RocketSTEM Issue #10 - February 2015 | Page 24

article. His compulsion to demonstrate that capabilfirst three weeks in space and following his return to Earth ity helped him convince his government to finance – periods when he had to adapt to new environments – the project during the dissolution of the Soviet Union he experienced “considerable [reductions] of tracking and the resulting economic chaos in Russia. performance, as well as elevated [perceived] workload ratings and clear drops in subjective mood.” However, Polyakov told Robert Zimmerman, author of Leaving during the second to fourteenth months in orbit, he Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest showed “an impressive stability of mood and perforfor Interplanetary Travel, that he felt very different durmance.” After the mission, there were no long-term reing the launch of his second mission. “Moments before ductions in performance. launch, Polyakov’s Those carefully structhoughts were far dif“My goal was to demonstrate the tured tests yielded useferent than those on his ful results, and so did first flight,” Zimmerman ability to work on Mars and come informal observations. wrote. “Then he had For example, in his 1996 felt eager, excited, and back in good health.” interview, Polyakov talkjoyous about finally geted about experiencing ting into space. Now he cosmic radiation. “When felt only fear. He wasn’t you sleep at night, if the afraid of dying. Far from particle hits your eye, it. What he feared now you can see the flash,” more than anything was he said, “like sparks in failure. ‘What if somethe eye when somebody thing goes wrong?’ he hits you in the head.” asked himself.... ‘I had sacrificed so much He also experienced time,’ he thought. ‘The a common effect of government has spent long-duration microgravso much, more than ity. On Earth, a person’s they can afford.’” spine is curved. Without the normal force of gravBut nothing went ity, the spine straightens, wrong. Liftoff was and the distance besmooth, docking was tween the discs increassuccessful, and Polyakov es. After fourteen months got to work. He and in orbit, Polyakov’s height a succession of crew increased from six feet mates performed two and a half inches to twenty-five ongoing six feet five inches. That experiments, mostly in presented a problem for life sciences. The topics the trip back to Earth. included micrograv“When you come back, ity’s effects on blood you have to fit yourself in chemistry and volume, the chair that was made the circulatory system, for your size as you were the central nervous syscoming up,” he said. “If tem, and bone density. you wear a special suit, it Polyakov, himself, is called ‘penguin,’ it kind was the subject of a Valeri Polyakov was a cosmonaut from March 1972 until June 1995. He has reof presses you down. In variety of evaluations. mained active in space medicine. Credit: New Mexico Museum of Space History that case you will have “Mental Performance less of a problem.” in Extreme Environments: Results from a Performance Yet another informal observation came from Monitoring Study During a 438‑Day Spaceflight,” a 1998 American astronaut Norman Thagard, who arpaper he co-authored, detailed the extensive examinarived aboard Mir six days before Polyakov returned tions he underwent before, during, and after the mission. to Earth. “[Polyakov’s] legs were just as big as tree They measured emotional moods, cognitive perfortrunks,” Thagard told Zimmerman. “If he did that well mance, the ability to manually track the path of movafter fourteen and a half months, I probably don’t ing images, and his perceptions of workload intensity. The results were based on only one person’s responses, have much to worry about for just [a few] months.” but they offer a glimpse of what other astronauts might Thagard and Polyakov were reunited in October experience on a long spaceflight. During the last three 1996, when they were both inducted into the Interdays before launch, Polyakov’s performance declined national Space Hall of Fame. In an oral history interin cognitive tasks and tracking response rates. During the view at that time, Thagard said, “Doctor Polyakov 22 22 www.RocketSTEM .org