In Space-Shenzhou-18/Experiments
In Space - Recent (China Manned Space Agency - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew taking photos, checking equipment in lab module with decorations
2. Corridor connecting lab modules
3. Various of equipment, sample retrieving work in progress
4. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew opening hatch, equipment moving
5. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew debugging experiment box
6. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew conducting cognitive researches
7. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew working, exercising, cleaning lab module, waving to camera
The Shenzhou-18 mission crew has been meticulously carrying out a variety of experimental tasks on the Tiangong space station that may shape our understanding of material science and low-friction engineering, as well as forming a foundation for effective psychological monitoring in space.
China on April 25 launched the Shenzhou-18 manned spaceship that sent the three astronauts to the Chinese space station for a six-month mission.
Last week, the mission crew finished retrieving an extravehicular exposure device used in experiments that expose materials to outer-space conditions. The team also completed sample recovery and storage.
In another ongoing experiment carried out on behalf of the National Natural Science Fund, a solid-liquid composite lubrication material was placed inside a box, which was also placed outside the cabin to be exposed to space. Researchers hope this environment will let it achieve "super lubrication", or near-zero wear of mechanical movement. The experiment may also provide insights into how lubricants impact mechanical processes over time in an outer-space scenario.
The mission crew also carried out work last week related to the real-time monitoring technology of astronauts' mental workload and adaptive automated human-machine collaboration technology based on cognitive engineering.
Specifically, the crew members used equipment including electroencephalography (EEG) caps to complete mental workload tasks and simulated space driving tasks, and collected EEG data, task performance data and subjective scale data throughout the experiment, allowing researchers to further clarify the influence of long-term in-orbit flight on mental workload and its mechanism and establish relevant monitoring models.
In addition, the crew carried out bone metabolism protection and emergency decision-making ability assessments in the orbiting space station.
In Space-Shenzhou-18/Experiments
Dateline : Recent
Location : In Space
Duration : 2'21
In Space - Recent (China Manned Space Agency - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew taking photos, checking equipment in lab module with decorations
2. Corridor connecting lab modules
3. Various of equipment, sample retrieving work in progress
4. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew opening hatch, equipment moving
5. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew debugging experiment box
6. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew conducting cognitive researches
7. Various of Shenzhou-18 crew working, exercising, cleaning lab module, waving to camera
The Shenzhou-18 mission crew has been meticulously carrying out a variety of experimental tasks on the Tiangong space station that may shape our understanding of material science and low-friction engineering, as well as forming a foundation for effective psychological monitoring in space.
China on April 25 launched the Shenzhou-18 manned spaceship that sent the three astronauts to the Chinese space station for a six-month mission.
Last week, the mission crew finished retrieving an extravehicular exposure device used in experiments that expose materials to outer-space conditions. The team also completed sample recovery and storage.
In another ongoing experiment carried out on behalf of the National Natural Science Fund, a solid-liquid composite lubrication material was placed inside a box, which was also placed outside the cabin to be exposed to space. Researchers hope this environment will let it achieve "super lubrication", or near-zero wear of mechanical movement. The experiment may also provide insights into how lubricants impact mechanical processes over time in an outer-space scenario.
The mission crew also carried out work last week related to the real-time monitoring technology of astronauts' mental workload and adaptive automated human-machine collaboration technology based on cognitive engineering.
Specifically, the crew members used equipment including electroencephalography (EEG) caps to complete mental workload tasks and simulated space driving tasks, and collected EEG data, task performance data and subjective scale data throughout the experiment, allowing researchers to further clarify the influence of long-term in-orbit flight on mental workload and its mechanism and establish relevant monitoring models.
In addition, the crew carried out bone metabolism protection and emergency decision-making ability assessments in the orbiting space station.
ID : 8397027
Published : 2024-09-29 17:49
Last Modified : 2024-09-29 19:56:46
Source : Other
Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
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