{"id":190,"date":"2007-11-05T20:23:34","date_gmt":"2007-11-06T03:23:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/2007\/11\/05\/20-things-you-didnt-know-about-living-in-space\/"},"modified":"2007-11-05T20:23:34","modified_gmt":"2007-11-06T03:23:34","slug":"20-things-you-didnt-know-about-living-in-space","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2007\/11\/05\/20-things-you-didnt-know-about-living-in-space\/","title":{"rendered":"20 Things You Didn’t Know About Living In Space"},"content":{"rendered":"
Written by Corey S. Powell<\/a><\/p>\n 1<\/strong> Nearly every astronaut experiences some space sickness<\/a>, caused by the wildly confusing information reaching their inner ears. In addition to nausea, symptoms include headaches and trouble locating your own limbs. Just like college, really.<\/p>\n 2<\/strong> And those are the least of your worries. In weightlessness, fluids shift upward, causing nasal congestion and a puffy face; bones lose calcium, forming kidney stones; and muscles atrophy, slowing the bowels and shrinking the heart<\/a>.<\/p>\n 3<\/strong> At least you’ll be puffy, constipated, and tall<\/em>: The decreased pressure on the spine in zero-g causes most space travelers to grow about two inches.<\/p>\n 4<\/strong> Lab rats sent into space during midpregnancy, while their fetuses’ inner ears are developing, spawn some seriously tipsy babies<\/a> (pdf).<\/p>\n 5<\/strong> No humans have yet been conceived<\/a> in space, so we can only imagine.<\/p>\n 6<\/strong> So that’s what it takes: A 2001 study<\/a> showed that astronauts who snored on Earth snoozed silently in space.<\/p>\n 7<\/strong> But astronauts sleep less soundly<\/a>; 16 sunrises a day throws a major wrench into their circadian rhythms.<\/p>\n 8<\/strong> And Ziggy played guitar. At the start of the workday on the space shuttle, mission control in Houston broadcasts wake-up music, usually selected with a particular astronaut in mind. On the all-work, no-play International Space Station, crews wake to an alarm clock.<\/p>\n 9<\/strong> If you are ever exposed to the vacuum of space without a suit on, don’t hold your breath: Sudden decompression would cause your lungs to rupture.<\/p>\n 10<\/strong> In addition, water on the tongue, in the nose, and in the eyes would boil away. This actually happened<\/a> in 1965, when a space suit failed during a NASA experiment and the tester was exposed to a near vacuum for 15 seconds.<\/p>\n 11<\/strong> Contrary to Hollywood, though, you wouldn’t explode. Lack of oxygen in the blood is what would kill you, but it would take about two minutes.<\/p>\n 12<\/strong> More explosion paranoia: Virgin Galactic, Richard Branson’s space-tourism company, reportedly considered barring women with breast implants due to fears that they might blow up.<\/p>\n 13<\/strong> John Glenn found it hard to choke down his food, but not because of the lack of gravity: Early astronauts relied on aluminum tubes of semiliquid mush, food cubes, and dehydrated meals.<\/p>\n 14<\/strong> Today astronauts can spice up their meals<\/a> with salt and pepper-in liquid form. Sprinkled grains would float away, tickling noses and clogging vents.<\/p>\n 15<\/strong> Missing something? Those vents on the space shuttle and International Space Station serve as the lost and found, sucking up anything that’s floating about unsecured.<\/p>\nExploding boobs, toilet target practice, the second birth…<\/h3>\n