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Activities may be standalone, or part of lessons or curricular units.

TE Activity: Lunch in Outer Space!

A photograph of an astronauts' meal tray. Placed on the tray are a fork, knife, spoon, scissors, two foil-sealed packages of food or drink, two vacuum-sealed packages of food, and a pudding cup. The food packages are attached to the meal tray with Velcro.
Figure 1. An astronauts meal.
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Summary

Students learn about the unique challenges astronauts face while eating in outer space. They explore different food choices and food packaging. Students learn about the engineering design process, and then, as NASA engineering teams, they design and build original model devices to help astronauts eat in a microgravity environment --- their own creative devices for food storage and meal preparation.

Engineering Connection

Engineers are involved in all aspects of space travel and living. Many astronauts are engineers! Because of the microgravity environment, eating in space is a great challenge, so NASA engineers develop creative devices to help astronauts eat while traveling in away from the Earth's gravity.

Contents

  1. Learning Objectives
  2. Materials
  3. Introduction/Motivation
  4. Vocabulary
  5. Procedure
  6. Attachments
  7. Safety Issues
  8. Troubleshooting Tips
  9. Assessment
  10. Extensions
  11. Activity Scaling
  12. References

Grade Level: 4 (3-5) Group Size: 3
Time Required: 50 minutes
Activity Dependency : None
Expendable Cost Per Group : US$ 1
Keywords: NASA, astronaut, digestive system, food, microgravity, outer space, human body
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Related Curriculum

Educational Standards    

  •   Colorado Science

Learning Objectives (Return to Contents)

After this activity, students should be able to:

  • Explain the challenges of eating in space (microgravity).
  • List the three main steps in the engineering design process (design, build, test).
  • Describe some of the devices engineers have designed to help astronauts eat in outer space.
  • Work in teams to design and build their own device for eating in outer space.

Materials List (Return to Contents)

Each group needs:

  • Scissors
  • White glue
  • Tape (cellophane, masking, etc.)
  • Pens and pencils
  • One copy of the Design Worksheet

To share with the entire class:

  • Paper
  • Rulers
  • Other assorted building materials for their models (balsa wood, construction paper, toothpicks, popsicle sticks, white paper, string, aluminum foil, paper clips, styrofoam, foam core, film canisters, etc.)
  • Markers and crayons
  • Hot glue gun (optional; for use by the teacher)

Introduction/Motivation (Return to Contents)

What do you think it would be like to try to eat in outer space? Can you imagine trying to eat a snack as it keeps floating away from you? Well, that's what would happen in an environment with little gravity (see Figure 2). It seems like it would be pretty tricky! Astronauts face a lot of new challenges when they travel in space, and one of those challenges is figuring out how to eat. Thankfully, the astronauts have a whole team of engineers and scientists who help get their food ready for them and design ways to help them eat it without it floating away.

A photograph of an astronaut attempting to hold onto apples while in space. The apples are floating around the astronaut.
Figure 2. Floating snacks.
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Who can guess some of the astronauts' favorite foods to eat in space? There is actually a list put together of the top 10 foods they like to take on space shuttle missions (see Figure 3).

A list of the top 10 foods astronauts want to take on a  space mission. From number one to number ten they are: butter cookies, dried beef, orange-mango drink, granola bar, lemonade, cashew and macadamia nuts, trail mix, shrimp cocktail, potatoes au gratin and chocolate pudding.
Figure 3. The top 10 foods for astronauts traveling in space.
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The engineers who design ways for the astronauts to eat in outer space must design a lot of different items for their use - even the salt and pepper shakers! If salt and pepper got loose in the space station or space shuttle, it could get stuck in equipment and cause a lot of damage. So, the astronauts use salt combined with water, and pepper in oil to season their food. The salt and pepper come in small bottles (see Figure 4) and work perfectly well for the astronauts.

Figure 4. Even salt and pepper shakers need to be modified for microgravity.
Figure 4. Even salt and pepper shakers need to be modified for microgravity.
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Engineers have designed many ways for astronauts to have food in space. When astronauts first started traveling in outer space, much of their food came in squeeze tubes, similar to toothpaste tubes. As you can imagine, food from a tube would not be that delicious, and the astronauts were not thrilled with this "food in a tube." Another food item that the astronauts used to eat were small bite-sized cubes of food (see Figure 5). These were somewhat better than the squeeze tube food, but still did not taste too great.

A photograph of astronaut's food from Project Mercury, showing a food tube and bite-sized snacks. The tube looks like a toothpaste tube, and one of the snacks looks like a small stack of eight mini-car tires. The other snack appears to be a set of small cubes placed in a metal holder.
Figure 5. Early Project Mercury food tube and bite-sized snacks.
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To provide astronauts with better-tasting foods, engineers came up with some new ideas for space food! Obviously, engineers have many goals in mind as they design food for the astronauts, but their two most important goals are to conserve space and weight. Because most foods are 90% water, it makes perfect sense to remove the water and add it in later ─ ultimately saving weight and volume. The folks at NASA also want to minimize the garbage that the astronauts generate from their meals. And lastly, also a very important goal, they want to make the astronauts' food taste delicious!

After much hard work by engineers, there are now seven different forms of food available to the astronauts ─ giving them more choices for meals. Before the astronauts go into space, they get to pick out exactly what they want to eat from the available food choices. Some of their selections include: Rice Krispies®, sweet n' sour chicken, brownies, Cornflakes®, scrambled eggs, strawberries, and macaroni and cheese (see the attached Baseline Shuttle Food List for more choices). There is an oven on the space shuttles, but no refrigerator or freezer. Therefore, astronauts can have warm dinners, but no popsicles!

A lot of people work to prepare the astronauts' food for space flight; then, when they take off, all their food is waiting for the astronauts in the space shuttle. Each astronaut has a unique colored dot on all their packages of food so that they can easily tell which packages belong to them. And, since most of the astronauts' food is sealed up in packages, another important component of their meal tray is scissors ─ made available to open the packages. Each astronaut has their own set of silverware and their own scissors.

The astronauts' drinks are powdered, and they come in flexible beverage packages that have a special adapter, called a septum adapter, where they can add water to re-hydrate them. Once the water is added, they can put a straw in the same spot.

When engineers, such as the engineers at NASA, want to design something, they go through the engineering design process. Today we are going to become NASA engineers and practice this process. Then you will put the design and building parts into practice. As you will see, there is a lot of work that goes into eating lunch in outer space!

The Engineering Design Process

The engineering design process is a set of steps that engineers go through when they want to design a solution to a problem. There are three main steps that you can remember to help you understand the engineering design process, and they are: design, build and test. We are going to talk a little bit about each one of these steps, and then you are going to get to try them out yourselves.

Design: Before engineers build anything, they first have to figure out exactly what they are going to build. They determine out how big it should be, how much it can weigh, what shape it should be, and how much money can be spent building it. Oftentimes, they talk to the people who are going to use their design, and they decide what special features they want it to have.

Build: Once the engineers have finished their design and are happy with it, they can begin to build a model or a prototype of their design. Models are usually smaller than the actual design, and there are many different types of models - some look just like the design, but in miniature, and others only exist on the computer. A prototype is another version of the design. A prototype generally works just as the final design will, and it is an opportunity to work out and fix some of the trouble spots that might ─ and usually do ─ arise before the final product is built.

Test: Once the engineers have the model or prototype ready, they run many different tests on it: strength, waterproof or not, weight, breakability, etc. They run many tests (sometimes over and over again) to ensure that the product can do what they designed it to do. If their device fails a test, or if the engineers discover some sort of problem with it, then they go through the cycle again - they re-design, re-build, and re-test until it is exactly how they want it to be.

Now that you understand the design process, we are going to design and build our own devices to help the astronauts eat in space. Unfortunately, we will not get to travel into outer space to test our designs, but we can still do a great job on the design and build parts of the process!

Vocabulary/Definitions (Return to Contents)

Engineering Design Process: A 3-step process by which engineers design a solution to a problem; the steps are: design, build and test.
Microgravity: A condition in space where only very small gravitational forces are experienced.
Prototype: The first full-scale (and usually working) version of a new design.
Septum Adapter: A special adapter that allows astronauts to add water to powered, flexible beverage packages.

Background Information

An image of two different packages of rehydratable shrimp cocktail. The package on the left is clear and vacuum sealed, and has a short tube placed in the side for adding water. The package on the right is a translucent plastic square box, with the lid removed. A sign below the packages reads: "Rehydratable."
Figure 6. Rehydratable shrimp cocktail.
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The seven forms of food are: rehydratable, thermostabilized, intermediate moisture, natural form, irradiated, condiments and shelf-stable tortillas.

Rehydratable food is food or beverages that have had the water removed. To prepare, astronauts just add the water back in and heat the food up in their on-board oven. Breakfast cereals can be pre-packaged with dry milk and sugar, and can be eaten once water is added. These foods can include soups, casseroles and appetizers (see Figure 6).

Thermostabilized food has been heat processed to kill organisms. These packages are heated, opened with scissors and eaten. This type of food is generally packaged in cans, plastic cups or flexible pouches. Food choices include beef tips with mushrooms, tomatoes and eggplant, and ham.

Intermediate moisture foods have just the right amount of water in them: not too wet (to prevent microbes from growing in the package) and not too dry (to help cut down on the amount of preparation for the astronauts). Essentially, these foods are ready to eat right out of the package, and they include dried peaches, pears and apricots, and dried beef (see Figure 7).

A vacuum-sealed bag of apricots. A small sign below the bag reads: "Intermediate Moisture Food."
Figure 7. A vacuum-sealed back of apricots, an intermediate moisture food for astronauts.
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Natural form foods are ready to eat. They come in clear, flexible pouches that are cut open with scissors, and they include granola bars, nuts and cookies (see Figure 8).

Irradiated foods are meat products that also come in flexible, foil-laminated pouches, and have been sterilized by radiation. There are twelve kinds of irradiated meat products that are used, including: beefsteak, sliced turkey, breakfast sausage and fajitas. The FDA only permits a few foods for the general public to be irradiated (at very low levels), so NASA has special permission to irradiate meat at higher levels so that the meats do not need to be refrigerated. (Note: meats that the general public eats that have been irradiated at the standard, low levels still need to be refrigerated.) As we have learned, there are no refrigerators on the space shuttle, so irradiation at higher levels is very important.

Condiments include ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, hot sauce, salt and pepper.

Vacuum-sealed bags of M&Ms and dried fruit and nuts. A sign below the two bags reads: "Natural Form Food."
Figure 8. Vacuum-sealed bags of M&Ms and dried fruit, natural form foods.
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Since bread is bad news on the space shuttle ─ because the crumbs can get into the machines and affect their functioning ─ shelf stable tortillas are used instead. NASA developed special packaging for these tortillas, so they will not mold. Pretty nifty stuff!

Before the Activity

  • Gather all necessary materials.
  • Print out the Design Worksheet (one per team).

With the Students

  1. Go over the seven forms of food with the students (from the Background section). Explain that these forms of foods help with the problem of eating in microgravity and demonstrate some of the solutions NASA engineers have developed for food during space flight. Tell to students that today they will become engineers from NASA and design a form of food or device to help the astronauts eat in space.
  2. Write the three main parts of the engineering design process on the board: design, build and test. (Note: See the Introduction section for more on the engineering design process.)
  3. Break students into teams of 2-3 and pass out worksheets (one worksheet per team).
  4. Give students 8-10 minutes to work on their design and complete the worksheet. Encourage students to focus on a particular food or a specific challenge of eating in space. (Note: This is an open-ended design, so encourage creativity.) Students may not begin building until their worksheet has been checked off.
  5. Once their team's worksheet is checked off, encourage students to begin building a model of their design.
  6. To encourage use of mathematics, establish constraints on some of the supplies and have students measure out a certain amount. For example: "you may only use 0.4 meters of masking tape, and 2.3 meters of string." Students should work together to measure out the allowed amounts.
  7. Allow time before the end of class for each team to present their idea and design to their peers.
  8. Instruct groups to clean up.

Safety Issues (Return to Contents)

Remind students to use caution while using scissors.

Students should use caution if using the hot glue gun. To help prevent accidents, set up a "hot gluing station," that can easily be monitored. Lay down newspaper to catch spills.

Troubleshooting Tips (Return to Contents)

Encourage the students to work as a team - to listen to their teammates and not discourage or make fun of others' ideas.

Pre-Activity Assessment

Discussion Question: Solicit, integrate and summarize student responses to the following questions:

  • Have you ever seen a picture or a movie of astronauts eating in outer space? It looks pretty funny, right? Why do you think it is so hard for astronauts to eat in outer space? (Write student responses on the board; possible answers include: they are homesick, the shuttle is spinning, they do not have a refrigerator, they do not have an oven, there is hardly any gravity, their food is floating around…)

With the students, come up with a list of foods that would be easy and foods that would be hard for astronauts to eat in space. (Make two lists on the board. Hard foods could be: spaghetti, cereal with milk, salad, etc. Easy foods could be: tortillas, lollipops, M&Ms.)

Activity Embedded Assessment

Student Interviews: As the students are working in groups on their designs, visit each group and ask them what they are learning about engineers as they build. (Possible answers: engineers are creative, engineers help people, engineers work in teams, engineers help astronauts, engineers have a design process, etc.).

Post-Activity Assessment

NASA Engineering Team Presentations: Allow students to choose one team member to present their team's idea to the rest of the class or have both/all team members present together. The students should explain which problem their team is trying to solve, why their team chose a particular design, and any challenges their team faced in the engineering design process.

Activity Extensions (Return to Contents)

Check out: http://edspace.nasa.gov/livespace/tortilla.html to see a video of astronauts playing with their food and a video of an astronaut making a tortilla burger.

Check out http://spaceflight1.nasa.gov/living/spacefood/index.html for more fun food-related videos.

Check out http://www.nasa.gov/audience/formedia/presskits/ffs_gallery_sfn.html for more pictures of astronauts taste-testing food and eating in outer space.

Students can create their own outer-space salt and pepper shakers using small plastic dropper bottles, salt, pepper, oil and water. The salt should be dissolved in water, and the pepper suspended in oil.

Activity Scaling (Return to Contents)

For upper grades, encourage students to make their design to scale. Discuss the numerous iterations that a design goes through before finally being produced and used by the astronauts.

For lower grades, discuss the importance of teamwork, and explain how engineers and scientists work together in teams at NASA.

CNN.com, Science and Space, "Space chef makes out-of-this-world holiday turkey," November 20, 2003, http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/space/11/20/astronaut.kitchen.ap/ - accessed April 26, 2006.

Canright, Shelly. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Greetings Kids Earthlings!, Kids Features, "Space Food" May 27, 2004, http://www.nasa.gov/audience/forkids/home/F_Space_Food.html - accessed April 19, 2006.

Canright, Shelly. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, For Students, Student Features, "Food for Space Flight: Space Food History" February 26, 2004, http://www1.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/postsecondary/features/F_Food_for_Space_Flight.html - accessed April 26, 2006.

Dismukes, Kim. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Human Space Flight, Living in Space, "Space Food," November 25, 2003, http://www.spaceflight.nasa.gov/living/spacefood/index.html - accessed April 19, 2006.

Dismukes, Kim. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Human Space Flight, Food for Space Flight, "Space Food History," April 7, 2002, http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/reference/factsheets/food.html - accessed April 26, 2006.

Kloeris, Vicki. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA Quest, Field Journal, "Space Food Systems ─ What the astronauts eat in space," April 29, 2001, http://quest.arc.nasa.gov/people/journals/space/kloeris/04-29-01.html - accessed April 26, 2006.

Merriam-Webster Online, "Microgravity," http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=microgravity - accessed April 19, 2006.

Merriam-Webster Online, "Prototype," http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=prototype - accessed April 19, 2006.

Museum of Science, National Center for Technological Literacy, Engineering is Elementary, The Engineering Design Process for Children, http://www.mos.org/eie/engineering_design.php - accessed April 26, 2006.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, NASA Facts, "Space Food," FS-2002-10-079-JSC, October 2002, http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/spacenews/factsheets/pdfs/food.pdf - accessed April 19, 2006.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration, EdSpace, Living in Space, "Food in Space," video, April 19, 2006, http://edspace.nasa.gov/livespace/tortilla.html - accessed April 26, 2006.

Smith, Malcolm C. et al. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, SP-368 Biomedical Results of Apollo, http://history.nasa.gov/SP-368/s6ch1.htm - accessed April 26, 2006.

Owner (Return to Contents)

Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, College of Engineering, University of Colorado at Boulder

Contributors

Abigail Watrous, Denali Lander, Beth Myers, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, Janet Yowell

Copyright

© 2006 by Regents of the University of Colorado
The contents of this digital library curriculum were developed under a grant from the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), U.S. Department of Education and National Science Foundation GK-12 grant no. 0226322. However, these contents do not necessarily represent the policies of the Department of Education or National Science Foundation, and you should not assume endorsement by the federal government.


Last Modified: February 29, 2008
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