To study the effects of micro-gravity in space, NASA pays test subjects to lie still for weeks on end

Test Subject in the Zero-Gravity Study courtesy Wyle Integrated Science and Engineering

When humans eventually live on the moon and Mars, the discomforts of eating freeze-dried food and drinking our own urine will hardly be our only space nuisances. Apparently, our feet will tingle, we'll get headaches and toothaches, our eyes will be runny, and we'll have chronically stuffy noses.

Scientists have a pretty good notion of what will happen to your body when you're walking on the moon or traveling gravity-free for two years en route to Mars -- thanks to a cadre of bed-ridden test subjects. Twice in the past year, self-described "pillownaut" Heather Archuletta agreed to lie still for what some Americans might consider a nice break -- she signed up to snooze in the name of science.

NASA needs more volunteers for its bed-rest study, which helps doctors understand what a lack of gravity does to the body. You can earn $160 per day, plus all travel and lodging expenses, if you make the cut. Five grand a month to lay down and play Xbox? It might sound too good to be true, but beware -- leaky eyes, throbbing feet, and bed pans await you.

"You have this notion in your head of, 'Oh, I can do it.' But it is strange to feel everything that changes," said Archuletta, 39. "You don't think about it; oh, God, you just feel pain. But when you learn why the body compensates the way it does, it is actually very enlightening."

Lying on your back for long periods simulates what happens to your muscles and bones in space. When you have no gravity pulling you down, your muscles don't have to work hard to move you across the room, and your bones don't have much weight to support, so they weaken. People living in micro-gravity have to exercise frequently to avoid that, which is why astronauts on the International Space Station are getting the new "Combined Operational Load Bearing External Resistance Treadmill" (named for comedian Stephen Colbert) later this year.

Zero-Gravity Simulation:  courtesy Wyle Integrated Science and Engineering
In micro- or zero-gravity environments, your blood thickens; blood and other fluids pool in your head, causing headaches, toothaches, and a stuffy nose; your feet get tingly, because less blood flows to them; and your eyes might leak tears for no reason. These are just some of the weird side effects.

But most people who experience those effects get the compensation of actually being in space. Why would a healthy person volunteer to go through the same thing in a bed on boring old Earth?

"I did have a couple of those moments where I was like, 'Geez, what have I done?" Archuletta said. "But it's a real privilege to get in ... I am passionate about this in a way I haven't been for an office job in a lot of years."

In the lunar study, you lie down for 21 days, with your body tilted so your feet support one-sixth of your weight, which mimics gravity on the moon. The longer-term study simulates the lack of gravity you would experience in a space station sojourn or while traveling to Mars. In that study, Archuletta lay in bed for 50 days, with her head declined, six degrees below the rest of her body. It would have been 90 days, but Hurricane Ike forced the evacuation of Galveston Island, where the tests take place.

Other than the persistent headaches at first, it wasn't too bad, she said -- she got to stay in bed and watch movies. But with a bed pan. "After you get used to that, it's just the same four or five minutes out of your day that it always was," she said.

Bed-rest study subjects have to pass the Air Force medical exam, and can't be on any medication. They cannot imbibe alcohol or caffeine, which might make the 16-hour "awake times" a little less fun. But subjects get paid to play Monopoly, watch movies, and catch up on reading, and they get a massage every other day, so it's not exactly punishment, either.

Though it's meant to study micro-gravity, the research could also help pregnant women who have been ordered to stay in bed for medical reasons, or people whose injuries or disabilities render them immobile.

Archuletta started a blog, The Pillow Astronaut, where chronicles her sometimes-bizarre experiences and answers the persistent question: Why would anyone in her right mind do this?

"I really want to see us get back to the moon and to Mars. I want to see that in my lifetime," she said.

Now at least she knows what it will feel like.

Test Subject in the Lunar Gravity Study:  courtesy Wyle Integrated Science and Engineering

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6 Comments

Ok, so among the people in my office we have two questions, who is giving the massage, and will our wives, kids and mother in-laws be able to contact us........

There are cases where pregnant women have to undergo essentially this same process -- although possibly not for the same length of time.

Wonder if theses poor women could get on this program -- since they are trapped in this situation anyway.

Wow, that job would be perfect for my teenage son. All he needs is a TV, his laptop and his IPhone to text and he could lay comatose for years and years probably. LOL

RT
www.anonymity.2ya.com

My brother did this last summer! We visited him a few times while he was there. It was kinda funny, and yes that is a lot of money to get paid to lay around. He did a lot of reading and some programming. If I didn't have kids I would have loved to take the job myself.

Once you finish your time you have to go through some physical therapy to build up your strength. I hope they are getting some good information out of the study.

r kids allowed to do it cause i'd totally do it during the summer!!!!!!!!!!

NASA always needed to invest in this field of technology because otherwise astronauts could not survive to the conditions of the space. They developed a mattress with memory foam and I think a pillow with memory foam.
http://mattressesguide.com/nasa-memory-foam/



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