
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA’s moonbound astronauts have reason to celebrate, and not just because their launch went so well. Their toilet is now working.
The so-called lunar loo malfunctioned as soon as the Artemis II crew reached orbit Wednesday evening. Mission Control guided astronaut Christina Koch through some plumbing tricks and she finally got it going.
The bad news is that it’s so cold inside the Orion capsule — 65 degrees Fahrenheit (18 degrees Celsius) — that the four astronauts are digging into suitcases for long-sleeved clothes. Mission Control is trying to warm things up.
The three Americans and one Canadian are on track to bust out of orbit around Earth on Thursday night and zoom to the moon for a lunar fly-around. It will be Mission Control’s first translunar injection since Apollo's swan song in 1972.
Until then, the astronauts are savoring the views of Earth from tens of thousands of miles (kilometers) high. Koch told Mission Control that they can make out the entire coastlines of continents and even the South Pole, her old stomping ground.
"It is just absolutely phenomenal," radioed Koch, who spent a year at an Antarctic research station before joining NASA.
The mission is due to end with a Pacific splashdown on April 10. NASA is counting on the test flight to kickstart the entire Artemis program and lead to a moon landing by two astronauts in 2028. Orion's toilet may need some design tweaks before that happens.
Located in the floor with a door and curtain for privacy, the capsule's lone toilet is based on an experimental commode that launched to the International Space Station in 2020. That station potty barely saw any use and has been out of order for years.
Known as the universal waste management system, the compact toilet uses air suction instead of water and gravity to remove waste, similar to earlier space toilets. It’s also designed to better accommodate female astronauts.
Koch and her crewmates had to resort to a bag and funnel system for urinating until she got the toilet working overnight.
Any toilet — even a fitful one — is better than none if you ask any of the six surviving Apollo astronauts.
NASA's Apollo capsules were too small to accommodate a commode, so the all-male crews relied on bags to relieve themselves throughout the lunar journey. These so-called Apollo bags were repurposed during NASA's later space shuttle flights; they served as backup whenever the shuttle toilet acted up.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
NEUESTE BEITRÄGE
- 1
Check out the exclusive pitch deck Valerie Health used to raise $30 million from Redpoint Ventures to automate healthcare faxes16.12.2025 - 2
Decrease in Home Buy Credits and Home loan Renegotiating Rates: An Outline of Latest things30.06.2023 - 3
The 1st full moon of 2026 rises tonight! Here's what to expect from January's supermoon Wolf Moon02.01.2026 - 4
Paris Agreement target off the table, report says07.04.2026 - 5
Select Your Go-To Bluetooth Earphones06.06.2024
Ähnliche Artikel
Israeli strikes on Beirut, as Hezbollah and Iran attack Israel04.04.2026
A throat bone settles it - Nanotyrannus was not a juvenile T. rex04.12.2025
Watch Blue Origin's huge New Glenn rocket ace its epic landing on a ship at sea (video)15.11.2025
New dietary guidelines recommend more dairy, meat and fats: What to know07.01.2026
Instructions to Safeguard Your Speculations In the midst of Changing Disc Rates19.10.2023
Flourishing as a Charitable Pioneer: Individual Encounters in Generosity25.09.2023
Genetic study identifies earliest-known dog, dating to 15,800 years ago25.03.2026
How the Iran war may affect your money and bills27.03.2026
Germany's Pistorius: NATO protects Europe from Iranian missiles27.03.2026
Vote in favor of your Number one Kind of Gems16.10.2023














