To prevent the lunar explorers becoming weak and feeble in the low gravity environment, scientists suggest they go for a run. But, this being space, it's not just any kind of run.
Instead, researchers have advised astronauts run several times a day around a "lunar Wall of Death".
Using a rented Wall of Death a giant wooden cylinder used by motorcycle stunt performers in a gravity defying fairground act - a 36-metre-high telescopic crane, and some bungee cords, the researchers showed it was possible for a human to run fast enough in lunar gravity not only to remain on the wall, but to generate sufficient lateral force to combat bone and muscle wasting.
"I'm amazed that nobody had the idea before," said Alberto Minetti, a distinguished professor of physiology at the University of Milan. "This could be a convenient way to train on the moon." And easier than building a spinning moonbase that generates the force, like the giant wheel of Space Station One in 2001: A Space Odyssey.
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