Shenzhou-21 crew push frontiers of space in medicine


The Shenzhou-21 crew members aboard the Tiangong space station have made significant strides in terms of space medical experiments and physical science research over the past week, while also maintaining the station’s habitable environment, according to the China Manned Space Agency.

In the field of space medicine, the crew focused on understanding the psychological and physiological effects of long-duration spaceflight.

They used laptops to complete tests on “trust and coordination mechanisms” and “human-machine trust,” which are crucial for designing future spacecraft interfaces and ensuring efficient teamwork between astronauts and automated systems, China Media Group reported on Sunday night.

A key advancement involved the use of the space Raman spectrometer, a device that identifies molecular compositions by shining a laser on a sample.

The astronauts used this tool to analyse metabolic components in urine samples. The data collected will be used to refine medical standards for monitoring astronaut health in orbit.

To explore how the brain perceives the physical world without gravity, they also conducted “microgravity intuitive physics behaviour” experiments.

Leveraging electroencephalogram equipment, which records electrical activity along the scalp, the crew gathered data for “meta-cognitive monitoring” and “group brain cognitive-emotion analysis” studies, helping scientists on Earth understand how the absence of gravity alters brain function and group dynamics, the report noted.

In the microgravity physical science domain, the team maintained experiment racks, replacing sampling covers in the combustion science rack and swapping samples in the fluid physics rack.

To safeguard their own health, the astronauts underwent medical checks including intraocular pressure tests, fundus exams and cardiopulmonary assessments. — Xinhua

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Universities closed to save power amid energy crisis
16 years’ jail for Aussie hitmen who killed compatriot
Showers bring early pop of colour to the urban jungle
Race to fill tanks before petrol hike
Rains trigger deadly dump collapse
Allies begin military drills
Kim lauds women as ‘solid buttress of revolution’
New devotees to ancient blades
Govt mulls removing fuel duties as conflict hits supplies
Beijing’s Middle East envoy urges peace

Others Also Read