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Doctors for the space agency are closely monitoring the health and diets of Butch Wilmore, 61, and Sunita Williams, 59, after a recent photo showed Williams looking jarringly gaunt.
Nearly 250 miles above our planet, NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore, 61, and Sunita Williams, 59, are currently relying on ingenuity and soup made from recycled urine to endure their longer-than ...
Health concerns started to grow after new photos of two NASA astronauts stranded in space were released ... the two Americans can be seen eating dinner that consisted of uncooked pizza and various ...
Frank J. Roberts, Apollo engineer demonstrating how astronauts eat to ARCS treasurer, Marion DeFore, Calif., 1965. Several of the food issues from the Mercury missions were addressed for the later Gemini missions (1965–1966). Tubes (often heavier than the foods they contained) were abandoned, gelatin coatings were added to the bite-sized ...
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During the 1970s, astronauts ate regular ice cream on the Skylab space station; it has also been eaten on the International Space Station. [4] Skylab had a freezer that was used for regular ice cream, [5] and occasionally Space Shuttle and International Space Station astronauts have also taken regular ice cream into the space station.
“They have to eat a lot of calories up there, at least 3,000,” says the specialist, “and it’s very easy for them to get tired of the food and just not want to eat as much. But they have to.
In 1972, astronauts on board Skylab 3 ate modified versions of Space Food Sticks to test their "gastrointestinal compatibility". [3] Space Food Sticks disappeared from North American supermarket shelves in the 1980s. They were revived by Retrofuture Products, of Port Washington, NY in 2006. Two flavors, chocolate and peanut butter, were released.