Home
Mobile | Membership | E-newsletter | Help
  
  Advanced Search
Facebook Twitter Flickr YouTube





Bicycle Ergometer, Skylab

Display Status:
This object is on display in the Space Race exhibition at the Museum in Washington, DC.


Bicycle Ergometer, Skylab

 

  • Summary

Manufacturer:   NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
Teledyne Systems Co.

Country of Origin: United States of America

Dimensions:
3-D Test: 116.8 x 63.5 x 114.3cm (46 x 25 x 45 in.)

Materials:
aluminum, steel, plastic, rubber, vinyl

The Skylab program studied the human body's reaction to long-duration flight in a microgravity (weightless) environment. Skylab astronauts used a stationary bicycle without wheels (ergometer) identical to this one to measure their heart rate, breathing, and work level while they exercised. Electrical recordings of heart activity of each astronaut were taken before, during, and after flight to determine changes in heart functions that might have been caused by the long-duration flights of 28, 59, and 84 days. They also measured their oxygen intake and carbon dioxide output as they exercised.

NASA donated this ergometer to the Museum for display in the backup Skylab orbital workshop in 1976.

Transferred from NASA Johnson Space Center


Inventory number: A19761669000