they adapt to the gravity and your reduced wait, so therefore can carry less weight and become weaker
Microgravity (the very low gravity found in orbit) is insufficient to prevent loss of bone structure during a long period of time in space. One way to compensate is by stressing the skeleton through vigorous exercise.
The cast of MicroGravity - 2005 includes: Anne Cabrera Bill Cabrera
Washito A. Sasamoto has written: 'Utilization of the Spacehab module as a microgravity carrier' -- subject(s): Space shuttle payloads, Microgravity, Modules, Microgravity applications, Active control
S. S. Sadhal has written: 'Microgravity Transport Processes in Fluid, Thermal, Biological, and Materials Sciences' 'Microgravity Transport Processes in Fluid, Thermal, Biological, and Materials Sciences' 'Heat Transfer in Microgravity Systems, 1994' 'Transport Phenomena in Microgravity'
The cast of Microgravity - 2006 includes: Tarika as Eniko Tarika Brandt as Eniko
microgravity
Microgravity - 2006 was released on: USA: 4 February 2006 (Science Fiction Short Film Festival)
microgravity
They Play around with microgravity
Microgravity Confinement
In microgravity, the density of an object remains the same. However, the apparent weight of the object is reduced because there is no gravitational force acting on it, giving the impression of weightlessness.
if you toss a coin in the air you are subjecting that coin to microgravity. When an experiment is in a NASA Glenn Research Center drop tower, the experiment is subjected to microgravity for about 2 or 5 seconds. When experiments and/or people are flown on a parabolic-trajectory aircraft, they experience a microgravity environment also. When astronauts, cosmonauts, and experiments are on the Int'l Space Station, they also experience a microgravity environment. All three effects are due to a condition of free fall, where the only significant force upon the person or experiment is gravity. The only real difference between the three conditions is the horizontal velocity and altitude.