| |
For release
May 4, 2006
SPACE INSTITUTE’S EXPERIMENT TESTED
ON NASA’S ZERO-GRAVITY ‘ROLLER COASTER’ PARABOLIC
FLIGHTS
The University of Tennessee Space
Institute’s fingerprints were all over a recently tested
gravity-free experiment that could provide adequate
drinking water for future astronauts on long space
trips.
Designed by Dr. Basil N. Antar, UTSI professor of
Aerospace Engineering, and Dr. Donald Reiss, a
microgravity scientist with NASA’s Marshall Space Fight
Center, the experiment was performed with the help of
UTSI doctoral student Dan Lehman aboard an aerial roller
coaster that for two days simulated zero gravity
conditions.
Since astronauts could not carry sufficient water on
lengthy trips to Mars, Antar says it will be necessary
to “re-circulate waste water over and over.”
Boiling water would be “useless” without gravity, he
continued, “because in zero-gravity conditions, bubbles
never float to the surface. We are working on a method
to separate vapor bubbles from liquid under space
conditions in hopes that this technique could be used
for future advanced life support systems, and especially
for supplying potable water to the astronauts.”
This was among first flights of NASA’s DC-9, which has
replaced the KC-135 “Vomit Comet.” Launched from
Ellington Air Force Base, the plane went through
up-and-down, parabolic arcs over the Gulf of Mexico.
While Antar monitored from the ground, Lehman assisted
Reiss in operating the airborne experiment that involves
separating gas from liquids to get rid of bubbles in
micro-gravity conditions. Such bubbles also cause
deformities in crystals, silicon micro chips, glass
fibers and in other in-space processes, Antar noted.
As in astronaut training, for 40 times each day the
plane dropped 10,000 feet (to zero gravity) then pulled
back up to between 30,000 and 35,000 feet (two g’s).
“I’ve had experiments in more than 50 of these flights
since 1990,” Antar said.
Lehman, a recipient of a NASA Space Grant who received
his master’s degree in Aerospace Engineering at UTSI in
December, made two earlier flights on the KC-135 plane.
In one, he helped test another of Antar’s experiments
that also dealt with gas-liquid separation in a
micro-gravity environment. Before that, as an
undergraduate student at the University of Minnesota,
Lehman took a ride on the “Weightless Wonder” KC-135
courtesy of a special NASA program. He is the son of
Floyd and Sylvia Lehman of Watertown, S.D.

Dan Lehman, left, balances on one finger during a
zero-gravity parabolic flight while Dr. Donald Reiss
checks on an experiment designed by him and Dr. Basil
Antar, a UTSI professor.
-- Photo by Dan Lehman

In a prior joint project, Dr. Basil N.
Antar, center, stands with Dan Lehman, left, and Dr.
Donald Reiss beside NASA’s KC-135.
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
|
|