Japanese astronaut to try flying carpet in space lab
Credit 10
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said that Wakata would perform 16 tasks chosen from 1,597 suggested by hundreds of people, from nursery school students to a 90-year-old man.
A Japanese space agency report said that Wakata will try a magic carpet that floats in the air after he reaches the Japanese laboratory Kibo (Hope) at the International Space Station (ISS) later in March for a nearly three-month stay.
“It is a fantasy on earth but can humans fly in space?” it asked.
The space agency said that the astronaut will also attempt to fold clothes, do push-ups and back flips, arm-wrestle another astronaut and shoot liquid out of the straw of a drink container to see what happens.
JAXA said it would release footage of the experiments to the local media. Wakata, a 45-year-old former Japan Airlines engineer, joined previous NASA space shuttle missions in 1996 and 2000. On his first space trip he and a fellow astronaut became the first to play the board game go in space, using a special set, JAXA said.
