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  • Go to UniverseUnboxed.com to learn about SciShow science kits!

  • And stick around to the end of this episode to hear more about this exciting new SciShow project!

  • [ ♪ Intro ]

  • Astronauts have to clear a lot of bars to get to space.

  • Education, physical fitness...we expect our space explorers to be the best of the best.

  • But they're still human.

  • And sometimes, humans can be picky eaters.

  • So not only does the food we send on space missions have to be lightweight, shelf-stable,

  • and safe for eating inside a space capsule,

  • it has to taste at least okay.

  • So, scientists have come up with really creative ways to keep astronauts well fed for days and

  • months at a time.

  • Some of the stories of their success have been exaggerated though.

  • But even some of the misconceptions can tell us something about the challenges of eating in space.

  • First up is the belief that NASA developed the powdered drink mix Tang specifically for space.

  • The famous friendship between Tang and NASA goes back to 1962.

  • That year, John Glenn became the first American to orbit the Earth.

  • And while the world watched on television,

  • he drank a powdered beverage out of a pouch labeledorange drink.”

  • That was Tang.

  • From then on, NASA and Tang were forever married in the public imagination.

  • But Tang was already available as a consumer product,

  • just one that hadn't really caught on yet.

  • For early astronauts, however, the flavored powder was a boon.

  • See on early space missions, drinking water was either stored in metal tanks or made from fuel cells.

  • Hydrogen fuel cells generate electricity by joining together hydrogen and oxygen,

  • and as a byproduct, they make water.

  • Either way, space water tasted like metal.

  • And Tang could cover up that taste.

  • And as a bonus, it also offered astronauts a few vitamins.

  • So NASA went all in on Tang.

  • They repackaged it in a microgravity-friendly pouch, but other than that it was the same product.

  • Astronauts just had to add water, stick in a straw, and drink.

  • While NASA didn't invent Tang, the two did enjoy a fruitful relationship,

  • in fact, they're together to this day.

  • Now the second misconception is the idea that everything in space is freeze-dried,

  • and there's nonormalfood at all.

  • It's true that astronauts eat a lot of weird stuff in space.

  • Back in the day, they squeezed puréed meals out of what looked like toothpaste tubes,

  • and ate it cold.

  • Even now, after decades of space food R&D,

  • astronauts still eat a lot of re-hydrated food out of airtight pouches.

  • But these days, they also eat a lot of normal things.

  • For instance, they can eat fresh fruit, at least for the first few days of a mission,

  • while it's actually fresh.

  • On holidays, like Christmas and Thanksgiving, they get turkey.

  • The International Space Station even has the occasional pizza night.

  • Today, there are around 200 items on NASA's space menu.

  • It includes things like scrambled eggs, fish casserole, and nuts.

  • Being able to choose from lots of foods they like is a real morale booster for astronauts.

  • And their psychological health is important, especially on long missions.

  • Still, it is true that most of the astronauts' food has to be carefully prepared and processed,

  • unlike on Earth.

  • There's typically no fridge or freezer in space, so all food has to be shelf-stable.

  • That means it's often freeze-dried, powdered, or packed in airtight pouches.

  • And it's taken a lot of work to figure out what that food should even be.

  • At first, NASA adopted army food,

  • but it turns out the high salt and fat that's good for soldiers isn't great for astronauts.

  • So, food scientists have spent years testing and modifying foods

  • to come up with today's vast menu for space.

  • And finally, even though most astronaut food is processed,

  • it doesn't look like that foil-wrapped chalky stuff you buy in museum gift shops.

  • You know, those blocks of so-called space ice cream that do not resemble ice cream at all?

  • That stuff has never been to space.

  • It does have a connection to real space food, but a very distant one.

  • Freeze-dried ice cream actually was developed for spaceflight way back in the Apollo era.

  • Engineers made it by freezing regular ice cream and using a vacuum pump to evaporate the ice,

  • thus preserving the ice cream, sort of.

  • It worked well enough to at least make it into the plans at some point.

  • A press release that went out before Apollo 7 said that freeze-dried ice cream was going to space.

  • It just never got there.

  • The astronauts on that mission say they never saw it, and it hasn't gone to space since.

  • The only ice cream astronauts get in space is the occasional scoop of the real stuff,

  • which sometimes goes up in a freezer intended for taking medical samples back to earth.

  • We've come a long way since astronauts were sucking food out of tubes with straws.

  • It's taken a lot of ingenious ideas to get here,

  • and the future of space travel will need even more creativity.

  • Like space farming.

  • Yes, scientists are now working on growing food in space,

  • since that's the only real way we can feed astronauts on long-distance missions.

  • It's no surprise that all this space-age science leads to some confusion,

  • but it's all in the name of keeping astronauts healthy and happy.

  • Bon Appétit!

  • Ah! Before you go, we have a very exciting announcement.

  • SciShow has just launched Universe Unboxed, our very own line of science experiment kits.

  • Universe Unboxed kits are designed for kids elementary school-aged and older,

  • and they're packed full of fun experiments.

  • Each kit teaches specific science concepts.

  • Not only that, though, in each one, we also explain how scientists use those concepts

  • and how they matter in the real world.

  • TheDefying Gravitykit is all about creating illusions that teach you something about the world.

  • Like making water float, which actually demonstrates the properties of water molecules.

  • Or making a bottle burp, which shows how temperature and air pressure are related.

  • Each experiment comes with a video demonstration.

  • And each video gives YOU the chance to guess what happened before explaining the science.

  • To buy one of these kits for yourself or your favorite kiddo,

  • or to find them in a store near you, check out UniverseUnboxed.com.

  • [ ♪ Outro ]

Go to UniverseUnboxed.com to learn about SciShow science kits!

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