Traveling in space can cause "Space
Sickness," which is very like being car sick. Although space sickness gets better
within a few days, it causes headaches and sleepiness. After
some time, the face becomes pale, nausea sets in and, in
really bad cases, some may vomit severely. Space sickness can suddenly strike,
causing some astronauts to vomit without any
warning. Researchers believe that
weightlessness causes some astronauts to lose their sense of
what is "up" and what is "down." While in the 1-G environment of
Earth, the eyes, the inner ear and other body parts, such as
muscles, bones or skin, provide the body with the
information it needs to cope adequately and maintain itself
in the area it is in. But in a weightless environment, the
information that reaches the ears, muscles and skin is not
stable and the only organ that functions properly in terms
of receiving information is the eyes. Astronauts lose their
sense of knowing exactly where they are.
This is why astronauts have a lot of training before they go up into
space. They go up in a special plane which drops very steeply for a
short time (it would feel like a VERY fast lift going down), and it
gives you a few seconds of weightlessness as it falls. Most people
vomit when this happens.
Another way of training is to work in a huge swimming pool.
Astronauts often practise doing jobs they will need to do on an EVA
while in a pool.
In space, fluids in the body rise up
when entering a weightless environment. On Earth,
gravitational pull ensures bodily fluids always travel in a
downward direction. But in a weightless environment, this
power is lost and fluids rise up into the head. At these times, astronauts faces
appear more swollen than when on Earth and they develop
"moonfaces." At the same time, as all the bodily fluids rise
up to make the face appear fatter, astronauts' legs also
become thinner.