Skip to player
Skip to main content
Skip to footer
Search
Connect
Watch fullscreen
Like
Comments
Bookmark
Share
Add to Playlist
Report
NASA Astronauts Explain Nonverbal Communication In Space
Space.com
Follow
29/10/2024
NASA astronauts Kayla Barron and Raja Chari describe how nonverbal communication in employed on the International Space Station.
Credit: NASA
Category
🤖
Tech
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
People on Earth use nonverbal ways to communicate every day, like facial expressions, hand signals,
00:16
body language, and American Sign Language. Astronauts in space have their own nonverbal
00:23
way to communicate too.
00:25
During the spacewalk and just generally during space operations all the time, communication
00:30
is hugely important. So talking to the people who are outside, talking to the people on
00:33
the ground, and obviously we have radios to do that, but a lot of times we wind up having
00:37
to do that nonverbally.
00:39
Hold on. Stop.
00:41
The hold signal. So whether it may be sometimes your ears may not be clearing fast enough
00:45
as the pressure is changing, maybe someone's helping rescue you, but you're still attached
00:50
and you realize that, and so in any case, you give them a hold signal, and that should
00:54
tell everyone to stop everything that's all the movement and kind of look around for
00:58
something that seems abnormal.
01:00
You okay? I'm okay.
01:04
We really want to check on each other, check on our buddies, so the way we usually do that
01:07
is we use the okay hand symbol, and so we'll use it as a question and as an answer. So
01:14
if I'm pointing at Raja and then giving him the okay sign, I'm saying, are you okay? And
01:20
if he is, he'll tell me, I am okay.
01:23
I see what you're saying.
01:26
There's a lot of nonverbal that just comes from knowing and working with people that
01:29
makes a big difference when you're working day in and day out, especially on a high-stress
01:33
thing like a spacewalk, where just the look at someone's face can tell you, like, either,
01:37
yeah, I'm good with this plan or I've got reservations, maybe we should stop and talk
01:42
about this, and you can do all that with just a glance, even through the glass of the space
01:47
helmets.
01:48
A handful of numbers.
01:51
If you're flying formation, which we practice in the T-38, we also use hand signals just
01:56
to keep up with those skills, and so one of the most common things is transmitting numbers
02:00
with your hands, and so one, two, three, four, and five are pretty easy, and then the way
02:04
we do six, seven, eight, nine, ten without taking our hand off the stick is to turn your
02:10
hand horizontal, and so you can do the same thing with air pressure.
02:13
So for example, if I had a problem with my suit and she was trying to tell me, you know,
02:18
what is your oxygen pressure, and I couldn't talk because I had a communications problem,
02:22
I could still tell Kayla, you know, I could tell her a one, and then this would tell her
02:26
one and six, and then, you know, I could do a combination of those numbers to transmit
02:31
to her non-verbally what the state of any of my values on my suit, whether it's suit
02:37
pressure, water pressure, temperature, all the different numerical values, we can use
02:41
hand signals for that.
02:43
Maybe we could demonstrate a few for each other and see if we can tell what the other
02:47
person's hand signals are.
02:50
So I'll go first, Raja, and you can see if you know what I'm trying to tell you.
02:56
What do you think Kayla is trying to communicate?
02:59
Is she telling Raja she can't hear, that he needs to clean his helmet visor, or asking
03:06
him what song he's listening to?
03:08
All right, so what Kayla's telling me there is she's pointing to herself, which is indicating
03:14
the person who has the problem, you could also point at someone else, but in her case
03:18
she's pointing at herself, so she's telling me she has a problem, and then she waved across
03:22
her ears, which is telling me she can't hear.
03:24
Okay, so let's say we have that same scenario, so we've had some kind of loss of calm, and
03:29
Kayla came to check on me while I was out on a spacewalk.
03:32
When she got there, I might give her a signal like this.
03:36
Can you figure out what Raja is trying to communicate?
03:40
Is he telling her that they need to move to the other side of the space station?
03:44
That they need to wrap up and finish what they're doing?
03:48
Or is he asking her to do a flip in microgravity?
03:53
So there, Raja would be trying to communicate to me that we need to speed things up.
03:57
Maybe he has a problem that's accelerating or getting worse, so he's saying it's kind
04:01
of an urgent situation here, let's get a move on, more or less.
04:06
Next time you see astronauts on a spacewalk, look out for some of the hand signals you
04:10
learned today.
04:12
You can even try them out with your friends to talk in your own nonverbal code.
04:18
For more fun with STEM, visit stem.nasa.gov.
Recommended
2:52
|
Up next
NASA Infusing Fast Laser Communications On Space Missions
Space.com
02/08/2024
1:24
Sheep Flow Like Water
Live Science
today
1:18
'Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning' Has Screened, And People Are Having Wild First Reactions To Its ‘Symphony Of Danger’
Cinema Blend
today
2:02
Will Poulter Was Disappointed That Alex Garland Was Making A War Film. Why He Decided To Take On The Project Anyway
Cinema Blend
today
1:04
Ian McShane Refused To Watch The 'John Wick' Prequel Series, Says He And Lance Reddick Had Their Own Idea That Was 'Much More Interesting' #shorts
Cinema Blend
today
3:17
Weightlifting Guide For Beginners
Live Science
yesterday
1:12
Footage Of Hayabusa2 Spacecraft Touchdown On Asteroid Ryugu
Live Science
yesterday
1:52
Dramatic hunger surge strikes the Middle East and Africa, UN survey shows
euronews (in English)
yesterday
1:33
EU-US trade deal leaves future of pharma tariffs uncertain
euronews (in English)
yesterday
1:05
Intense floods strike Romania as wildfires rage across Turkey and Albania
euronews (in English)
yesterday
1:51
Watch The Sun's Corona In Sharpest Detail Yet Using Adaptive Optics
Space.com
yesterday
1:32
Java In Zero-G - How The Space Coffee Cup Works
Space.com
yesterday
0:40
OTD In Space - July 28: First Photo Of A Total Solar Eclipse
Space.com
yesterday
2:23
Virgin Galactic | Our Delta Spaceship Is 'Start Of A Spaceline Design'
Space.com
yesterday
1:06
James Webb Space Telescope Delivers 4K Amazing View Of Spiral Galaxy
Space.com
yesterday
1:25
The Moment When Isar Aerospace's 1st Spectrum Rocket As It Crashes And Explodes After Launch
Space.com
yesterday
1:11
James Webb Telescope Detects Molecule In Orion Nebula View
Space.com
yesterday
1:09
Lucy Spacecraft Captured 1st Ever Close-Up Views Of Asteroid Donaldjohanson
Space.com
yesterday
1:04
Bus-Size Asteroid Flew Closer Than The Moon - Watch The Orbit Animation
Space.com
yesterday
8:07
Incredible Views Of SpaceX Starship Reentering Earth's Atmosphere
Space.com
yesterday
1:06
James Webb Space Telescope Captures Stunning 4K View Of Milky Way's Heart
Space.com
yesterday
1:09
Sun Blasts 'Huge Rush Of Mass' ESA Says It Warped The Magnetic Field
Space.com
yesterday
1:52
Amazing Cartwheel Galaxy Via James Webb Space Telescope
Space.com
yesterday
1:25
NASA's Perseverance Rover Captures Martian Moon Phobos Eclipse The Sun
Space.com
yesterday
1:11
Amazing Views Of A Shoebox Sized Cubesats Deployed From ISS
Space.com
yesterday