KSC inventor tests cabin pressure monitor
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Photo Number: KSC-00PD-5049
Release Date: 18-Oct-2000
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Description:
Jan Zysko (left) and Rich Mizell (right) test a Personal Cabin Pressure Altitude Monitor in an altitude chamber at Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida. Zysko invented the pager-sized monitor that alerts wearers of a potentially dangerous or deteriorating cabin pressure altitude condition, which can lead to life- threatening hypoxia. Zysko is chief of the KSC Spaceport Engineering and Technology directorate's data and electronic systems branch. Mizell is a Shuttle processing engineer. The monitor, which has drawn the interest of such organizations as the Federal Aviation Administration for use in commercial airliners and private aircraft, was originally designed to offer Space Shuttle and Space Station crew members added independent notification about any depressurization.
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Point of Contact
Name: NASA Kennedy Space Center
Address:
KSC Public Affairs Office
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
John F. Kennedy Space Center
Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899
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Photos By: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Scanned By: Seven/Still Photo Imaging
Captions: InDyne, Inc.
Curator: NASA/KSC Internet Systems Lab (Dumoulin, Downs, Paladino)
Last Updated: Tuesday August 28 19:19:30 EDT 2001 (Anita Barrett) A service of the NASA Image Exchange (NIX)