NASA, ESA will study how artificial gravity can keep astronauts healthy

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station have to exercise and alter their diet to endure extended stays in microgravity, but NASA and the ESA hope to find a better way. They're about to start a study that will explore how artificial gravity...

Learning to fly with NASA’s spacewalk simulator

What you're looking at is not a production set photo from Gravity, but rather a training simulation for Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen. He's suspended over a mockup of the International Space Station (ISS), while attached to the Active...

NASA, Roscosmos pick seasoned astronauts for year-long ISS trip

NASA, Roscosmos pick seasoned astronauts for yearlong ISS trip

We now know which two astronauts will have to pack their bags very, very well in the next three years: NASA's Scott Kelly and Roscosmos' Mikhail Kornienko have been picked for the year-long stay aboard the International Space Station in 2015. Both voyagers are old hands at space travel, having each spent a total of six months in orbit and at least some time on the ISS crew. There's no great shock in the choices when the mission will track the long-term effects of near-zero gravity on the human body -- after all, most of us would want a crew comfortable in its spacesuit boots for such an ambitious (though not record-setting) trip. Kelly and Kornienko will start a two-year training program shortly into 2013 that should have them in shape by the expedition's launch... and hopefully remind them to bring a good toothbrush.

Continue reading NASA, Roscosmos pick seasoned astronauts for year-long ISS trip

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: NASA (1), (2)

ISS ready for new zero-g experiments, students asked to float ideas

ISS-zero-g-student-space-experiments

Those secret space experiments you've been scheming? They may never happen if you try to go it alone. Fortunately, the space science group NCESSE can get you a ride, having started the countdown for its fifth wave of microgravity experiments aboard the International Space Station. US and international students from grade 5 up to university level can submit ideas until September 12th, 2012, with final culling by December 7. The mini-labs -- which can include experiments in seed germination or crystal growth, for example -- are set to be ferried aboard a SpaceX flight in April 2013. Three similar missions have flown nearly 60 student experiments already, with a fourth set as soon as the Falcon 9 craft deigns to go. If you've got a flat-out good idea being prevented by big G, hit the source to see how you could get it fired off to the ISS.

ISS ready for new zero-g experiments, students asked to float ideas originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 May 2012 09:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceStudent Spaceflight Experiments Program  | Email this | Comments