How do Chinese astronauts eat, sleep in spaceship?
12/10/2005 17:29
Fei Junlong and Nie Haisheng, the two astronauts undertaking China's second
manned space mission, will live and work in space for about 119 hours. How do
they move, eat and sleep in the vessel? ASTRONAUTS
MENU Before the Shenzhou-6 was launched, two space medical
specialists prescribed detailed recipe for the two astronauts, including 50-odd
varieties of foodstuff. Fei and Nie will have three meals every day, with
balanced nutrition and adaptation to their respective tastes. According to
Chen Bin, head of the Space Nutrition and Foodstuff Research Office under China
Space Center, the two astronauts will have three meals every day, 5 to 6 dishes
for each meal. Foodstuff prepared for them total more than 40 kg. Chen said
the foodstuff can be classified into staple food and nonstaple food. Rice will
be the major staple food, with 140 grams of rice packed into a vacuum bag to be
warmed by a heater. Non-staple foods include beef cooked with preserved orange
peels, beef and cuttle balls and dehydrated vegetables such as rape hearts
cooked with mushrooms. The astronauts have instant coffee, green tea, orange
juice and even creamy soup to drink. Dehydrated, refrigerated fruits provided
for them include strawberry, apple, banana, peach and Hami
melon. SLEEP IN VARYING POSTURES A sleeping bag has been
arranged for the Shenzhou-6 spacecraft. It is hooked on the wall of the vessel's
orbit module. The astronauts will sleep by turns, one at rest and the other on
duty. Under the microgravity conditions, they may sleep standing, sitting or
lying. When they sleep, they should put their arms inside the sleeping bag and
tie their hands on their chests, so as not to touch equipment switches
accidentally. It is reported that in microgravity environment, a sleeping
person will have a feeling that their arms and legs seem to separate from their
trunks. An astronaut from the former Soviet Union once took one of his arms left
outside his sleeping bag as a weird object floating toward him. He was scared in
cold sweat by the illusion. ASTRONAUTIC SUIT: PERSONAL PROTECTION
SYSTEM Since no space walk is planned for the current manned space
task, Fei and Nie are equipped with only intra-capsule suits, which weigh more
than 10 kg each, said Li Tanqiu, director of the Astronautic Suit Research
Office under the China Space Center. If accidental pressure loss occurs in
the capsule, the astronautic-suit rescue system will start to keep astronauts
safe and sound in six hours, during which the vessel will possibly realize an
emergency return to the Earth, Li added. At the place of heart on the
astronautic suit, there is a round-shaped device that can be screwed. It is used
to readjust pressure, temperature and humidity inside the suit. On the right
side of the stomach position of the suit, a thin tube serves for
telecommunications; and on the left side, two pipes are used for providing
oxygen and discharging carbon dioxide. According to Li Tanqiu, the outer
layer of the suit is made of high-intensity polyester fabric, allowing a
five-square-centimeter cloth to resist a pulling force of 300 kg. During
their five-day space travel, Fei and Nie will take off the astronautic suits to
enter the orbiter from the re-entry module. In the microgravity environment,
they will take on and off the suits in 10 minutes, Li Tanqiu said.
Xinhua news
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