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Endeavour shuttle astronaut Don Pettit sips coffee from a zero-g cup of his own invention during the STS-126 mission to the International Space Station.
This cup was designed to sip coffee in space, where low gravity creates problems with fluids. It currently costs $500 to 3-D print in the transparent plastic. courtesy portland state university.
So it comes as no surprise that he found a way to drink coffee from a cup, instead of the traditional straw, on his day off Sunday aboard the international space station. IE 11 is not supported.
Of sacred morning routines, few stack up to the ritual of rolling out of bed and sipping that first sweet, sweet cup of steaming coffee. Unless you’re an astronaut on the International Space ...
A team of researchers at Portland State University has developed a coffee cup that gives astronauts in space an earth-like drinking experience by driving liquid towards the mouth. The Space Cup ...
Or, to be more exact, a cup of really good espresso—the only part of home that Italian astronaut Luca Parmitano said in 2013 that he really missed during his stay on the International Space Station.
Of all the science done aboard the space station, this latest discovery might be the most ground-breaking yet. It’s a space cup that lets you drink real space coffee, in space.