🌌 Tyson on Gravity, Space, and the Human Body

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🌌 Tyson on Gravity, Space, and the Human Body

Neil deGrasse Tyson often emphasizes how gravity shapes our biology. On Earth, every movement we make—standing, walking, even breathing—requires our muscles and bones to work against gravity. This constant resistance keeps them strong.

But in space, especially in orbit or deep beyond Earth’s pull, gravitational force is much weaker. Tyson notes:

- Muscle and bone loss: With no gravitational force to work against, the body doesn’t need the same strength. Muscles atrophy, and bones lose density. Astronauts can lose up to 1% of bone mass per month in microgravity.
- “Use it or lose it”: Tyson explains that biology follows this principle. Without the daily stress of gravity, the body starts dismantling what it doesn’t need.
- Exercise isn’t enough: Even rigorous workouts in space only slow the decline. They don’t fully replicate Earth’s constant gravitational pull.
- Long-term implications: For missions to Mars or beyond, scientists must solve this problem—whether through artificial gravity, advanced exercise regimes, or medical interventions.

Tyson frames this as a reminder of how deeply Earth’s environment defines us. We evolved under gravity’s constant tug, and when it’s gone, our bodies reveal just how dependent we are on it.

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