tv Documentary RT July 31, 2024 9:30pm-10:01pm EDT
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a link and a script in the region, the hello everyone. my name is ego pitts. girls, and this is the 2nd episode of us space show, stall, bound. today we are in most go on this time we will talk about the company, whoever sold the gun on these people and we will talk about rushes, pause to the stalls, i'm most impulsively. today we will have a live connection with the commander of the i s s. crew all the content and code, but not just hit the
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day people who are truly passionate about space of a cabinet with me have a red square for the 1st time in the history of television. and some our program provides an opportunity to pose questions to a real cosmonaut who is currently on board the international space station. i don't think we will have to communication sessions on a short break between them. so when they over to station falls into shadow as the goals and what size being while we're waiting for the signal from the i says something that's remember a person who isn't defined going to it. and so now you're, your call in, in this name is known worldwide. good afternoon. the soviet union announced it had launched what big number to the,
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[000:00:00;00] the, the parson space, fine, our travelers, space associates. right now i am being informed that the i ss has establish a connection with us, which means this time. so the main part of the last all bound episode, hello, hello, yours as ways we can hear you well and see you perfectly clear as i'm even a bit envious of you standing on red square right now. let's move straight to the questions. i love what types of problems that credit on the i ss and what are the challenges of crowding thoughts and space meanings. hello generally is leafy vegetables despite their small size, they are very rich in vitamins. additionally,
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these vegetables have relatively for throwing seasons from planting seeds to getting leaves. it takes less than a month and salad crops. of course we've also grown weeds, but the ratio of audible to non edible parts is about 50 percent. we need to deal with the straws and disposal is a big challenge in space. it is clear that for a mission to mars, we will need to grow not justly few vegetables, but also other types of festivals, like carrots, tomatoes, and peppers. i think the most challenging aspect is that when we grow something on earth, we use a hydroponic method without soil assisted by gravity. here, there is no gravity, only weightlessness assigned just have to come up with various trips to deal with this. thank you very much for your own. so let's continue with that questions. please don't commit to the printer again. mr. continental hello greetings. from your deal, i have
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a question for you. i would like to know what changes in personality have you experienced during long missions. what were you like before the flight and how did you change after the flight? thank you, but you know, it's hard to say on the one hand, i understood what i would be doing. and what i would see. i had been preparing for a long time for the 1st flight. the amount of training helped me create a model in my minds, which was very close to what i actually saw during my space flights for probably the most important thing for me, was not just to see or experience something part of what to successfully complete the flight program so please tell us how would you spend your dream vacation? it's a good question. i would just spend time by the portfolio specific method reach. hello mr. continental. please tell us the prank each other on the station. and if you play some tricks to joke around with each other than how it's very hard to go without jokes here on the station. so we are all cheerful people with cheese each
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other and a front the way. we joke around and do pranks from us, keep that all on the stations. we're very cheerful, people and joke around all the time. as i say, what happens on the, i assess, stays on the i s s who has asked the question yet. you haven't, please go ahead. not said of me to say hello mr. continent. i would like to ask what the space sound like to you. i mean the moment when you are flying, when you are already in for bed, what does space sound like to you? when i'm inside the spacecraft station or shift, it's quite noisy because the systems are working and the ventilation system contributed significantly to creating the noise. when i go out into open space, sound doesn't spread in the vacuum, but inside the space suit, the systems that support my life for working. and i can hear them that if you're inside the station and someone is working outside, you can hear a scraping noise on the home. it's quite audible inside and can cause some
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unpleasant feelings. mr. clinton go, considering your prolong, stay on the i assess. i want to ask about your personal thoughts or possibly observations regarding the potential existence of intelligent life beyond. you know, i'm absolutely convinced that besides our lives there are other forms of civilization, but in what form, i do not know that i am convinced that we're not alone in the universe. it feels like some secrets of being kept from us. please, another question. and everything else. hello, mr. cunningham. i know that dogs, cats, monkeys, and even cockroaches have been in space. what about bird? how would they feel in waitlist conditions? and have you ever tried bringing a bird on board as an experiment? well, i've never brought up for it, but there has been experiments with jumping these coils. these experiments started more than 30 years ago on the mir space station,
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who managed to get some living checks and spaces, but unfortunately they did not survive to adulthood. some scientists believe this was due to the tricks inability to orient themselves in space with the white gloves this resulting in the disruption of their behavioral and feeding skills to determine the causes of these anomalies. acrylics berman was designed and a completely new incubator was created. a space flight involves a combination of factors that affect the living organisms. these include weightlessness, an overload during watching landing radiations and altered electromagnetic environments and unique's, micro biological conditions inside of the space station. the scientist, however, believe that the key factor here is weightlessness. so to test is contribution to change in quil embryos. they came up with a very special incubator consisting of 2 sections. in one of them, the x were comes to understand or conditions or for the space station. while in the
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other one, they were centrifuge, that is, some truthful force was used to create the same effect as gravity. the idea was that eggs that are not center fused would have the same abnormalities. and the eggs in the centrifuge would develop normally excuse permits is over, and the results are coming back to earth. science at all. yes, little questions please. hello, mr. continental, please tell us. do you meditate onboard the i ss if so, how does meditation help you? so to say in your work or in your relations with colleagues, you know, i've never tried meditation on board here or down on earth. but now that you've given me the idea, maybe i'll try it out one day. maybe that would be a great hope. what you're using, so that's off to today show. yes, please. good afternoon, mr. continental. is it true that crying is not allowed on board the i assess or is that a mist? well, i've never tried crying on board the i assess, but yes, you're correct. we and everything around us are in
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a state to console. weightlessness fluids are no exceptions. for cosmonaut, it starts to cry. i think i just surface tension will start pulling the tiers. it disappears right on their face, and it will keep growing in volume after breaking away from the face, the forms water spear will immediately find a new surface to moisten. it's so feel free to cry about that. yes, frank, come on. let's continue please. mr. clinton and cool, i have a technical question. what kind of water do cosmonaut stream do they drink spring water from containers or from a year in water? we generation system. i chosen so as will work it we seem to have a lot of knowledge. indeed, there are 3 types of water that we consume. first it's important water just the road like system. then it's water regenerated from condensate. and the 3rd type is water obtains quite regeneration from here. and we'll thank you very much for such
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a candid on so the more questions please. hello, mr. clinton echo, is it possible for humans to grow up in the conditions of the i s s, and what are the chances that in the future humans will grow up on such a space stations be born there? and it's a go up there to those. well, you know, i've never been part of an experiment like this, so i have no idea in this regard. i can't say anything here. the 1st communication session is over the long waiting for the next one out. but let's talk about the on assess the station has existed for over 25 years is the most expensive objects built one mind calling to buy in comparison is like 100 personally for scrolling scrapers and define it. that's just a totally spelled into wells. but the i says is in every site that's the true peak, about and time civilization. was that the history of the honest as type, smart to the russian modules, audio lowest back in 1998. today, the station is going to many components. a module was focused by the customer to
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constantine voters or shows us washington like inside that the simple you have both include everyone, some of the board, the i ss now i want to give you a short tour of the longest route through the station. let's go for floating through the m l m we're turning behind us is the service module where most of our working daily life takes place, including meals, sports station, maintenance and scientific experiments. and shows here where you're passing alongside the earth. let's move ahead to the f to be module. we're cargo storage. and now we're crossing the kind of conditional border where in the american segment, the little darker here,
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the, the we fly carefully to the form. here we need to take a 90 degree turn. and this is our gym. someone that works with the best view of the or did you can get the call to reach the we further forward then what do we see? this is the american segment. the lab module in our ship is dr. the upper port of node one on the we turn last 2, we entered into the most spacious module on the i ss the japanese module. it's so spacious that i can't grab onto anything right now. i'm far away from any wall. i'm just waiting until i reach the office at long for your return upward. now we're flying upwards. either the storage module and the japanese
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segment. we've now reached the end of our journey through the longest route of the i ss. of course, the i says is not the 1st base station before it was me at the end of the 1st space station in history. for tooth, i used to have a 100 people from 12 nations. so all the stations before that as well. let's take a look which english chief and this gives me his grade them. that's to the dances and it'll show nancy will use the luxury to do what you're going to accumulate. but his emotional miller was much phone for the strategy of we've had a spell as a company and also in reference to the,
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the amount of code and the, the, the push. but it usually means to reach city mutually to a to replace the origin was more of a sprinkler on with of course miss losses. so in your course mission the, the bill is so that's done. so you've got the feeling we have the mobile. can you give them the keyboard just to be sure, nobody else needs to be aware? usually it is. see by see, do i make a ok?
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those are just frequently gone. so those for me, the, the, the, you see the, when you mentioned the need of those, i do the, the creation of the space station from my point of view has been a great big, beautiful technological experiment. the still concise, same as for the i assess, it is a diplomatic vehicle for all of us. this is wonderful because the loser 6 of the needs and every step of noise. so they came to the
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dorms that i was in the community please. this demetrius, kate right now, being told we re establish the connection with the international space station with us right now is called an old component concord bias, s expedition 71 mission. come on to mr. come on and call you with us again. yes, i'm back with you here. we receive questions for our program from all over the country for some folks and you know, everyone has been able to come to red square today to also me person on a certain nick of a, a photographer. mm hm. from notice it, the record is a question for you. hello, my name is ana. i am from nose. i see this, i have a question. do you wave your hand when you fly out of your home then? and do your family members know that you're flying over russia and wave back at you? well, you probably know that there are multiple websites tracking the i assess flight trajectory over one or another settlements. you can even run such a search. so yes,
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we do fly over moscow quite often and i know that my son is in the studio with you and he can say whether he waved his hand when the i assess is flying over moscow. doc acts to who is a son of mystic on entering k or menu that you and you see where it says i'm testing. let's talk with you. so do you wave your hand to your dad when he's flying over? well, at times when i'm free from my studies and i tried attracting scores. great, wonderful, that's a nice surprise. is that perhaps a question you'd like to ask too. when are you coming home? on september 23rd, andre a leg of rich all according to plan. as planned, i've been listening to all these questions on something, they only come up with one. what do you do if you know these guys a g on your, in a space suit? well, that's yes, decide those the ones we have a special device for that called the vol. solve a device. this has to cost,
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and you can put your nose in between those costs and scratches douglas. and i'd really like to know how you perform 1st aid procedures and a wait list. environment will go to the got the we undergo 1st aid and self a training while preparing for the flights. so if anything happens we can provide help by ourselves. and so, i mean, if you got a lot of 1st aid kits and a lot of specialized medical equipments level, don't yet see others. we use the mission crew even has a medical officer got meeting scheduled. so we all undergo some very serious medical training. if anything happens, we can always contact our flight doctor, ladies by means of a video and audio call. we can get a consultation with the qualified professional from earth. that's in case we can take care of the problem. we're self. see which is products assignment of what the that going for group. and if i may expand this question that being any emergencies when crew members from different countries came to each other's, i talked about a chat, a little bit more financially. you're also global. it was right, of course,
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many times, as you know, there was a catastrophe in 2003 with the space shuttle columbia. the entire crew died. and so for a long time, new crews were delivered to the i assessed by a russian. so i use space craft level level because we use this concept mister kind of to go, could you tell us what's your typical day like on the, i assess how is this week different from the previous one? well usually we get up around 6 am and we finish a working day at 9 30 pm. this week will be different because we will be dedicated to loading the cargo space craft progress would be outdated equipment and household waste. in a month, this cargo space craft is scheduled to be unblocked and a new progress will come to this node, considering the current technological advances so far, is it likely that all people in the future will be free to travel? for example, in orbit around the earth or even sort of planets. and what happened in the near
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future for a long time from now? i think that this future isn't so far off. i'd say that probably very likely all this will happen within the next 30 to 50 years. good afternoon. i've got a question. what would you like scientists to consider when developing equipment or materials that are delivered to the i ss to revise meals or the packaging? maybe you'd like some personal items to be delivered or you'd like adjustments to some equipment so that it's easier to use it. so that's a good question. you know, i can certainly do a comparison with what we now have on the. i assess almost all the i assess modules are multi functional. that means that we exercise each, use the restroom as well as do some technical work and run experiments in one module. they're also cabins for sleep interest to make it more comfortable. we'd like to have specialized modules for each specific task and the space station of the future must be self sufficient. it must depend less on the earth than the i assess currently does that includes water processing,
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oxygen supplied development of the equipment for waste disposal? you are absolutely right about that. the manufacturer has some spare parts on the stations. of course, we'd like to have enough simple domestic items like a coffee machine, kaufman off fly coffee very much when we don't have enough of it. and it's instant coffee here. thank you very much. let's try to ask one more. you woke up. what was your most interesting assignment? the most interesting assignment was originally carried out for the bio printing experiments to it's very exciting and it was the 1st time it was done ever in the world. i printed an oregon with a memory effect, and it went on to feed into a tu just means we'll be able to print such hollow tubular organs in space in the future. you know, causing or is a very special kind of job. the best of the best to reach and everyone who is ever flown is
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a hero of russia. they continue working in space to make it one day accessible for all of us. let's take a look at how they do it eastern and what kind of experiments that conducting a pool of the i ss to each mankind as a result of its activities as a result of burning minerals, actively satcher rates, the atmosphere with various gases that exist in nature but are not so intensively emitted. this problem has really started to be raised at the highest levels. we need to do it all the time. we need to see who is admitting how much where it is disappearing to and what to measure greenhouse gases with tony. there are a lot of devices, laboratories where you can take a sample, we need to measure all over the planet and at different altitudes. and of course, there are not enough stations. we are talking not about dozens or even hundreds of station with some glue. naturally, we come to the conclusion that we need some space based means. the 1st step was to create a device for the i ss,
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and with the 1st device has the beautiful name. ruth solved, got the mermaid. here is one of its samples. so this time it was delivered to the i ss and to 1007 old all the optics. all the electronics are packed in a box like this on a bracket for installation on the port whole looking down. and here you can even see there are buttons that the cosmo not used to launch the measurement program. the edition for youth or excuse me, means we will talk about the btn experiments to the name implies that this is some kind of toy that is supposed to measure neutron flux is in the orbit, where the i ss flies. we are looking at space rays in this indirect way. oh, it's interesting to look at the physics and the surroundings of the earth because of the way the magnetic field is arranged. the way the radiation belts are arranged, elizabeth plus, we should also add solar flares because particles charged by flowers, also generate neutrons. and we can study this generation process. took
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a sense of what i've discussed on the practical side of things. this is about radiation assessments, because neutrons have a very high damage factor for each type of particle. there are factors that are then recalculated into harm to the body. neutrons have a very high damage factor from the in addition to measuring radiation, there is an additional factor that neutrons can be used for searching for water on mars from us. we actually found that the used would you give up with neighborly? there is a very curious phenomenon called the cosmic x ray background. so far it's parameters are not exactly know because most much our experiment is designed to measure this phenomenon more precisely. what will it do? first, it is a very curious phenomenon from the point of view that it represents the radiation of all sources in the universe. the telescopes cannot see this monitor will be
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installed by the cosmonaut. so on the outer surface of the i ss it will constantly look at the zenith. we'll just smart that was a neat and dusting $72.00 days to it will have viewed somewhere around 80 percent of the entire sky. the full color was me just to percent of the nationally for today. i would like to talk to everyone who joined the table in red square a many times to all the content and come for taking the time to speak to us from the international space station is that will be good for you, mr. come in. i can thank you very much for your time. thank you for the interesting questions. thank you very much. yeah, i'd like to remind you that you can send your questions. we'll call some of those to our email. let me go pest control for this job. i'm project by everyone's them back on
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the i look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given it by human beings, except we're so shorter is that conflict with the 1st law show alignment of the patient. we should be very careful about visual intelligence at the point, obviously is to place a truck or rather than fit the area. i mean with the artificial intelligence, we have somebody in the team and the robot must protect this phone. existence was on
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