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Physicians and physiologists are interested in the long-term effects of apparent weightlessness on the human body. Among these effects are redistribution of body fluids to the upper body, loss of muscle tone, and overall mass loss. One method of measuring mass in the apparent weightlessness of an orbiting spacecraft is to strap the astronaut into a chairlike device mounted on springs (Fig. 13.39). This body mass measuring device (BMMD) is set oscillating in
FIGURE 13.39 Astronaut Tamara Jernigan uses a body mass measuring device in the Spacelab Life Sciences Module (Passage Problems 87-90).
If a 90-kg astronaut is “weighed" with this BMMD, the time for three periods will be
- a. 50% longer.
- b. shorter by less than 50%.
- c. longer by less than 50%.
- d. longer by more than 50%.

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