3D-Printed Coffee Cups Help Liquids Defy Gravity
12:17 minutes
In 2008, NASA Astronaut Don Pettit was on the space station, pondering a uniquely space-based problem: So many of Earth’s basic cultural rituals—clinking glasses together, for example—just don’t translate in near-zero gravity. “You can smash your juice bags together, but it doesn’t have the same human connection,” he says.
Seven years later, the first gravity-defying coffee cups have arrived at the space station. Pettit describes their odd, curvy shape as the “kind of bulbous thing you might find on a rare orchid.” They work using capillary action: Simply press your lips to the rim, and you get a sip, whether you want one or not.
Pettit and his co-designer, mechanical engineer Mark Weislogel of Portland State University, join us to talk about this unique design challenge.
Don Pettit is a NASA astronaut at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas.
Mark Weislogel is senior scientist at IRPI and a mechanical engineering professor at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon.
Christopher Intagliata was Science Friday’s senior producer. He once served as a prop in an optical illusion and speaks passable Ira Flatowese.