enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Space food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_food

    Space food is a type of food product created and processed for consumption by astronauts during missions to outer space. [1] Such food has specific requirements to provide a balanced diet and adequate nutrition for individuals working in space while being easy and safe to store, prepare and consume in the machinery-filled weightless ...

  3. Here’s what the astronauts stranded on the ISS are eating ...

    www.aol.com/news/astronauts-stranded-iss-eating...

    The food, which is personalized to meet each astronaut’s daily requirements, is usually freeze-dried or packaged, and can be reheated using a food warmer on the ISS.

  4. How stranded Boeing Starliner astronauts will manage to have ...

    www.aol.com/stranded-boeing-starliner-astronauts...

    The two astronauts stranded at the International Space Station will enjoy a Thanksgiving feast together Thursday — as they mark 176 days in zero gravity.. The Post has learned that the ISS ...

  5. Stranded Astronauts Are Surviving On Soup Made With Their ...

    www.aol.com/stranded-astronauts-surviving-soup...

    NASA is also carefully monitoring the astronautshealth and nutrition. Each astronaut is allotted about 3.8 pounds of food daily. But concerns have recently arisen over Sunita and Butch’s health.

  6. Vegetable Production System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetable_Production_System

    A Veggie module weighs less than 8 kg (18 lb) and uses 90 watts. [7] It consists of three parts: a lighting system, a bellows enclosure, and a reservoir. [8] The lighting system regulates the amount and intensity of light plants receive, the bellows enclosure keeps the environment inside the unit separate from its surroundings, and the reservoir connects to plant pillows where the seeds grow.

  7. Space farming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_farming

    The supply of food to space stations and other long duration missions is expensive. One astronaut on the International Space Station requires approximately "1.8 kilograms of food and packaging per day". [1] For a long-term mission, such as a four-man crew, three year Martian mission, this number can grow to as much as 24,000 lb (11,000 kg). [1]

  8. Space Food Sticks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Food_Sticks

    In 1972, astronauts on board Skylab 3 ate modified versions of Space Food Sticks to test their "gastrointestinal compatibility". [3] Space Food Sticks disappeared from North American supermarket shelves in the 1980s. They were revived by Retrofuture Products, of Port Washington, NY in 2006. Two flavors, chocolate and peanut butter, were released.

  9. NASA astronauts who were part of the SpaceX Crew-8 team discussed their 235-day mission on the International Space Station that ended in hospitalizations.

  1. Related searches time zone that astronauts use to live on earth today are known as food and health

    astronaut food factsastronauts eating food
    astronaut food wikipedia