BEIJING, June 22 (Bernama-Xinhua) -- Shenzhou-23 spaceflight mission's three astronauts have conducted their first in-orbit medical rescue training since arriving at China's Tiangong space station, a video released by the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) has shown, reported Xinhua.
The training aimed to help the astronauts, Zhu Yangzhu, Zhang Zhiyuan, and Li Jiaying, familiarise themselves with rescue operation techniques and force application characteristics under microgravity conditions, the CMSA said in the video on Sunday.
In addition to the medical training, the crew has been engaged in a wide range of scientific experiments.
They utilised a space Raman spectrometer to study the relationship between gut microbiota and nutritional metabolism under long-duration spaceflight conditions.
Behavioural experiments on visual motion processing and intuitive physics in microgravity were performed, exploring how gravity affects visual information processing and how long-term spaceflight impacts intuitive physics perception.
The crew also conducted in-orbit emotion recognition and emergency decision-making capability assessments.
China launched the Shenzhou-23 crewed spaceship on May 24.
The mission is notable for including a one-year in-orbit stay experiment, which will provide crucial data for future long-duration space exploration.
-- BERNAMA-XINHUA
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