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  • NASA astronaut Scott Kelly is returning to Earth today, after spending nearly a year

  • aboard the International Space Station. Kelly’s extended stay on the orbital lab was for NASA’s

  • year-long mission. It’s an experiment to see how long-term spaceflight affects the

  • human body.

  • The idea behind the mission is to help NASA better prepare for trips into deep space.

  • A crewed mission to Mars, for instance, is going to take upwards of several months. NASA

  • wants to know how astronauts will fare during these missions. They also want to figure out

  • how to mitigate any negative health effects along the way and when the astronauts get

  • there. Kelly collected several body samples prior to and during his flight to document

  • how his body has been changing.

  • NASA also had a unique opportunity with Kelly, since he has an identical twin, Mark Kelly,

  • who is a former astronaut himself. Mark is serving as a “controlsubject in this

  • experiment by remaining on Earth. Since the twins are genetically identical, samples from

  • the brothers can be compared to show just how much Scott’s body has adapted to living

  • in microgravity for so long. Researchers can then try to tease out if there is a genetic

  • basis for some of the health changes people experience in space.

  • As for what those body changes will be, NASA will find out once Kelly gets back to Earth.

  • But the agency has a pretty good idea of what theyll see, based on the experiences of

  • other astronauts. Many people who live in space experience problems with their cardiovascular

  • system; microgravity causes bodily fluids like blood to float up into the torso region,

  • so veins in the legs weaken and can’t contract blood as easily. Astronauts also have a hard

  • time with their spatial orientation and balance, since they don’t have the same cues in space

  • to tell them which way is up. And people also report vision changes, potentially due to

  • fluid building up in the brain behind the eyes. It’s something that’s affected Kelly

  • during his time in space.

  • [KELLY] You know, I have a little bit of, i think, effect on my vision that is very

  • consistent with what I experienced last time.

  • There are a whole host of other physical changes that Scott may experience tooincluding

  • changes in his gut microbiome and how his RNA is expressed. His muscles and bones are

  • likely a lot weaker too; on Earth, wework outthese systems just by standing and

  • walking as gravity pulls us down. Without gravity, astronauts have to compensate as

  • much as possible by doing specific exercises.

  • Once Kelly is back on solid ground, NASA will try to figure out how space has really affected

  • him. First Kelly will do a field test as soon as he gets back to Earth to see how well he

  • adjusts to a gravity environment again. Hell then undergo months of sampling and medical

  • tests, the results of which won’t be released until at least 2017. But Kelly will still

  • get to enjoy the comforts of Earth as the experiment continues.

  • [KELLY] When I get back to Houston, I’ll go to the astronaut crew quarters at the Johnson

  • Space Center for several hours of medical tests that end at about 3 in the morning,

  • then i’m going to go home and jump in my pool.

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly is returning to Earth today, after spending nearly a year

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