Two Indian American Teenagers Among NASA’s 3-D Space Contest Finalists
What makes this even more of an imperative study – even more so to NASA – is the effect that zero gravity seems to have on decision-making: apparently, it is “harder to think” in space than it is on a planet (which, of course, comes with a complimentary gravitational pull).
Two Indian American teenagers figured among the 10 finalists of NASA’s national Future Engineers 3-D Space Container Challenge, which asked students to design models of containers that could help astronauts keep things in order in space. Yes, a ball of water. Each and every detailing, the colors, the textures, etc are visible with our eyes.
In these instances, astronauts will want to have the ability to carry out duties resembling utilizing instruments and driving a rover, they usually have to be able to escape in a touchdown emergency. The space agency reported that high definition videos and images can act as very good source of information in terms of scientific investigations. NASA stressed the fact that the winning design helped to make life simple better and comfortable for astronauts in space.
These so-called 4K cameras will help astronauts improve on their experiments with higher resolution images and better frame rates.
Scott Kelly, the NASA astronaut who can be seen in the video, is already a well-known figure on internet, having regularly shared many photographs from his stay at the global Space Station.
Why exploding? Because, as Business Insider reports, Kelly also uses an effervescent tablet in the second part of the video which after dissolving in the ball of water, generates bubbles of carbon dioxide gas inside the water that would usually rise to the surface of a glass on Earth – but in space they move to the outer edges of the water ball, expanding in size until the bubbles pop and fling bits of water everywhere. He recently made the rounds by sharing photographs from his ISS stay, including an incredible picture of the Northern Lights as seen from space, which Kelly uploaded to his Twitter account.
NASA-funded researchers are studying brain structures and functions of the astronauts aboard the global Space Station (ISS) to understand how brain changes in space and ways to deal with those changes.