPE Dose: Materials & Tissue- GCR much higher energy producing secondary radiation

Shielding Depth, g/cm20 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

Do

se E

qu

iva

len

t, r

em

/yr

1

10

100

1000

10000

GCR L. HydrogenGCR PolyethyleneGCR GraphiteGCR AluminumGCR RegolithSPE GraphiteSPE Regolith

No Tissue Shielding With Tissue Shielding

August 1972 SPEShielding Depth, g/cm2

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

Dos

e E

quiv

alen

t, re

m/y

r1

10

100

1000

10000GCR L. HydrogenGCR PolyethyleneGCR GraphiteGCR AluminumGCR RegolithSPE GraphiteSPE RegolithSPE L. Hydrogen

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 24: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

24

Fatal Cancer Risk at Solar MinimumMinimum(20 g/cm2 Aluminum Shielding)

Mission D, Gy E, Sv %REID 95% CI

Males

Lunar (90 d) 0.03 0.071 0.28 [0.09,0.96]

Mars (600 d) 0.36 0.87 3.2 [1.0,10.5]

Mars (1000 d) 0.41 0.96 3.4 (3.2)* [1.1,11.0]

Females

Lunar (90 d) 0.03 0.071 0.34 [0.11,1.2]

Mars (600 d) 0.36 0.87 3.9 [1.2, 12.8]

Mars (1000 d) 0.41 0.96 4.1 (4.5)** [1.4, 14.4]

*Parenthesis exclude Prostate cancer; **Parenthesis LSS-report 12 (others report 13)Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 25: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

25

Fatal Cancer Risk near Solar MaximumMaximum*(Males)

Mission D, Gy E, Sv %REID 95% CI

5 g/cm2 Al

Lunar (90 d) 0.45 0.69 2.7 [0.92,7.4]

Lunar (600 d) 0.63 1.21 4.4 [1.5,13.3]

Lunar (1000 d) 0.66 1.24 4.4 [1.5,13.0]

20 g/cm2 Al

Lunar (90 d) 0.042 0.09 0.35 [0.11,1.2]

Mars (600 d) 0.22 0.54 2.0 [0.65, 6.8]

Mars (1000 d) 0.25 0.60 2.1 [0.69, 7.2]

*Phi=1100 MV (solar modulation) with Aug. 1972 SPE in transit

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 26: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

26

Material Shielding and GCR Risks

• Do materials rich in hydrogen and other light atomic mass atoms significantly reduce GCR risks?

• Possible advantages– High Z/A ratio increases stopping effectiveness– Higher projectile fragmentation per unit mass in hydrogen– Reduced target fragmentation per unit mass in hydrogen

• Possible physics limitations to GCR shielding approaches– GCR not stopped in practical amounts of shielding– Target fragmentation is largely short-range and correlated with

projectile track– Target fragments in tissue occur for all materials and largely produced

by relativistic ions not absorbed by shielding• Do the biological uncertainties prevent us from knowing?

Page 27: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

27

Significance of Shielding Materials for GCRSpiral 4 (40-yr Males): 20 g/cm2 Shields

(%) Fatal Cancer Risk

0 3 6 9 12 15

Pro

babi

lity

0.000

0.003

0.006

0.009

0.012

0.015

Distribution aluminumDistribution polyethyleneDistribution Liq. Hydrogen (H2) E(alum) = 0.87 Sv E(poly) = 0.77 SvE(H2) = 0.43 SvR(alum) = 3.2 [1.0,10.5] (%)R(poly) = 2.9 [0.94, 9.2] (%)R(H2) = 1.6 [0.52, 5.1] (%)

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 28: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

28

2 test at solar minimum for 20 g/cm2 shields for 40-yr males on Mars swing-by mission. P(n,2) is the probability materials can not be determined to be significantly different (n=500). Values in bold for P(n,2)<0.2 indicate a significant improvement over aluminum. Test Material E, Sv REID(%) 95% CL 2/n P(n,2) All Uncertainties Aluminum 0.87 3.2 [1.0, 10.5] - - Polyethylene 0.78 2.9 [0.94, 9.2] 0.05 >0.99 Hydrogen 0.43 1.6 [0.52, 5.1] 0.63 >0.99 LET-dependent Uncertainties Aluminum 0.87 3.2 [1.9, 8.7] - - Polyethylene 0.78 2.9 [1.8, 7.5] 0.08 >0.99 Hydrogen 0.43 1.7 [1.0, 4.2] 1.10 <0.15 Solar maximum for 5 g/cm2 shields. Test Material E, Sv REID(%) 95% CL 2/n P(n,2) All Uncertainties Aluminum 1.21 4.4 [1.5, 13.1] - - Polyethylene 0.94 3.5 [1.2, 10.8] 0.14 >0.99 Hydrogen 0.52 2.1 [0.60, 6.4] 0.81 >0.99 LET-dependent Uncertainties Aluminum 1.21 4.4 [3.0. 11.0] - - Polyethylene 0.94 3.5 [2.3, 8.8] 0.32 >0.99 Hydrogen 0.52 2.1 [1.2, 5.2] 1.38 <0.001

Significance Tests of Shielding Effectiveness

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 29: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

29

Future approaches• Lack of data for hazard rates for carcinogenesis in model systems drives

uncertainties

• Current model for fluence F, and LET, L

• Biological based models will consider incidence in model systems for various radiation qualities and dose-rates

– Knudson-Moolgavkar approach mutation rates 1 and 2; expansion rate

– Extension introduce covariates for radiation type, dose, and dose-rate into model parameters

• Track structure/Repair Kinetics IPP Models (Cucinotta and Wilson, 1995)– Extend IPP models to include track structure and repair kinetics effects on initiation or

promotion rates, cell killing of target cells, etc.

– Requires mechanistic assumption on initiation processes (mutation, LOH, CI, number and nature of steps, etc)

)],()1(),()([)(

),,( aaEARvaaMavERRFLDDREF

LQaaEh EcEE E

)))(exp(()(),(),(),( 2221, ataNLFLFaaEh TE

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 30: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

30

Radiation Quality in Track Structure Models-possible advantages of Bayesian Statistics

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 31: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

31

CONCLUSIONS - GCR• Cancer risks for exploration missions

– Risks from GCR are 2 to 5 percent mortality with upper 95% C.I. exceeding 10% for both males and females

• Shielding will not significantly reduce GCR risks

• Materials have unknown benefits because of biological uncertainties

– Risks from SPE are manageable with shielding approaches• Hydro-carbon shields offer a mass reduction over Aluminum shields of factor of

two or more for acute effects from most SPE spectra

• Benefits for cancer risk reduction are similar, however not significant for poly or similar materials again due to biological uncertainties

• Uncertainty factors of 4-fold for GCR and 2.5 fold for SPE do not include several model assumptions– Uncertainties for Mars mission likely higher than estimated here

• Exploration vehicle shielding should focus on SPE not GCR

Slide Courtesy of F. Cucinotta, NASA/JSC

Page 32: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

32

New Methods

FLUKAGCR and SPE spectra

Quality factors Yields of “Complex Lesions”

Dose

Equivalent dose

“Biological dose”

(Complex Lesions/cell)

30 DNA base-pairs

mathematical phantom (68 regions)

“voxel” phantom (287 regions, 2x106 voxels)

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 33: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

33

The FLUKA Monte Carlo code

hadron-hadron and hadron-nucleus interactions 0-100 TeV nucleus-nucleus interactions 5 GeV/u-10,000 TeV/u (DPMJET) electromagnetic and interactions 0-100 TeV neutron multigroup transport and interactions 0-20 MeV

nucleus-nucleus interactions below 5 GeV/u down to 100 MeV/u (by coupling with the RQMD 2.4 code)

parallel development of an original non-relativistic QMD code down to 20 MeV/u

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 34: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

34

August 1972 SPE - comparison to NCRP limits

1 13.31 11.63 6.89 8.01 1.80 2.76

2 7.25 6.57 4.90 5.81 1.32 1.95

5 2.23 2.11 1.60 1.79 0.62 0.88

10 0.62 0.60 0.56 0.42 0.25 0.33 !!!

Skin Lens BFO

NCRP limits for 30 days LEO missions: 1.5, 1.0 and 0.25 Gy-Eq for skin, lens and BFO, respectively a 10 g/cm2 Al storm shelter would provide adequate protection

Erma Golem Erma Golem Erma Golem

Al shield

(g/cm2)

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 35: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

35

GCR - comparison with skin dose results obtained with HZETRN+CAM (Wilson et al. 1997, NASA TP 3682)

This work Wilson et al.

Al Shield (g/cm2)

1 0.51 0.56 0.16 0.19

5 0.52 0.57 0.17 0.20

10 0.53 0.56 0.19 0.21

20 0.56 0.55 0.23 0.21

This work Wilson et al.

Solar min. (mGy/d) Solar max. (mGy/day)

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 36: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

36

GCR proton component - skin doses

• increase of proton doses (all dose types) with Al shielding thickness

• large role of nuclear reaction products, especially for equivalent and “biological” dose

0

0.05

0.1

0.15

0.2

0.25

0.3

0.35

0.4

0.3 1 2 3 5 10

Al thickness (g*cm-2)

mG

y*d

-1

Total Primary Secondary Hadrons Electromagnetic

0.00E+00

5.00E-05

1.00E-04

1.50E-04

2.00E-04

2.50E-04

0.3 1 2 3 5 10

Al thickness (g*cm-2)

Cl*

cell

-1*d

-1

Total Primary Secondary Hadrons Electromagnetic

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.3 1 2 3 5 10

Al thickness (g*cm-2)

mS

v*d

-1

Total Primary Secondary Hadrons Electromagnetic

Skin Dose [mGy/d] Equivalent Dose [mSv/d]

“Biological” Dose [(CL/cell)/d]

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 37: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

37

August 1972 SPE - skin doses

• dramatic dose decrease with increasing shielding (from 13.3 to 0.62 Sv in the range 1-10 g/cm2)

• major contribution from primary protons (the role of nuclear reaction products is not negligible only for equivalent and “biological” dose)

• similar trends for equivalent and “biological” dose

skin dose (Gy) skin equivalent dose (Sv)

skin “biological” dose (CLs/cell)

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 38: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

38

August 1972 SPE - skin vs. internal organs

• much lower doses to liver than to skin (e.g. 1.0 vs. 13.3 Sv behind 1 g/cm2 Al )

• larger relative contribution of nuclear reaction products for liver than for skin (e.g. 14% vs. 7% behind 1 g/cm2 Al)

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

1 2 5 10 20

Al thickness (g/cm2)

Total Primary Protons Secondary Hadrons

Equivalent dose to skin (Sv) Equivalent dose to liver (Sv)

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 39: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

39

Aug. 1972 and Oct. 1989 SPEs -Effective Dose (Sv)

Al shield August 1972 (Erma) October 1989 (Erma)

(g/cm2) E E* E*NASA E E* E*NASA

1 2.04 1.35 1.31 1.11 0.78 0.78

2 1.43 0.95 0.94 0.79 0.55 0.58

5 0.63 0.43 0.52 0.42 0.30 0.33

10 0.23 0.17 0.27 0.20 0.15 0.18

• large contribution (33-50%) from gonads, especially with small shielding

• E* values (by neglecting gonads) very similar to those calculated with the BRYNTRN code and the CAM phantom (Hoff et al. 2002, J. Rad. Res. 43)

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 40: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

40

GCR at solar min. (=465 MV) - skin doses

• roughly constant skin dose (decrease in heavy-ion contribution balanced by increase in light-ion contribution) with increasing shielding; decrease of skin equivalent and “biological” doses starting from 2 g/cm2

• much larger relative contribution of heavy ions for the skin equivalent and “biological” dose than for the skin dose

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.3 1 2 3 5

Al thickness (g*cm-2)Total Proton Alpha 3≤Z≤10 11≤Z≤20 21≤Z≤28

00.20.40.60.8

11.21.41.61.8

2

0.3 1 2 3 5

Al thickness (g*cm-2)

Total Proton Alpha 3≤Z≤10 11≤Z≤20 21≤Z≤28

Skin Dose [mGy/d] Skin Equivalent Dose [mSv/d]

Skin “Biological” Dose [(CL/cell)/d]

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 41: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

41

GCR at solar min. (=465 MV) - skin vs. internal organs

With respect to skin, internal organs have 1) similar dose (0.5 mGy/day) but smaller equivalent dose ( 1.3 vs. 1.7 mSv/day); 2) larger relative contributions from nuclear interaction products

skin liver

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.3 1 2 3 5

Al thickness (g*cm-2)

mG

y*d

-1

Total Primary Ions Secondary Hadrons Electromagnetic

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.3 1 2 3 5

Al thickness (g*cm-2)

mG

y*d

-1

Total Primary Ions Secondary Hadrons Electromagnetic

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

0.3 1 2 3 5

Al thickness (g*cm-2)m

Sv

*d-1

Total Primary Ions Secondary Hadrons Electromagnetic

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

0.3 1 2 3 5

Al thickness (g*cm-2)

mS

v*d-1

Total Primary Ions Secondary Hadrons Electromagnetic

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 42: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

42

GCR at solar min. - Annual Effective Dose (Sv)

NCRP recommendations for LEO a 2-year mission to Mars at solar minimum would allow us to respect the career limits for males of at least 35 years-old (limit: <1 Sv) and females of at least 45 (limit: < 0.9 Sv) THAT is IF the Same Limits Apply!

0.3 0.47 0.43 0.37

1 0.47 0.44 0.38 0.49 0.37

2 0.46 0.41 0.35 0.47 0.36

3 0.43 0.41 0.35 0.44 0.33

5 0.42 0.42 0.34 0.39 0.30

Al (g/cm2) This work (male)

This work (female)

This work (no gonads)

Hoff et al. (male)

Hoff et al. (no gonads)

• large contribution from gonads, especially with small shielding (30% at 2 g/cm2)

• results very similar to those calculated with the HZETRN code and the CAM model (Hoff et al. 2002, J. Rad. Res. 43)

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 43: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

43

Conclusions - SPEs

calculation of:

- dose decrease with increasing shielding

- differences between internal organs and skin

- relative contribution of primary protons and secondaries

- contribution to effective dose from gonads

Concludes that in case of an SPE similar to the August 1972 event, a 10 g/cm2 Al storm shelter should allow us to respect the 30-days NCRP limit.

Courtesy of F. Balarini

Page 44: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

44

Future developments

Further validation of the FLUKA Monte Carlo code in space radiation protection problems with

simple shielding geometry

Repetition for more realistic geometries of shielding and spacecraft

Ultimately, we will need to assess the risk from this kind of radiation field, and that is a Biology Problem,

not a physics challenge…

Page 45: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

45

Modeling Lunar & Martian Surface Radiation Environments

• We need to start with the Free Space Fluences• For the Moon, we can just calculate the albedo

produced by the impact of the primary fluences and add one half the free space fluence to the albedo.

• For Mars, we have to propagate the free space fluence through the atmosphere to and into the surface materials. Then examine the field near and underneath the surface including all secondaries…

Page 46: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

46

Free Space GCR Environments at 1 AU1977 Solar Minimum (solid)1990 Solar Maximum (dashed)

Energy (MeV/amu)

Particle

Flu

ence

(#particles/cm

2-M

eV/a

mu-y

ear)

10-2 10-1 100 101 102 103 104 105 10610-3

10-2

10-1

100

101

102

103

104

105

106

Z=1

Z=2

3Z10

11Z20

21Z28

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 47: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

47

Free Space Solar Particle Event Proton Spectra at 1 AU

Energy (MeV/amu)

Particle

Fluence

(#particles/cm

2-M

eV/a

mu)

10-2 10-1 100 101 102 103 104103

104

105

106

107

108

109

1010

1011

1012

Worst Case SPEFeb. 1956Aug. 1972Sept. 1989

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 48: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

48

Lunar Surface GCR Environments

Energy (MeV/amu)

Particle

Fluence

(#particles/cm

2-M

eV/a

mu-y

ear)

10-2 10-1 100 101 102 103 104 105 10610-4

10-2

100

102

104

106

108

1010

Z=1

Z=0

Z=2

3Z1011Z20

21Z28

1977 Solar Minimum (solid)1990 Solar Maximum (dashed)

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 49: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

49

Lunar Surface “Worst Case SPE” Environment

Energy (MeV/amu)

Particle

Fluence

(#particles/cm

2-M

eV/a

mu)

10-2 10-1 100 101 102 103 104102

103

104

105

106

107

108

109

1010

1011

Z=1

Z=0

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 50: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

50

Dose Equivalent on Lunar Surface Due to GCR

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

S p h e r e T h ic k n e s s ( g / c m2

)

An

nu

alB

FO

Do

seE

qui

vale

nt(c

Sv)

0 2 5 5 0 7 5 1 0 00

5

1 0

1 5

2 0

2 5

3 0

3 5

4 0A L 2 2 1 9 - 1 9 7 7 m in.P o ly e t h yle n e - 1 9 7 7 m in .H N a n o fib e rs - 1 9 7 7 m in .L iq u id H y d r o g e n - 1 9 7 7 m in .A L 2 2 1 9 - 1 9 9 0 m a x.P o ly e t h yle n e - 1 9 9 0 m a x.H N a n o fib e rs - 1 9 9 0 m a x.L iq u id H y d r o g e n - 1 9 9 0 m a x.

Page 51: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

51

Modeling the Martian Surface Radiation Environment

Page 52: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

52

Planetary Surface Material and Atmosphere

(Simonsen et al.)

Mars Induced Fields

GCR ion

Diffuseneutrons

High energyparticles

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 53: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

53

Mars Surface Environment

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 54: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

54

Mars Surface MappingCharged Ions – 1977 Solar Minimum

from Space Ionizing Radiation Environment and Shielding Tools (SIREST) web site http://sirest.larc.nasa.gov

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 55: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

55

Mars Surface MappingNeutrons – 1977 Solar Minimum

from Space Ionizing Radiation Environment and Shielding Tools (SIREST) web site http://sirest.larc.nasa.gov

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 56: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

56

Mars Surface MappingLow Energy Neutrons – 1977 Solar Minimum

from Space Ionizing Radiation Environment and Shielding Tools (SIREST) web site http://sirest.larc.nasa.gov

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 57: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

57

Mars Surface GCR Environments

Energy (MeV/amu)

Particle

Fluence

(#particles/cm

2-M

eV/a

mu-y

ear)

10-2 10-1 100 101 102 103 104 105 10610-4

10-2

100

102

104

106

108

1010

Z=1

Z=0Z=2

3Z10

11Z20

21Z28

1977 Solar Minimum (solid)1990 Solar Maximum (dashed)

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 58: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

58

Mars Surface Neutrons

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 59: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

59

Mars Surface “Worst Case SPE” Environment

E n e rg y ( M e V / a m u )

Pa

rtic

leF

lue

nce

(#p

art

icle

s/cm

2

-Me

V/a

mu

)

1 0 - 2 1 0 - 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 3 1 0 41 0 0

1 01

1 0 2

1 0 3

1 04

1 0 5

1 0 6

1 07

1 0 8

1 0 9

Z = 1

Z = 0Z = 2

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 60: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

60

Dose Equivalent on Mars Surface Due to GCR

S p h e r e T h ic k n e s s ( g / c m2

)

An

nu

alB

FO

Do

seE

qui

vale

nt(c

Sv)

0 2 5 5 0 7 5 1 0 00

5

1 0

1 5

2 0

2 5

3 0

3 5

4 0A L 2 2 1 9 - 1 9 7 7 m in .P oly e t h yle n e - 1 9 7 7 m in .H N a n o fib e rs - 1 9 7 7 m in .L iq u id H y d r o g e n - 1 9 7 7 m in .A L 2 2 1 9 - 1 9 9 0 m a x.P oly e t h yle n e - 1 9 9 0 m a x.H N a n o fib e rs - 1 9 9 0 m a x.L iq u id H y d r o g e n - 1 9 9 0 m a x.

Courtesy of M. Clowdsley

Page 61: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

61

Summary and Conclusions

• SPE’s can probably be shielded against– …But only in “Storm-Shelters” or Protected Habitats

on planetary surfaces.

– Problematic during EVAs and in thinly shielded surroundings.

• GCR is more difficult to protect against in terms of keeping the Chronic Dose acceptable during a long mission, but enough shielding or a shorter mission could work…

Page 62: Surviving in space: the challenges of a manned mission to   Mars

CERN Course – Lecture 3October 28, 2005 – L. Pinsky

Modeling the Interaction of the Space Radiation in Spacecraft & Humans, and

Assessing the Risks on a Mission to Mars

62

Acknowledgements

N. Zapp (University of Houston) A. Ferrari (CERN & INFN-Milan)

J. Wilson (NASA -Langley) L. Townsend (Univ. of Tennessee)

M. Clowdsley (NASA-Langley) J. Barth (NASA-GSFC)

F. Cucinotta (NASA-JSC) S. Antiochos (NRL)

F. Balarini (INFN-Pavia) G.P. Zank (UC Riverside)

C. Cohen (Cal Tech) G. Reeves (LANL)

…And Many Others

European Community (EC contract # FI6R-CT-2003-508842) Italian Space Agency (ASI contract # I/R/320/02) NASA (Grants NAG8-1658 and NAG8-1901)

UH Institute for Space Systems Operations