3名航天员简历公布假设以下是航天员桂海潮的一天英语作文
全文共6篇示例,供读者参考
篇1
    My Day as an Astronaut in Space
    Hi, my name is Gui Haichao and I'm an astronaut! Today I'm going to tell you all about a regular day for me living and working in the International Space Station. It's really neat up here in space!
    I wake up every morning at 6 AM to the sound of a jarring alarm clock noise. Even though there is no day or night in space, we still have to keep on a schedule just like people on Earth. The first thing I do is use my toiletry kit to brush my teeth and get ready for the day. The toothpaste has to be swallowed instead of spit out since the water would just float away as bubbles!
    After that, it's time for some breakfast. We have food packages that are kind of like tv dinners, but way better tasting. My favorite morning meal is the scrambled eggs! To eat them, I just squeeze the package and the eggs come floating out. I have to be careful not to let any get away though, or it could make a real mess on the Space Station. I use a little funnel to guide the food right into my mouth.
    With my belly full, I do my daily exercise routine. It's really important for astronauts to exercise every day, even more than people on Earth! That's because we don't have any gravity pulling us down, so our muscles and bones can get weak over time. I spend at least two hours lifting weights, riding the stationary bike, and doing other exercises to stay healthy and strong.
    Then it's time to get to work on my science experiments and maintenance tasks. One of the coolest things I get to do is grow plants and vegetables right here on the Space Station. We have a special plant growth chamber with lamps that mimic sunlight. By studying how plants grow in space, it can help get us ready for future long missions to the Moon or Mars.
We eat some of the fresh veggies too, which is amazing since they're literally fresh from space!
    I also have to do a lot of repairs and checkups on all of the complicated equipment we have up here. The carbon dioxide removal system is really important to keep the air clean. We even have tools like 3D printers that let us make new equipment parts! It feels like being a mechanic mixed with a scientist sometimes.
    Every few hours, we get to take a break and just enjoy the incredible view out the windows. From up here, you can see all of Earth rotating slowly below. The oceans and clouds look so beautiful from space. I'll never get tired of that sight! We can also look out and see the moon, the blackness of space, and sometimes even the Space Station's giant solar panel arrays.
    For lunch, I'll heat up a pack of delicious space curry or pasta. To drink, I'll suck out some water from one of the liquid bags we have. No cups are needed since the water just floats in big bubbles! We have a table we strap our food containers to so they don't go floati
ng all over the place while we eat.
    In the afternoon, it's back to work running science experiments, doing maintenance checks, exercising some more, and talking with mission control in Houston. In my free time, I like learning Russian from my two cosmonaut crewmates or playing games with them. We have a small recreation space with a television, books, and a floating chess/checkers set.
    For supper, my favorite foods are the chicken teriyaki and the mashed potatoes with gravy. They taste just like what you'd have back at home! We always have to be careful not to make too many crumbs or spills while eating though, since it's really hard to clean things up in microgravity.
    After supper, we squeeze in a little more exercise and work time before getting ready for bed. I'll take a shower using hot water and special low-suds soap and shampoo before putting on my comfy pajamas. For sleeping, I have to strap myself into a sleeping bag anchored to the wall, so I don't go floating around all night! The bright sun visors have to go down over all the windows so it seems like night time in the Station.
    Shortly before my bedtime at 10 PM, I like to call my family back in China and read my daughter a bedtime story over the video link. She thinks it's so cool that her dad lives in outer space! Sometimes she asks when I'm coming home, and I have to explain that I'll be up here for another few months doing important science. I miss her and my wife so much, but I know what I'm doing is incredible and important for all of humankind.
    Well, that's a typical day in the life of this astronaut! From running experiments to spacewalking (which I didn't even talk about!), it's always an amazing adventure. I feel so lucky to see breathtaking views of our beautiful planet Earth, and to get to experience living and working in the frontiers of space. It's definitely not easy, but it's the dream of a lifetime for an astronaut like me.