4K Camera Captures Riveting Footage of Unique Fluid Behavior in Space Laboratory
About | Information | History | Online | Facts | Discovery
Astronauts on the International Space Station dissolved an effervescent tablet in a floating ball of water, and captured images using a camera capable of recording four times the resolution of normal high-definition cameras. The higher resolution images and higher frame rate videos can reveal more information when used on science investigations, giving researchers a valuable new tool aboard the space station. This footage is one of the first of its kind. The cameras are being evaluated for capturing science data and vehicle operations by engineers at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. Read more: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/news/red_epic_dragon_camera *To view in 4k, be sure to change resolution under "Settings" menu in YouTube viewer to "2160p 4k". (Video: NASA) HD download: https://archive.org/details/NASA-Ultra-High-Definition ________________________________________ FOLLOW THE SPACE STATION! Twitter: https://twitter.com/Space_Station Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ISS Instagram: https://instagram.com/iss/
Comments
-
Nice experiment on Zero-G airplane.
-
its pretty cool that u can kinda see the very tiny drops orbeting aroud the big one
-
reminds me of the tails and emissions of comets
-
looks like the sun ;)
-
I'll think - that's experiment are dangerous on the space station.
-
Man, dirt must get everywhere in microgravity. I bet it even spreads itself out on surfaces, when it has a static charge, or when it is a liquid with surface tension. And there are a lot of surfaces in the ISS. I wonder if they are now wishing that they had more cabinets and drawers, and less gear and controls out in the open? Maybe they can use that Bigelow inflatable as a closet; just stuff everything in there, seal it off, and call it clean.
-
I wanna see fire!
-
Were those tiny droplets actually orbiting the larger blob?
-
were some of those smaller drops which escaped, towards the end of the video, curved by the influence of the gravitational influence of the bigger ball of water? i saw a few very small drops pass close to the ball, and curve around it as a comet would past the earth or other body? or would it be airflow in the station?
-
"- Houston we have a problem, we are out of fuses! Kelly is playing with water again and has short circuited every system on-board the station."
-
The background music somewhat sounds like a Punjabi song haha
-
Yet another reason to love space.
-
Is this guy really in outer space?
-
How did the mini droplets escaping the big ball change directions like seen in the video? Minijets escaping and creating thrust? If so that's pretty dope. Well maybe it was just the air vents?
-
The audio is clearly intended to test your mute button is functioning correctly. Thankfully mine is.
-
Fake!!!!
-
Why the other video have so many dislikes?
-
se la tenía que haber comido xD
-
Why is this unique
Of course it would behave this way
That's just physics -
seriously shitty music
2m 5sLenght
5316Rating