EXPERT COMMENT: What happens when someone dies in space? Space tourism brings new legal and moral issues (2024)

In an article for The Conversation, Christopher Newman, Professor of Space Law and Policy, and Nick Caplan, Professor of Aerospace Medicine and Rehabilitation at Northumbria University, discuss the legal, cultural and environmental issues we will have to consider as space tourism come closer to reality.

Commercial spaceflight companies such as Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin are now offering exclusive opportunities for celebrities and civilians to travel to space.

Traditionally, astronauts have been subject to rigorous training and medical scrutiny before going to space, and the risk of death from natural causes was considered remote.

But in this new era of space tourism, it appears medical screening may not be carried out, and only minimal pre-flight training provided.

With a wide variety of people now going to space, and the prospect in the coming years of humans establishing bases on the Moon and beyond, it raises an important question: what happens if someone dies in space?

Under international space law, individual countries are responsible for authorising and supervising all national space activity, whether governmental or private. In the United States, commercial tourist spaceflights require a licence for launch to be issued by the Federal Aviation Administration.

Should someone die on a commercial tourist mission, there would need to be a determination as to the cause of death. If the death of a spaceflight participant was due to a mechanical fault in the spacecraft, the Federal Aviation Administration would look to suspend further launches by the company pending an investigation.

If mechanical failure is discounted, there would need to be consideration of the overall duty of care to all travellers by the commercial provider and assessment made about whether it did everything possible to prevent the person’s death.

Uncomfortable but inevitable

The time spent in space on these tourist missions currently ranges from a few minutes to a few days. This means the risk of a death in space from natural causes is very low, though not impossible.

The question of what to do if someone dies in space will become significantly more pertinent – and complex – when humans embark on longer missions deeper into space, and even one day become permanently established in outer space.

Fundamentally, there will need to be some sort of investigative process put in place to establish the cause of death of humans in outer space. There have been inquests before, such as the inquiry into the Columbia Shuttle disaster in 2003, where Nasa’s space shuttle Columbia disintegrated as it returned to Earth, killing the seven astronauts on board.

But these have been specialist investigations into high-profile accidents and concerned only US spaceflight. As opportunities for space travel expand, it’s inevitable, either through accidents, illness or age, that deaths in space or on another celestial body will occur.

A formal procedure for investigating deaths on long-duration missions and space settlements will be necessary to ensure there is clear information on who died, the causes of death, and so lessons can be learned and possible patterns detected.

EXPERT COMMENT: What happens when someone dies in space? Space tourism brings new legal and moral issues (1)

Commercial spaceflights are allowing more people to travel into space. Blue Origin

Many of the procedures associated with inquests and investigations could be imported from Earth. International space law provides the default position whereby a country that has registered a spacecraft has jurisdiction over that space object and any personnel. It’s likely that a country with such jurisdiction would be the natural authority to commence an inquest and determine the procedures to deal with a death in space.

While this is a useful starting point, an agreement tailored to the specific settlement or mission would probably be better. Planning a mission to space includes considering factors like power, food, protection against radiation and waste disposal. Establishing processes concerning what to do if a person dies, and incorporating these processes into any plan, will make a traumatic event slightly less so.

Having an agreement in place at the outset of a mission is even more important if there are a number of countries participating.

Practical considerations

In addition to the legal dimension, missions that send humans further into the Solar System will need to consider the physical disposal of human remains. Here it’s important to take into account that different cultures treat their dead in very different ways.

On short missions, it’s likely the body would be brought back to Earth. The body would need to be preserved and stored to avoid contamination of the surviving crew.

On a round trip to Mars, which would be years in duration and may be a prospect in the coming decades, the body could possibly be frozen in the cold of space to reduce its weight and make it easier to store on its way back to Earth.

But if we start to colonise outer space, bodies may need to be disposed of rather than stored.

Although Star Trek fans may recall the way Spock’s body was jettisoned into space, this probably wouldn’t be desirable in real life. Countries may object to having a human corpse floating in space, while the body itself may contribute to the growing issues created by space debris. The family of the deceased might want their loved one’s body returned to them.

Disposal of human remains on a colony is similarly fraught. The body of a settler buried on another planet may biologically contaminate that planet. Cremation is also likely to contaminate, and could be resource-intensive.

In time, there will undoubtedly be technical solutions to the storage and disposal of human remains in space. But the ethical issues around death in space cut across anthropological, legal and cultural boundaries. The idea may be uncomfortable to contemplate, but it’s one of many conversations we will need to have as humans become a space-faring species.

EXPERT COMMENT: What happens when someone dies in space? Space tourism brings new legal and moral issues (2024)

FAQs

What happens to the people who died in space? ›

Here is how death in space would be handled today: If someone died on a low-Earth-orbit mission – such as aboard the International Space Station – the crew could return the body to Earth in a capsule within a matter of hours. If it happened on the Moon, the crew could return home with the body in just a few days.

What happens when someone dies in the ISS? ›

If an astronaut died on a low-Earth-orbit mission, the crew could send the body to Earth in a capsule within hours. If this happened on the Moon, the crew could take the body home in just a few days. If an astronaut died during the trip to Mars, the crew likely wouldn't be able to return quickly to Earth.

What is the protocol if someone dies in space? ›

Suppose, if someone died on a mission which is functioning on a low Earth orbit such as the International Space Station . In such a situation, the crew can return the body in a capsule back to Earth within a few hours. In the case of Moon, the crew can return the body back to Earth within a few days.

What do they do with the body if someone dies in space? ›

A deceased astronaut's body would likely journey back to Earth alongside the surviving crew after the mission's culmination, possibly years later. During this time, the body could be preserved within the spacecraft, leveraging controlled environmental conditions to slow decomposition.

Would someone decompose if they died in space? ›

The things that are in our bodies will only survive for a short time as the oxygen in our space suit is extinguished , the radiations from the sun ( and freezing without the sun) will eventually mummify us . Decomposition would not likely happen for eons as no moister , oxygen, and insect life to decompose the matter .

Who went to space and died? ›

The fatal frontier

Then, of course, there was the Apollo 1 fire in January 1967, which killed astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee in a horrific manner. During a launch simulation, a stray spark within the cabin of the grounded spacecraft, which was filled with pure oxygen, ignited.

What happens to a human body in space without a spacesuit? ›

Key Takeaways. Without a spacesuit in space, you would become unconscious within 15 seconds due to lack of oxygen. Your blood and body fluids would boil and then freeze because of the extremely low air pressure, and your tissues would expand from the boiling fluids.

What happens if an astronaut takes off his helmet in space? ›

His head would be exposed to the temperatures of space, which is -455 degrees Fahrenheit. The air in your lungs is FORCED out of your body due to the surroundings being a vacuum. You will have 15 seconds before the oxygen in your bloodstream runs dry.

What happens if you are born on the ISS? ›

As a result, a child born and raised in space might never be able to live on Earth. It's possible they might not be able to walk, stand, or even breathe. Earth's gravity is so important to humans that it's been described as the identity of mankind.

Has anyone floated away in space? ›

Thankfully, an astronaut being irretrievably stranded away from their spacecraft has never happened before. The first astronaut to float away from the safety of their ship without a tether was Bruce McCandless, who reached 320 feet away from the Challenger space shuttle on February 7, 1984.

What happens if an astronaut gets sick in space? ›

A trained Crew Medical Officer astronaut can help them. If it becomes serious enough (life threatening or debilitating), they will be forced to board their Soyuz capsule along with their crewmates who are assigned to that capsule and come home early.

How much do astronauts get paid? ›

What is the average NASA astronaut's salary? According to NASA, civilian astronaut salaries are determined by the US Government's pay scales – or more specifically grades GS-13 to GS-14. As of 2022, the GS-13 pay scale ranges from $81,216 to $105,579 per annum.

How much does a space funeral cost? ›

Typically, the cost can range from around $2,500 to $12,500. The cost varies depending on the nature of the burial experience offered. For instance, merely launching the ashes into space and then having them returned to the earth may be on the more affordable end of the price spectrum.

Would a body decompose on Mars? ›

If you are left on the surface of Mars, you will not decompose as you would here on Earth. If you die during the Martian daytime, your bacteria would begin the normal process of breaking down your body. However, once night hits, your body will freeze and the bacteria will be stopped in its tracks.

Have any astronauts been lost in space? ›

Komarov was supposed to test the ship in manned mode and conduct the world's first docking in space with another Soyuz-2 spacecraft. The mission also involved the transition of two Soyuz-2 astronauts through outer space to Soyuz-1. However, the plan never succeeded, and Komarov became the first astronaut lost in space.

What happens if an astronaut gets sick on the ISS? ›

For medical emergencies, the Crew Medical Officer is the person in charge. The Medical Officer is trained not only for the usual first-aid treatments, but also for other medical matters such as, stitching up wounds and giving injections. All astronauts are trained for emergency resuscitations in case of heart attacks.

What if someone gets sick on the ISS? ›

Rare but possible, astronauts do get sick, and they fall ill in space, as well. What happens if someone on the International Space Station gets very sick? If they can be treated on board, they will be. If not, they will come home on the vehicle that took them up there.

How long can someone live in the ISS? ›

How long do astronauts stay on the space station? A typical mission is about six months long. However, with NASA's future long-duration missions, some astronauts have stayed for as long as 340 days to see how microgravity affects the human body during an extended stay in space.

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