
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
They may not have all the fixins, but the astronauts aboard China's Tiangong space station are sure eating well.
A new oven delivered to Tiangong has been put to quick work by the six people currently living aboard the outpost, the astronauts of the Shenzhou 20 and Shenzhou 21 missions.
In a video released by the Astronaut Center of China (ACC), the space station crew is seen securing a set of chicken wings in a specially made grill cage and placing it in a small, cabinet-like compartment in the space station's wall.
The oven not only serves as a powerful technology demonstration for the microgravity microwave (which actually functions more like an air fryer), but it also provides a welcome flavor of home for the astronauts living aboard the station.
Kang Guohua, a senior member of the Chinese Society of Astronautics and a professor of aerospace engineering at Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics, told Chinese state media that comforts such as hot meals are important to keep crews psychologically "grounded."
According to the ACC, the oven operates without stressing Tiangong's power grid and is designed to provide consistent and smokeless baking conditions in the station's microgravity environment. Such conditions are necessary aboard orbital outposts like Tiangong and the International Space Station (ISS), which rely on strictly maintained life support systems and rigorous fire safety protocols.
Cooking in microgravity differs from cooking something here on Earth. The sweet spot for the chicken wings was 28 minutes inside their enclosed grill container. Some peppered steak was also prepared for Shenzhou 20 Commander Chen Dong, according to a report from the Global Times, a tabloid owned by the state-run People's Daily.
The Global Times compared the cooking milestone to one notched aboard the ISS in 2019, when NASA astronauts baked cookies in space using a prototype Zero G oven. That test showed that baking things in orbit (at least cookies) takes longer than it does on Earth. But China's oven, unlike the temporary Zero G oven used aboard the ISS, is there to stay. The device has been integrated into Tiangong's systems and certified for up to 500 uses.
The Shenzhou 21 crew launched to Tiangong on Oct. 31 and will remain aboard Tiangong for roughly six months. The trio is relieving the Shenzhou 20 astronauts, who have been living aboard the station since April and will return to Earth on Nov. 5.
latest_posts
- 1
A Gustav Klimt painting is now the most expensive piece of modern art sold at auction. The fascinating history behind the $236 million 'Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer.' - 2
A Manual for Pick Dependable Vehicle Rental Administrations For 2024 - 3
Fossils unearthed in Morocco are first from little-understood period of human evolution - 4
The Meaning of Breaking the Pen's Nib in Death penalties - 5
Allow Innovative Progressions To have a Massive Effect
Top 20 Wellbeing and Wellness Applications for a Sound Way of life
Air superiority and long-range strikes: what China's war games say about how it might assault Taiwan
Black Friday streaming deals 2025: Grab the Disney+ Hulu bundle for only $5 and save over 60%
Clocks to go forward one hour in Europe as summer time starts
Figure out How to Remain Persuaded During Your Internet based Degree Program
Step by step instructions to Show Children the Significance of Appropriate Handshaking
Why won't NASA's Artemis 2 astronauts land on the moon when they get there?
Comet MAPS faces a make-or-break moment as it dives toward the sun on April 4 — could it shine in the daytime sky?
Between 600 to 800 aid trucks entering Gaza daily since start of ceasefire, COGAT confirms













