Skip to main content

ISS astronaut video shows a tough gym workout

Astronauts visiting the International Space Station (ISS) usually stay for about six months. The microgravity conditions aboard the ISS mean that muscle will quickly waste away if a strict exercise regime isn’t followed during that time.

NASA astronaut Loral O’Hara has just shared a video (below) showing her using many of the station’s exercise machines during her stay aboard the orbital outpost. O’Hara, who returned to Earth in April, calls the video “a little glimpse into our space gym.”

Recommended Videos

.@LunarLoral spent 203 days in space before returning to Earth on April 5, 2024. She exercised over two hours everyday on the space station to maintain her bone and muscle health in weightlessness. https://t.co/Mi57mFQYJY

— International Space Station (@Space_Station) July 22, 2024

The lack of gravity aboard the ISS means that a lot of harnesses are required to keep you in place. They also add resistance so that you get the full benefits of a workout and maintain and enhance your muscle strength.

O’Hara pointed out in her post that each astronaut exercises for 2.5 hours every day. This comprises around 60 minutes of weightlifting and 30 to 50 minutes of cardio involving running or cycling.

“While any exercise program has its challenges, I found it really enjoyable to have the opportunity to load my body up every day and zone out a bit listening to music or podcasts, reading, studying for upcoming events, and hanging out in [the] Cupola looking at [the] station and the planet in between sets,” O’Hara said.

Early on in human space exploration, scientists understood that exercise is a vital part of maintaining healthy bones and muscles in orbit, just as it is on Earth. Simple elastic bands were used for exercise on the early missions, but since then the gym hardware has become increasingly sophisticated.

Current exercise machines aboard the space station include ARED (Advanced Resistive Exercise Device), a machine built with pneumatic cylinders that creates the necessary force to give the astronaut a decent workout. Another machine is CEVIS (Cycle Ergometer with Vibration Isolation and Stabilization System), a specially designed “bicycle” used for aerobic exercise.

Scientists are continuing to research the effects of exercise in space, as well as other things like diet, to help NASA better prepare for upcoming lunar missions that could see astronauts stay for prolonged periods inside a moonbase. Even greater challenges are presented with long-duration crewed missions to distant planets like Mars, the first of which could take place in the 2030s.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Time-lapse from ISS shows lightning and mysterious red light
Earth in a time-lapse captured from the ISS.

In his final weeks aboard the space station after six months in orbit, NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick has shared a gorgeous time-lapse of Earth.

It shows a large part of Asia as the International Space Station (ISS) passed over it at night at an altitude of about 250 miles. The footage, which you can watch below, shows numerous flashes of lightning over a wide area, bright clusters of city lights, and colored lights from fishing boats, which Dominick describes as “one of my favorite things to see at night from the ISS.” But it also shows a bright red light, the source of which Dominick is unsure about.

Read more
Crew Dragon is about to fly with empty seats for the first time. Here’s why
A Falcon 9 rocket launches from California.

NASA and SpaceX are making final preparations for the Crew-9 astronaut flight to the International Space Station (ISS), which is set to launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, September 26.

But this will be the first of SpaceX’s 13 crewed flights to the ISS since the first one in 2020 where there will be two empty seats on the Crew Dragon spacecraft. And there’s a very good reason for that. Let us explain.

Read more
Polaris Dawn’s high-speed journey home captured in photo from ISS
An illustration of how the Polaris Dawn spacewalk will look.

A remarkable photo taken by an astronaut aboard the International Space Station (ISS) shows SpaceX’s Polaris Dawn Crew Dragon capsule entering Earth’s atmosphere at high speed as it returned home with four crew members on board early on Sunday morning.

Close examination of the image (top), which was captured by recent ISS arrival Don Pettit, shows a streak of light and the Crew Dragon, with some city lights visible in the background. The five-day Polaris Dawn mission carried four non-professional astronauts and performed the first-ever privately funded spacewalk while also taking humans to the furthest point from Earth since the Apollo missions five decades ago.

Read more