Technically it's micro-gravity. At the ISS, earhts gravity has still 88 % of it's force. So all the people in the space station, and the space station itself, are constantly falling down on earth. They are just moving so fast around the earth that they "miss" earth while falling towards it :-)
Hi there ma'am , maybe next time you decide to go back to fly around in the Heavens, maybe you could grab ya a small tube of styling gel, fit right in your pocket. Hold them curls down. Lol.
She can talk almost without interruption for about 30 minutes. In order to keep the astronauts from getting bored with the boring life of a spaceship, NASA must have hired women who were storytellers to become astronauts because they could constantly provide them with all kinds of topics 🛰
Really an inspiring video depicting life in a space station. The astronaut lady is a great communicator. Hope one day we will be a multi-planet species.❤
It’s really cool but with my claustraphobia and the thought of not being able to sit down I think I’d go stark-raving mad. Lovely to see the spherical Earth. Awesome video.
Yeah you definitely have to have good mental health and I’m sure everyone that goes up there has a bit of anxiety, especially if it’s their first time. But they train for this and prep so that definitely helps. Me and you, us average joes, we might not cope so well. Lmao.
I just realized that they are not floating weightlessly in space motionless, but rather are traveling quickly in a direction that is parallel to the surface of the earth and freefalling towards the earth, pulled down with gravity. However, the speed that they are travelling creates an inertia of moving off into space at a rate which is totally equal to the force of gravity. Therefore, they appear to be floating weightlessly. Of course, we call this "orbit".
vartika every time I watch these videos, the astronauts explain it so well, so basic and not complicated at all. They would make great teachers if they weren’t doing this.
Такое приятное чувство от увиденного !!! Такая милая девушка, спасибо огромное за ваш труд и такой подарок нам землянам,где бы мы могли такое ещё увидеть....
I’d have fun for all of an hour and then I’d be anxiety ridden. It’s like when you travel for a couple weeks, it’s fun at first but then you miss home and normalcy. I’m absolutely sure I’d be crying after 4hrs in space, maybe 2. 😂 (That wouldn’t include crying during the departure from earth. I could help but think what if I never make it back or see my family again?) 😢 I imagine you have to go through screening and be mentally sound to go to space. A lot of people panic on plans imagine the fear and anxiety going into space. This was an awesome tour of the Space Station! 👏🏽 You folks are so brave! 🙌🏽
Harbinger Your spine de-compresses around 2 inches in space, so when you get back to earth it feels like something is constantly pushing down on your spine until it gets used to the gravity again and re-compresses
@@kalebsattison8556 When I spend a few hours swimming and I come out of the pool, I feel heavy. The amount of heaviness they must feel upon arriving on earth must be rough.
Awesome journey of a space station though we aren't there but the way you both explore and cover each and every part of the space stations I am really amazed thank you and also be safe out there 🙏
Officially coolest video here ever. Man, she is so eloquent and agreeable. You can obviously see how professional and delightful she is at the same time.
@@divyammakwana591 It’s a sensation of wooziness. It usually occurs when you're traveling by car, boat, plane, or train. You would usually have the need to throw up.
I reckon astronauts who live on the ISS for any length of time undergo strenuous psychological evaluations to make sure they are grounded (ha!), calm under pressure and genuinely amiable before they get a space pass. I've shared a room at times (boarding school and college) with people I know I'd be happy never to see again but at least I knew I could escape!
I'm fascinated by this video. Thanks for sharing and explaining how is life out there, I'm not sure I would be able to sleep not having any reference if I'm upsidedown or not 😂.
I still find it crazy that there's people that deny that we can go to space and that videos like this are fake. She's literally floating all over the place.
And with all that equipment you see when she's floating around would cost millions. But if it was fake, why would they have all of this expensive equipment that would be useless after they turned the camera off. Flat earthers have no common sense 😂
@@famalanche it could be. But again, CGI that high quality would cost alot too. But it would be worthless after the camera turns off. It would be cheaper to go to space
It's so insane we have literally live footage from people in space, you can't make CGI live, and you can't fall in a zero-gravity plane for more than like a minute without crashing into the earth, what is earth fake too?
One of my dreams is to become an astronaut. As I grow up, I realized that I need to study hard in order to become one. Well, I am completely broke and I give up this dream. I am happy to those people who still want to become a astronaut or whatever it is that is related in working on NASA. Learning about space is magnificent. Goodluck to the future astronauts, be one to discover the mysteries hidden outside our planet earth.
Yeah it's great augmented reality. How do you have gas pressure next to a vacuum? You cant, space is just a mathematical model based on a non existent r value, reified into existence by people that believe the imigary of the nasa priest class. Look what the catholic church achieved and all they had was a book that hardly anyone could read
Much respect to all the astronauts and engineers, ect. In my opinion, the most talented humans ever. The amount of physical and mental work is out of this world... literally lol
The damage in the camera's sensor (white dots in dark scenes) is kinda crazy. That's being caused by micro particles hitting the sensor while travelling through space, like when astronauts report seeing small flashes while on the ISS. That's crazy to see a visualization like that. Those poor astronauts eyes lol.
@@lemon_maho I was watching Lewis Hamilton visiting Nasa and saw this too... I wish Flat Earthers and other Space Deniers will find this on their recommended videos too. This will make them cry.
Jack G thank you so much Jack G for this clarification , yeh , i should write astronaut instead of scientist bcz the latter is not suitable for such situation , again thank you bro respect from Algeria 🇩🇿
+Bruce R. First of all, don't make any assumptions of how much square footage my house has. Second, I was referring to the area that delivers cargo to the space shuttle. The little connecting tunnel that one person could barely pass through. I'm also not stuck inside my house for 6 months. I can leave and go outside.
Lynn Dang Lol..smh. Well you know I'm right if you ever do look up the square footage of the station. You weren't being specific at all for anyone reading that original comment to know what you were referring to. Your last statement is completely irrelevant to the term claustrophobia* if you knew how large the station is in the first place.
Bruce R. Continue to start up problems on youtube bro. Because my comment was innocent for what I was thinking about, which was the little tight tunnel, and required no sassy assumptions. Starting condescending to strangers is going to get you really far in life. The square footage is 2000, with a 7 foot ceiling according to PBS. I'm not talking about cubic space, I'm talking about walking space. I'm not floating around on earth, So it doesn't matter to me now tall their ceilings are. I live in a house with my family of 6, plus me which makes 7. My parents' home is four thousand five hundred square feet with 8 foot ceilings. Please tell me how much bigger it is then my residence. Especially when it's semi permanently inside for 6 months.
www.pbs.org/spacestation/station/training.htm Read all of it next time. "Habitable, pressurized volume on the International Space Station will be 43,000 cubic feet. That is about the volume of three average American houses, each one containing about 2,000 square feet with a 7 foot ceiling for a total of around 14,000 cubic feet. The pressurized volume will be roughly equivalent to the interior of a 747 jumbo jet."
@@michaelflaherty1812 yup, I believe if you're a right kind of person for this you persistently choose not to be bothered by these details and enjoy the work you just love :)
There is an interesting thing about coming back to Earth from ISS. After a year on space station astronauts often (While having interview) let go for example microphones, as they think it will float just in place they placed it :)
I remember being underway on a Destroyer for long periods and finding walking on dry land sometime challenging. Meaning, you feel, and are very clumsy, because you are used to compensating and anticipating certain movements. But I cant imagine what it would be like after 6 months weightless. WOW!
I'll puke and puke for sure. Huge respect for all the astronauts past, present and future. Not just brains but takes courage to go beyond earth knowing something can go wrong anytime
Somehow.. i dont know why, im not that afraid of heights.. but, i feel like i would have a strange feeling of falling/ being a bit scared of the height while looking down back on earth in that dome. Tho it looks just amazing!