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Recommended for: Grades 3-12

Resource: Astronauts Speak: Gene Cernan

Media Type:
Real Audio

Length:
Size: 1 byte

Being an astronaut in orbit looks easy. Under conditions of "weightlessness," they seem to float about their spacecraft effortlessly, somersaulting and gulping beverages out of midair. However, as one of the first astronauts to "walk" in space recounts in this audio clip from NOVA, there's nothing easy about working in space.

Supplemental Media Available:

Astronauts Speak : Gene Cernan (HTML Document)

 

Teachers' Domain, Astronauts Speak: Gene Cernan, published January 22, 2004, retrieved on ,
http://www.teachersdomain.org/resource/phy03.sci.phys.mfw.gene/

One of NASA's first attempts at a "space walk" turned into an exhausting failure for astronaut Gene Cernan. Unlike astronauts who had "walked" in space on previous missions, Cernan was assigned several work tasks to be performed outside the spacecraft. Each time he attempted to push or turn a valve, he was sent hurtling in the opposite direction with little control over his trajectory. After many frustrating minutes, his mission outside the capsule was called off, and NASA scientists began trying to figure out what went wrong.

NASA scientists and engineers should probably have predicted that if an astronaut applied force to open or close a valve, the valve would apply the same amount of force to him, but in the opposite direction. After all, nearly 300 years ago, Isaac Newton presented what came to be known as his third law of motion, which says that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. We experience these conditions on Earth; if we lean heavily against a wall, the wall pushes back with a force equal and opposite to our lean. (To illustrate the wall's opposing force more vividly, imagine leaning against it while wearing roller skates.) On Earth, gravity and friction provide the stability we need to resist the forces exerted on us during everyday tasks. In contrast, orbiting astronauts must struggle against conditions of "weightlessness".

Orbiting astronauts never actually experience "zero gravity," even though they commonly use this term to describe the sensation of weightlessness. In fact, at an altitude of 320 kilometers (200 miles), Earth's gravitational pull is about 90 percent of what it is on the planet's surface, meaning that an orbiting spacecraft and its passengers weigh about 90 percent of their weight on the ground. The sensation of weightlessness is the result of the spacecraft's constant state of free-fall around Earth. The spacecraft travels at about 7.5 kilometers (4.7 miles) per second. At this speed, gravity continues to pull the spacecraft toward Earth, but the surface of the Earth also curves away from the spacecraft. As a result, the spacecraft continuously falls at a rate that matches this curvature. The spacecraft is always falling, but from its perspective, so is the surface of the Earth. To the astronauts, it seems as though gravity has disappeared even though it is still very much present.

To combat weightlessness during subsequent missions, NASA engineers equipped spacecraft with footholds and handholds that would give space-walking astronauts the stability they needed to perform work.
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Source: NOVA: "To the Moon"

This resource was adapted from NOVA: To the Moon

Resource Produced by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Developed by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Credits

Collection Funded by:

National Science Foundation