Astronauts may have some tough jobs
in orbit - like building a $100 billion International Space Station - but
apparently getting a good night's sleep isn't one of them.
In fact, sleeping is pretty
comfy in space because you can slumber without gravity's incessant pull,
according to Canadian astronaut Julie Payette, who has been living aboard the linked
space station and shuttle Endeavour for more than a week.
"We sleep very well in space. Can
you imagine?" Payette
told reporters in a recent interview broadcast by NASA. "We have a sleeping
bag each, and when you get into it you float in the sleeping bag. The sleeping
bag floats in the module. So all you have to do is just attach it somewhere,
which is a good idea by the way because during the night while your sleeping
you might start drifting and end up somewhere you didn't intend to be in the
first place."
Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata, who is returning home aboard Endeavour after living
on the station for 4 1/2 months, has said that anchoring yourself at night is key because otherwise you might bump into sensitive
computers and equipment and switch them on accidentally.
Some astronauts have complained in
the past that the first night's sleep in space can be fitful because their
minds are racing ahead to the coming mission's complexity. But Endeavour's
six-man, one-woman crew is in the homestretch of a 16-day spaceflight that
included five challenging spacewalks to deliver spare parts and a Japanese
experiment porch to the space station.
About the only thing missing,
Payette said, is a shower. The thing that makes sleeping in space so
comfortable - that weightless feeling - also makes it impossible to start the
next morning with
a refreshing shower.
"Of course, we're in weightlessness,
so a showerhead with water dripping on top of your head would not work,"
Payette said. "We don't have a shower. We don't even have a faucet or a tap."
NASA's first space station, Skylab,
and Russia's Mir space station did include a shower facility for crewmembers.
On Skylab, astronauts floated into the shower, pulled up a privacy curtain, and
were able to shower in water from a push-button hose and dry off using a vacuum
system.
But on the International Space
Station and NASA shuttles, astronauts have a squirt gun that shoots water and a
wash cloth. They also have a special rinse-less shampoo to keep their hair
clean.
"We wash like we would if we were on
an expedition or a camping trip or something," Payette explained. "It works."
Payette and her crewmates aboard
Endeavour are slated to leave the space station on Tuesday and land Friday at
NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
SPACE.com is providing continuous
coverage of STS-127 with reporter Clara Moskowitz and senior editor Tariq Malik
in New York. Moskowitz contributed to this report.Click here for mission
updates and SPACE.com's live NASA TV video feed.