Researchers are studying how the body adapts to weightlessness in space, which will help astronauts in future missions.
The original NASA sign from 1959. By Kellie B. Gormly April 2 at 8:00 AM This may sound like a joke about a lazy person’s dream job: Earn big money by staying in bed and watching TV.
The researchers are studying how the body adapts to weightlessness in space, which will help astronauts in future missions. Study subjects will spend the 60 days with their heads tilted down six degrees, which mimics conditions in space. Without gravity sending blood to the legs, astronauts’ heads fill with fluids, resulting in “puffy-head, bird-legs” syndrome, according to the NASA website. Researchers will study how the shifts in fluid affect participants’ bodies, as well as possible bone and muscle loss.
“Crewed spaceflight will continue to be important in the future in order to carry out experiments in microgravity, but we must make it as safe as possible for the astronauts,” Hansjörg Dittus, DLR executive board member for Space Research and Technology, said in a written statement. “This bed rest study . . . offers space researchers from all over Europe and the U.S.A. the opportunity to work together and jointly acquire as much scientific knowledge about human physiology as possible.
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