Khaleej Times

Moon tourists risk rough ride: Experts

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paris — Non-stop vomiting, a puffy face and the constant need to pee: Volunteers for a week-long loop around the Moon may be in for a rough ride even if all goes to plan.

In the week that Space-X announced it would launch two tourists to skirt Earth’s satellite in 2018, experts agreed the health effects would chiefly be minor and short-lived. These are the stakes: “Like every single astronaut who goes into space, they’re going to get... very bad motion sickness,” Daniel Grant of the Centre for Altitude Space and Extreme Environmen­t Medicine in London, said.

This is because the balance sensors in the inner ear which tell us which way is up and down, get all confused in zero gravity.

Some astronauts get over it within hours, while others need days — clearly a problem for a trip lasting only a week.

In bad news for selfie enthusiast­s, another symptom is a puffy face (and thinner legs) as body fluids, pulled downward by gravity on Earth, spreading out and upward in the weightless environmen­t. This can also lead to profuse urination — tricky in an environmen­t where everything, including liquids, float.

Bones and muscles will change too, say the experts, although a week is probably too short to cause lasting weakness. Other annoyances on the journey could include unexpected claustroph­obic freakouts, and a disturbed sleep cycle which will translate into heavy jetlag back on home soil.

A potentiall­y graver, but less likely, peril is elevated cancer risk from exposure to radiation outside Earth’s protective magnetosph­ere.

Spaceships have built-in protection against radiation, which is hundreds of times higher than on Earth.

Radiation doses for a short trip like this one would be low, “but that does not mean there is no risk at all”, said Thomas Berger, a radiation biology expert at the German DLR space agency.

It grows with so-called solar particle events — massive ejections of protons from the Sun which can deliver highly concentrat­ed doses of radiation.

These events, which can last two days, are unpredicta­ble but rare.

But if humans were somehow to get caught in the blast, high exposure could cause radiation sickness leaving the travellers too ill to control their vessel. In an extreme case, they could die. The main danger to space tourists, observers agree, is spacecraft failure.

“In my view, the biggest risks are technical failure on blastoff, during the voyage, or on reentry into Earth’s atmosphere,” said Martin Giard of France’s National Institute for Earth Sciences and Astronomy. — AFP

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