Humans living in space for months, years, or even generations will need to navigate sex in a zero-gravity world.
New study finds microgravity disrupts sperm and embryo development, raising concerns about human reproduction in space.
As commercial spaceflight draws ever closer and time spent in space continues to extend, the question of reproductive health beyond the bounds of planet Earth is no longer theoretical but now ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
Humans might struggle to make babies in space. Sperm gets disoriented in microgravity, a new study suggests
Floating in near-weightless conditions can be disorienting for even the most experienced astronauts. Male reproductive cells—sperm—also seem to get confused in simulated microgravity, which has ...
Medindia on MSN
Space Reproduction: Why Sperm May Get Lost in Microgravity?
India, March 31 -- Space reproduction may require more than just normal conditions-it needs direction, according to new research from Adelaide University highlighting that a lack of gravity negatively ...
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