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     <div begin="2.666s" end="7.899s">Exercising in space is not only possible – it’s essential! Despite their busy schedules,</div>
     <div begin="7.9s" end="12.833s">astronauts exercise nearly two hours a day on the International Space Station.</div>
     <div begin="12.833s" end="17.366s">In the absence of the effects of gravity, if you don’t do anything about it, very quickly,</div>
     <div begin="17.366s" end="21.032s">our muscles get very weak, and even our bones start to dissolve away.</div>
     <div begin="21.033s" end="26.266s">Why? Because everything is so lightweight here, there is no real need to be strong</div>
     <div begin="26.266s" end="29.466s">for daily life on orbit. But we know that we will come back to Earth one day…</div>
     <div begin="29.466s" end="33.632s">…so for that you can maintain your strength. Exercising in orbit is quite different</div>
     <div begin="33.633s" end="38.399s">from exercising on Earth. In the space gym, there are three pieces of exercise equipment:</div>
     <div begin="38.4s" end="42.633s">We can do stationary bicycle on orbit. That’s pretty similar to doing a stationary</div>
     <div begin="42.633s" end="45.866s">bicycle ride on Earth, except you don’t have a saddle to sit on.</div>
     <div begin="45.866s" end="50.166s">You just wear a belt to keep you from floating away, and we have clips on the shoes.</div>
     <div begin="50.166s" end="54.399s">There is also the treadmill. The trick there, of course, is to wear a harness</div>
     <div begin="54.4s" end="60.733s">with bungees that keep us kind of cinched down to the treadmill, and that way we can run</div>
     <div begin="60.733s" end="64.899s">and remember how to walk, basically, when we come back, and also helps loading our spine</div>
     <div begin="64.9s" end="69.133s">and our bones.  And then we have this machine, this contraption ARED,</div>
     <div begin="69.133s" end="74.499s">to do basically the rest of our exercise to maintain our strength and all our muscles.</div>
     <div begin="74.5s" end="79.9s">So we can’t use dumbbells, of course, in orbit – we work in zero gravity  –</div>
     <div begin="79.9s" end="87.633s">so we use this machine that basically uses the principle of suction inside a vacuum piston.</div>
     <div begin="87.633s" end="89.633s">And that’s how we can exercise.</div>
     <div begin="89.633s" end="94.166s">After a long, hard workout, astronauts can feel sore, too! </div>
     <div begin="94.166s" end="99.199s">The feeling of exercise on orbit is really similar to exercising on Earth. You warm up,</div>
     <div begin="99.2s" end="103.9s">you stretch, and you increase the load, and if you overdo it, yeah it kind of hurts and it’s the same,</div>
     <div begin="103.9s" end="109.566s">the same feeling than exercising on Earth.</div>
     <div begin="109.566s" end="118.332s">The exercise routine is prepared and adjusted by specialized trainers throughout the mission.</div>
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