Jacques van Oene
August 6th 05, 01:38 PM
International Space Station Expedition 11 Science Operations Status Report
for the Week Ending July 29, 2005
08.02.05
Steve Roy
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
(Phone: 256.544.0034)
Status Report: 05-131
Expedition 11 NASA ISS Science Officer John Phillips conducted his fourth
session of the Foot/Ground Reaction Forces during Spaceflight, or FOOT
experiment. Phillips wore the instrumented Lower Extremity Monitoring Suit,
or Lycra cycling tights, which measured his joint angles, muscle activity
and forces on the feet during a typical day on the Space Station.
The human body is designed to bear weight. Without the stimulation caused by
placing weight on lower extremities, whether due to the microgravity
environment or lack of use on Earth, bone will lose mass and muscles will
lose strength. FOOT will characterize the load placed on lower extremities
during daily activities on the Space Station, and then examine how an
in-flight exercise routine could prevent muscle atrophy and bone loss
associated with space flight.
Focused human physiological and biological Space Station research on
astronaut health and the development of countermeasures to protect crews
from the space environment will allow for long duration missions to explore
beyond low Earth orbit.
NASA's payload operations team at the Marshall Center coordinates U.S.
science activities on Space Station.
--
--------------
Jacques :-)
www.spacepatches.info
for the Week Ending July 29, 2005
08.02.05
Steve Roy
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
(Phone: 256.544.0034)
Status Report: 05-131
Expedition 11 NASA ISS Science Officer John Phillips conducted his fourth
session of the Foot/Ground Reaction Forces during Spaceflight, or FOOT
experiment. Phillips wore the instrumented Lower Extremity Monitoring Suit,
or Lycra cycling tights, which measured his joint angles, muscle activity
and forces on the feet during a typical day on the Space Station.
The human body is designed to bear weight. Without the stimulation caused by
placing weight on lower extremities, whether due to the microgravity
environment or lack of use on Earth, bone will lose mass and muscles will
lose strength. FOOT will characterize the load placed on lower extremities
during daily activities on the Space Station, and then examine how an
in-flight exercise routine could prevent muscle atrophy and bone loss
associated with space flight.
Focused human physiological and biological Space Station research on
astronaut health and the development of countermeasures to protect crews
from the space environment will allow for long duration missions to explore
beyond low Earth orbit.
NASA's payload operations team at the Marshall Center coordinates U.S.
science activities on Space Station.
--
--------------
Jacques :-)
www.spacepatches.info