What Happens to Your Body After a Year in Space

If we’re ever to go beyond the moon, one thing is sure: NASA will need to fortify the human body.

After a record stay in space, astronaut Scott Kelly grew 1.5 inches due to a lack of gravity. He faces a greater risk of cancer than most earth-bound folks due to radiation exposure that’s 20 times higher in space. His bones are less dense than they used to be, and his heart is likely smaller.

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“It felt like I had been up there my whole life, you know, after about the first six months,” Kelly said in a NASA video following his March 1 return from the International Space Station. “I’m definitely encouraged on our ability to go even longer.”

Kelly spent 340 days aboard the ISS on his fourth mission to space, along with Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko. Over his entire career, Kelly has spent 520 days in space. His twin brother, retired astronaut Mark Kelly, is providing data to help quantify the effect of a year in space on a person who is almost identical genetically.

Humans aren’t engineered for long-term space travel, which makes Kelly’s Year in Space mission a key component of NASA’s efforts to mitigate the harsh effects. If it doesn’t succeed, missions to Mars and any plans for supply or mining operations on the moon won’t be feasible. A round trip to Mars is expected to last more than 500 days.

Here are some of the things that happen to the body in space, which NASA needs to understand better:

 

 

 

 

 

This article was written by Justin Bachman, legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network.