In this video from the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) astronaut Jeremy Hansen gives an inside look at how the Artemis II crew manages storage in such a small spacecraft. He also discusses ‘that’ topic, dealing with waste.

YouTube video

Transcript

Jeremy Hansenย โ€“ Weโ€™ll have stowage bags, and we have trash bags, and we will slowly collect trash over the mission and bring back with us. Letโ€™s talk a little bit about stowage, because for four people for nine days and all the activities we have planned, weโ€™re going to have a lot of stuff.

Most of the floor of this vehicle is used for stowage. So, some of it has avionics in it, computer boxes, etc., but other parts of it are just empty compartments that we can store things in. You can see these panels. Thereโ€™s even panels under these seats, and we can access all of these once weโ€™re in space. And thatโ€™s what weโ€™ll get our stuff out of.

And so then inside there weโ€™ll have stowage bags that will all be labelled and organized, and weโ€™ll know where to go to get whatever it is we need for any specific task.

So another thing thatโ€™s important for habitability, of course, is food and water. And when you eat food in space, itโ€™s all pre-prepared: you rehydrate it, or you just open it up ready to eat. You end up with a lot of packaging. And so, youโ€™ve really got to be careful with that and then manage that trash carefully and stow it away, and we have trash bags, and we will slowly collect trash over the mission and bring back with us.

The only thing we jettison during our mission is the urine. Because on our vehicle, unlike the International Space Station, we donโ€™t have a method to recycle the urine. Everything else comes back with us. All the solid waste, all the feces, weโ€™ll be bringing back to Earth with us.โ€

Marc Boucher is an entrepreneur, writer, editor, podcaster and publisher. He is the founder of SpaceQ Media. Marc has 30+ years working in various roles in media, space sector not-for-profits, and internet content development.

Marc started his first Internet creator content business in 1992 and hasn't looked back. When not working Marc loves to explore Canada, the world and document nature through his photography.

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