MIT Media Lab Space Exploration Initiative’s 2022 microgravity flight features lunar-specific payloads in advance of the upcoming To the Moon To Stay Mission, and record participation from departments across MIT, including the department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, CSAIL, Architecture, and the Media Lab.
Hero image caption: Michelle Lin, a graduate student in MIT’s department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, floats while demonstrating Physical Instinct In Microgravity, which uses a wearable sensor system garment to measure proprioceptive adaptation to microgravity. Credit: Steve Boxall/ZERO-G
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On May 20 this year, MIT researchers and outside collaborators conducted a variety of experiments—with project topics ranging from autonomous self-assembly and zero-g fluid management, to arts and crafts in space, fashion wear and suits for space travel, to virtual reality systems in weightless environments—during the fifth annual microgravity flight hosted by the MIT Media Lab’s Space Exploration Initiative (SEI). A total of 16 projects were aboard the flight, which was chartered through the ZERO-G Research Program out of Pease Airport (Portsmouth, New Hampshire).
Dava Newman, director of the MIT Media Lab and a veteran microgravity flier with thousands of parabolas under her belt, joined the flight and praised the work being done by the SEI and colleagues to help prepare humanity for future planetary missions. "This cross-MIT/SEI effort is really a highlight and culmination for the end of the academic year,” Newman said. “These photos really capture the magic, depth, and joy of isolated, confined, and extreme environments (ICE) and microgravity."