The seven renewed members Shipping 72 The crew wrapped its week to look for how blood passes from the brain to the heart and how muscles and bones react to the exercise in space. THE International space station Residents also carried out vision checks and helped a variety of scientific equipment.
New NASA flight engineer Nichole Ayers launched his first round of Drain the brain 2.0 Experience Friday setting up equipment in the Columbus laboratory module and data collection to measure the volume of blood flowing in its neck. Doctors want more information on how the lack of severity affects the heart’s heart function at the heart to improve team health screening in space and promote new treatments for heart disease on earth.
Takuya Onishi, Jaxa astronaut (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) and flight engineer, worked throughout Friday by installing a Space exercise experience in the Tranquility module. Onishi first installed a movement capture system and its associated components then recorded its training on the advanced resistive exercise device which imitates free weights on earth. The results can help researchers design effective exercise programs to counter the effects of weightlessness, including bone loss and muscle atrophy.
Work in the Harmony moduleNASA flight engineers Anne McClain And Petit joined for regularly programmed eye checks. McClain took care of the job doctor’s position and looked in Petit’s eyes using standard medical imaging equipment while doctors on the ground followed in real time. Doctors continued to permanently monitor how life in space affects vision due to fluid changes caused by space towards the head of a crew member applying pressure on the back of the eye.
The commander of the station Alexey Ovchinin has teamed up with Fight Engineer Ivan Vagner, both of Roscosmos, at the beginning of their day and studied the methods to refine the location of the Outpost orbital in space using terrestrial photography techniques. The results can allow future spaceships on missions to the Moon or Mars to navigate without using satellites or mission controllers. The flight engineer Kirill Peskov worked on the construction of an audio database to form an artificial intelligence system and life survival equipment throughout the Roscosmos segment of the Outpost Outpost ending his first full week in space.
Learn more about the Station’s activities by following the Spatial Station Blog,, @Space_Station And @Iss_research on X, as well as the ISS Facebook And ISS Instagram accounts.
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