This latest experiment in beer and space comes from Astronauts4hire, a non-profit founded this year by a group of space enthusiasts whose goal is to provide trained astronauts for researchers who are conducting experiments in sub-orbital (and eventually orbital) space.
Testing space beer — which will be produced by a joint venture between the 4-Pines Brewing Company and Saber Aeronautics Australia — is Astronauts4hire’s first job.
The tests will start next month aboard a modified Boeing 727 operated by Zero G, a space entertainment company that offers to fly you on a series of parabolic arcs so you can experience weightlessness without leaving Earth — “flip, float and soar as if you were in space.”
Are you nauseated yet? If so, maybe you’re not astronaut material. From Astronauts4hire:
Sampling the beer during weightless parabolas, the flight researcher will record both qualitative data on beverage taste and drinkability and biometric data on body temperature, heart rate, and blood alcohol content.This is the first of a series of flights that will be funded by sales of space beer on Earth, according to Astronauts4hire. Exactly what makes this beer “space beer” remains to be seen.
NASA doesn’t allow its astronauts to drink beer or any other alcoholic beverage before or during flights — the space agency doesn’t want astronauts’ senses dulled or their reactions slowed. It has advised against giving alcohol to the miners trapped underground in Chile for the same reasons.
Back in 2001, however, NASA did experiment with brewing beer in space — along with Coors, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Coca-Cola, which were helping NASA commercialize “the space frontier…one of the greatest opportunities facing America,” NASA said at the time.
One experiment showed that fermentation was more efficient and happened faster in space — the picture is of a Coke-dispensing machine that Coca Cola developed for the space shuttle.
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