English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

6 answers

There might be the risk of atrophied bones and muscles if the child were to grow up in zero g. It would make it alot harder to cope if the person were to go to Earth for the first time, experiencing a relatively strong gravitational environment. In addition, if you didn't experience some kind of gravity (even if only artificially induced by rotating the space ship/station) at some point in your life you may not even have learned how to properly walk upright. Think about it.

2006-07-22 05:36:26 · answer #1 · answered by Search first before you ask it 7 · 1 0

Probably nothing much. Tee birth and conception don't rely on gravity to work. The mother might have a better time of it and not suffer a bad back and piles!

In reality there have been lots of animal and plant breeding experiments in space. Plants, flies, fish and quail all seem to have coped fine in space although there would be long term ramifications on a new born baby if it couldn't interact with a gravitational field in terms of muscular and skeletal development.

2006-07-22 05:00:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you are attempting to ask a real question yet doing so in disgusting way. i think that once you physique build that lots, your bodies hormones get all tousled and you does not have the capacity to conceive as definitely. physique developers specifically situations take relatively some different supplements and different unnatural issues no longer cautioned for pregnant women human beings. i've got googled "pregnant physique developers" and that i'm no longer coming up with relatively some solutions. in many situations, i think of physique developers are extra concentrated on different issues and don't desire/ have toddlers.

2016-12-14 11:47:41 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

that's a weird question. do you mean the baby is born just floating in outer space. god that's super sad. i don't imagine the baby would survive.unless the mother catches the baby before it floats away..like i said weird question..

2006-07-22 04:43:04 · answer #4 · answered by christine 3 · 0 0

Since the "Scientific community" for abortion conclude that a fetus is an, "unviable cell mass", it could not possibly be called "LIFE" in outerspace!

2006-07-22 04:57:03 · answer #5 · answered by rochelle_hall2000 3 · 0 0

good question!, I for one would think making the baby would be more fun in zero gravity

2006-07-22 05:05:06 · answer #6 · answered by echochat40 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers