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That includes researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), who are developing a set of wearable robotic limbs to help astronauts recover from falls. When the wearer falls over, an extra pair of limbs can extend out to provide leverage to help them stand, conserving energy for other tasks. The study found that falls were more common when, like Duke, astronauts were collecting samples or using tools – tasks that Artemis astronauts are likely to undertake. Kim Shiflett/NASA NASA astronaut Eric Boe wears Boeing's new spacesuit designed for astronauts who will fly on the CST-100 Starliner. Ballesteros plans to spend the next few years of his PhD using a “Swiss Army Knife technique” to turn SuperLimbs into a system for astronauts that can “address different important use cases, but all be one unified design.”SuperLimbs could help astronauts recover from falls, move efficiently, and do work.
Persons: haven’t, Artemis, Charlie Duke, Duke, Walter M, Schirra Jr, Donald K, Slayton, John H, Glenn Jr, Scott Carpenter, Alan B, Shepard Jr, Virgil I, Grissom, Gordon Cooper Jr, John W, Michael Collins, Edwin E, Aldrin Jr, Buzz Aldrin, Neil A, Armstrong, Aldrin, Joe Engle, Richard Truly, John Young, Bruce McCandless, McCandless, Robert L, Stewart, Michael J, McCulley, Franklin R, Chang, Diaz, Ellen S, Baker, Shannon W, Donald E, Williams, Michael Fincke, Yury Lonchakov, Kennedy, Center's Neil A, Jessica Watkins, Bob Hines, Kjell Lindgren, Samantha Cristoforetti, Kim Shiflett, Eric Boe, Boeing Dustin Gohmert, NASA's, Joel Kowsky, NASA Kristine Davis, SuperLimbs, Harry Asada, Erik Ballesteros, Ballesteros, it’ll, , Jonathan Clark, ” Ballesteros, Ana Diaz Artiles, Kalind Carpenter, Preston Rogers, Mirza Samnani Organizations: CNN, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, University of Michigan, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, Mercury, Command, NASA Space Shuttle, Challenger, NASA's, NASA NASA, Russian Sokol, International Space, SpaceX, Armstrong Operations, Boeing, Orion, Space, Space Center, Extravehicular Mobility, UPI, Jet Propulsion, SuperLimbs, Neurology, Space Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Texas, Swiss Locations: Tranquility, Russian, Washington ,, Washington, Japan, Mars . China
SpaceX is set to return its fourth operational crew mission from the International Space Station on Friday, with the quartet of astronauts due to splash down in the company's capsule off the coast of Florida. The company's Crew Dragon spacecraft "Freedom" is scheduled to undock from the ISS at 12:05 p.m. ET to begin the trip back to Earth, with splashdown expected at around 4:55 p.m. Crew-4 includes NASA astronauts Bob Hines, Kjell Lindgren and Jessica Watkins, as well as European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti. The mission launched in April for a six-month stay on the orbiting research laboratory.
Oct 14 (Reuters) - The fourth long-duration astronaut team launched by SpaceX to the International Space Station (ISS) safely returned to Earth on Friday, splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean off Florida after nearly six months of research aboard the orbital outpost. The SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule dubbed Freedom, carrying three U.S. NASA astronauts and an Italian crewmate from the European Space Agency, parachuted into the sea at the conclusion of a five-hour autonomous flight home from the ISS. Camera shots from inside the crew compartment showed the four strapped in their seats, garbed in helmeted white-and-black spacesuits. Applause from the SpaceX flight control center in suburban Los Angeles was heard over the webcast. During their 170 days aboard the space station, the crew orbited Earth 2,720 times - about once every 90 minutes - to log some 72 million miles (116 million km) in space, according to NASA.
The astronauts — NASA’s Kjell Lindgren, Bob Hines and Jessica Watkins, as well as Italian astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti with the European Space Agency — were scheduled to depart from the space station aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule Thursday morning. Aerospace company SpaceX developed the Crew Dragon spacecraft under a $2.6 billion contract with NASA as part of the Commercial Crew Program. SpaceX renewed orbital human spaceflight capabilities from US soil in 2020 with the launch of its Demo-2 mission, which carried two NASA astronauts to the space station. The Crew-4 astronauts’ return to Earth comes less than a week after the Crew-5 astronauts arrived on a separate SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule. Since SpaceX developed the Crew Dragon under a fixed-price commercial contract, however, it retains ownership over the vehicle.
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