How Do Astronauts Shower in Space?

showering in space
There are many challenges associated with living on the International Space Station. Showering, NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg says, is one of them.NASA

The first thing people usually want to know is how astronautspee in space. But really, showering is just as hard — if not harder. Think about your own shower and the two things that make it so nice: plenty of hot water and gravity.

It makes sense that hot water would be in short supply in space, but why doesgravitymatter? Well, without the Earth's gravity pulling the water down from the showerhead, along your soapy self and down into the drain, there's just water and suds going everywhere. The gravity on the International Space Station is about90 percent of the gravityon Earth's surface (it's called microgravity), so engineers have had to get clever to keep astronauts clean.

Advertisement

In the earliest days ofNASA, astronauts on theGemini and Apollomissions had very few options. They could take a sponge bath with a towel, soap and water, but water was very limited in those tiny capsules. These guys also didn't really change their clothes. When astronauts returned to Earth in the 1960s, they were ripe.

When the space stationSkylabwas in orbit, it had a shower of sorts. Astronauts stepped inside a collapsed tube and strapped their feet in at the "bottom" (top and bottom hardly matter when there's microgravity). Then they pulled the tube up around them and clipped it in at the "top." They'd smear liquid soap all over themselves and then rinse it off with a mere 12 cups (2.8 liters) of pressurized water coming through a hose and showerhead inside the tube.

Then they had to dry off with a towel and suction up every single water droplet before it got into the equipment and shorted something out. From start to finish, the process took two hours, so a lot of astronauts skipped it. Again,ripeon their return, but they did have more clothes to change into.

During thespace shuttleera, astronauts used the sponge bath system, just like the Gemini and Apollo crews did. But theInternational Space Stationthat orbits Earth today has improved the shower situation. All water is supplied inlittle pouches, and any that gets on their skin just kind of sticks in blobs. To clean up, astronauts use rinseless soap, plus a little water from a pouch and洗发水to get clean.

Just as in Skylab, any water that they use has to be captured with a towel. Any remaining moisture left behind is captured by theEnvironmental Control and Life Support Systemand recycled. And we meananymoisture. The International Space Station system reclaims every drop of water, from showering to breathing to peeing, then cleans it and reuses it.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Loading...