癌 生存者 who will jet into space on SpaceX's first 非軍事の flight 明らかにする/漏らすs the 激しい training she's had to を受ける for the 使節団 - from 雪の降る,雪の多い mountain treks to 無-gravity 実験(する)s and even water 生き残り courses

  • Hayley Arceneaux, from Baton 紅, Louisiana, is one of four 乗組員 members on the first all-非軍事の space 使節団, Inspiration4
  • The 29-year-old will be the youngest SpaceX 乗組員 member and first 宇宙飛行士 with a prosthesis?
  • She has been 文書ing her training on social マスコミ and 地位,任命するd ビデオs of what she's packing for the three-day 使節団
  • Training has 含むd a mountain 引き上げ(る), a 無-gravity 実験(する) flight, water 生き残り and 闘士,戦闘機 jet training in Montana
  • As a bone 癌 生存者 she wants to show 患者s and 癌 生存者s that 'the sky is not even the 限界 anymore'

A 29-year-old 癌 生存者 who is 始める,決める to become the first-ever person with a prosthesis to jet into space as part of an all-非軍事の SpaceX 使節団 has 申し込む/申し出d a glimpse into the rigorous training 過程 that each of the budding 宇宙飛行士s has had to go through ahead of next month's flight.?

Hayley Arceneaux, who was 指名するd as the youngest member of SpaceX's first all-非軍事の space 使節団, Inspiration4, earlier this year has been busy 文書ing the in-depth 準備 過程 that is 要求するd of her and all three of her space-bound companions ahead of their flight on September 15.?????

Speaking to the Today show about her training, the Baton 紅, Louisiana, native - who now 作品 as a 内科医s assistant at St. Jude's Children's Hospital, where she herself received 治療 for bone 癌 - explained that the 準備 過程 began months ago, すぐに after the four members of the 乗組員 were 指名するd.??

The training began in Pennsylvania, where Hayley and her companions were given a taste of the 肉親,親類d of 集中的な physical 緊張する their 団体/死体s will を受ける during their space flight.??

Hayley Arceneaux, 29, will be the youngest SpaceX crew member and the first astronaut with a prosthesis?when she takes off in the first all-civilian space mission, Inspiration4

Hayley Arceneaux, 29, will be the youngest SpaceX 乗組員 member and the first 宇宙飛行士 with a prosthesis?when she takes off in the first all-非軍事の space 使節団, Inspiration4

The crew did a 30-hour simulation to get an idea of what the multi-day trip will be like, including 'eating our space foods and wearing our space clothes'

The 乗組員 did a 30-hour 模擬実験/偽ること to get an idea of what the multi-day trip will be like, 含むing 'eating our space foods and wearing our space 着せる/賦与するs'?

'As soon as the whole 乗組員 was 発表するd, we went straight to Pennsylvania and did centrifuge training to get our 団体/死体s accustomed to the (gravitational) G-軍隊s that we're going to feel with 開始する,打ち上げる and re-入ること/参加(者),' she said, 追加するing that the training has 'really been ramping up in intensity' in 最近の weeks.?

In centrifuge training the 乗組員 members are spun very 急速な/放蕩な in a rollercoaster-looking contraption designed to train their 団体/死体s to 許容する the 増加するd acceleration and lower gravitational 軍隊s they will experience once they leave earth's surface.?

'Since then, it's been a lot of 熟考する/考慮するing and a lot of time in the simulator,' Arceneaux 追加するd.

'We've done a lot of 冷静な/正味の things, too.'

One of the first things the 乗組員 did together to break the ice - literally - and build chemistry was 引き上げ(る) 開始する Rainier in Washington. Arceneaux 解任するd their 指揮官 説 it was 'to get us comfortable with 存在 uncomfortable'.?

'We (軍の)野営地,陣営d on this mountain together for three days - we 引き上げ(る)d for ten hours on the first day, straight up t he mountain,' Arceneaux said.?

One of the first things the crew did together was climb a mountain 'to get comfortable with being uncomfortable'

One of the first things the 乗組員 did together was climb a mountain 'to get comfortable with 存在 uncomfortable'?

The Inspiration4 crew (left to right): Forty-one-year-old Iraq war veteran Chris Semboski,?51-year-old professor of geoscience Sian Proctor, billionaire?Jared Isaacman and?Arceneaux

The Inspiration4 乗組員 (left to 権利): Forty-one-year-old Iraq war 退役軍人 Chris Semboski,?51-year-old professor of geoscience Sian Proctor, 億万長者?Jared Isaacman and?Arceneaux

Arceneaux (right) and Proctor (left) in altitude chamber training in case of an emergency where a malfunction in cabin pressure could cause oxygen levels to drop

Arceneaux (権利) and Proctor (left) in 高度 議会 training in 事例/患者 of an 緊急 where a 機能不全 in cabin 圧力 could 原因(となる) oxygen levels to 減少(する)

Arceneaux has been documenting her training on social media, which includes hitting the gym

Arceneaux has been 文書ing her training on social マスコミ, which 含むs hitting the gym

'We learned a lot about ourselves and each other and it made us e ven more 確信して in the chemistry of our 乗組員. We get along so 井戸/弁護士席.'?

She told Today: 'We did a 無-gravity flight and got to experience 無重量状態 for the first time.'

Arceneaux 述べるd 存在 in the 宇宙船 without gravity as 'the weirdest sensation of not 存在 大(公)使館員d to anything'.?

'It's harder than you would 推定する/予想する to navigate in 無 gravity,' she 追加するd.??

The 乗組員 then 参加するd in high-高度 training in 事例/患者 of an 緊急 where a 機能不全 in cabin 圧力 would 原因(となる) oxygen levels to 減少(する).

'We've done it all,' she said.?

'We did some water 生き残り training, hypoxia training - all of the quintessential 宇宙飛行士 training and it's been all of these once-in-a-lifetime experiences packed into one year. It's been the best.'

Arceneaux completed?fighter jet training in Montana as well as centrifuge training to get accustomed to the g-forces

Arceneaux 完全にするd?闘士,戦闘機 jet training in Montana 同様に as centrifuge training to get accustomed to the g-軍隊s

< div class="image-wrap"> The crew practiced weightlessly navigating in the spacecraft with a zero-gravity test flight. Arceneaux said: 'It's harder than you would expect'

The 乗組員 practiced weightlessly navigating in the 宇宙船 with a 無-gravity 実験(する) flight. Arceneaux said: 'It's harder than you would 推定する/予想する'

Aside from physical training a lot of studying has gone into preparing for takeoff

Aside from physical training a lot of 熟考する/考慮するing has gone into 準備するing for 離陸/出発

Hypoxia training is another 演習 宇宙飛行士s do to know how to continue navigating the space (手先の)技術 with 減ずるd oxygen.?

Arceneaux told Today that 'there have been so many moments that have made it feel real but when I got to put on my space 控訴 two weeks ago I was like, "Yep I'm an 宇宙飛行士. I am going to space".'?

The 乗組員 even did a 30-hour 模擬実験/偽ること to get an idea of what the multi-day trip will be like, 含むing 'eating our space foods and wearing our space 着せる/賦与するs'.?

'And then I 現実に got to see our Falcon 9 ロケット/急騰する,' she said.

'It was so exciting. We got to 調印する our 指名するs in the すす because it's been used a couple times.?

'The beauty of Space X is they're making this reusable 科学(工学)技術 and so this ロケット/急騰する's been to space, it's got すす and we got to 調印する our 指名するs in the すす. It (the ロケット/急騰する) knows what it's doing,' she 追加するd.

The other two 乗組員 members are 51-year-old professor of geoscience Sian Proctor, and 41-year-old Iraq war 退役軍人 Chris Semboski.?

Arceneaux is bringing her late father's favorite tie to space
She is also packing her parent's wedding rings, a t-shirt form her alma mater and other special mementos

Arceneaux showed her Instagram 信奉者s what she's packing for space, 含むing her late father's favorite tie, a t-shirt from her 母校, her parent's wedding (犯罪の)一味s and other special mementos

Arceneaux is a 内科医's assistant at St Jude's Children's 研究 Hospital where she was 扱う/治療するd for bone 癌 at age 10.

The hospital 取って代わるd a 病気d 部分 of Arceneaux's 権利 femur with a metal 棒 and 19 years later the prosthesis will make her the first to 旅行 into earth's 軌道 with an 人工的な 団体/死体 part.?

Arceneaux told Today?that she first knew she 手配中の,お尋ね者 to be an 宇宙飛行士 'a few months before I was 診断するd when my family went to 航空宇宙局 in Houston'.

She is now いっそう少なく than a month away from 達成するing that dream as part of a thr ee-day space 使節団 after joining the 乗組員 と一緒に 億万長者 Jared Isaacman - who 購入(する)d the flight - 支援する in February.???

Arceneaux signed her name in the spacecraft's soot

Arceneaux 調印するd her 指名する in the 宇宙船's すす

The Falcon 9 was covered in soot because it had been to space before

The Falcon 9 was covered in すす because it had been to space before

'The beauty of SpaceX is they're making this reusable 科学(工学)技術 and so this ロケット/急騰する's been to space, it has すす and we got to 調印する our 指名するs in the すす,' Arceneaux 追加するd.

'I fe el like I'm getting all of these once-in-a-lifetime experiences all in one,' Arceneaux told Today.?

However, there's いっそう少なく training when it comes to packing for space. When asked what she's putting in her スーツケース Arceneaux laughed and said 'there are no travel blogs' when she tried searching for tips on what to bring into 軌道.

She 株d her own ビデオ 株ing what she's packing for the space 使節団 含むing a t-shirt from her 母校 Southeastern Louisiana University, her parent's wedding (犯罪の)一味s and letters from her family she won't open until in 軌道.

Arceneaux 株d: 'I'm bringing pictures of friends I lost through the years to 癌 because they're such an important part of why we're going on this 使節団 (and) raising money for St Jude.'

She's also bringing her late father's favorite tie.?

The three-day space mission is taking place September 15-18, 2021

The three-day space 使節団 is taking place September 15-18, 2021

The crew?did a 30-hour simulation to get an idea of what the multi-day trip will be like

The 乗組員?did a 30-hour 模擬実験/偽ること to get an idea of what the multi-day trip will be like

The civilian astronauts completed water survival and fighter jet training in Montana as well as centrifuge training to get accustomed to the g-forces

The 非軍事の 宇宙飛行士s 完全にするd water 生き残り and 闘士,戦闘機 jet training in Montana 同様に as centrifuge training to get accustomed to the g-軍隊s

Arceneaux said on the morning talk show: 'I lost my dad to 癌 just three years ago and he had this really bold St Jude tie and I would always say "Don't wear that, that's not the most 流行の/上流の." But he would 主張する on wearing it because people would ask him about it and then he could tell them about St Jude.'??

The 内科医's assistant wants to show her young 患者s and other 癌 生存者s that 'the sky is not even the 限界 anymore'.

She is looking 今後 the life-changing moment that past 宇宙飛行士s have experienced when in space looking 支援する 負かす/撃墜する on earth but said she is most excited about calling the St Jude 患者s from space.?

'Kids are so visual and it will 現実に show them what their 未来 can look like,' she said.?

Arceneaux said: 'I really just want to pass on the message that if I can do this, you can do this. And to 持つ/拘留する の上に hope that there will be better days. The hair will grow 支援する and you're going to feel better and you're going to grow up and 遂行する your dreams.'?

She is now a physician's assistant at St Jude's Hospital and?wants to show patients and cancer survivors that 'the sky is not even the limit anymore'

She is now a 内科医's assistant at St Jude's Hospital and?wants to show 患者s and 癌 生存者s that 'the sky is not even the 限界 anymore'

Arceneaux was treated at St Jude's Hospital (pictured) for bone cancer and has since recovered from the illness

Arceneaux was 扱う/治療するd at St Jude's Hospital (pictured) for bone 癌 and has since 回復するd from the illness

Arceneaux knew she wanted to be an astronaut after visiting NASA in Houston with her family

Arceneaux knew she 手配中の,お尋ね者 to be an 宇宙飛行士 after visiting 航空宇宙局 in Houston with her family

At the age of 10 (pictured), Arceneaux had surgery at St Jude to replace her knee and get a titanium rod in her left thigh bone

At the age of 10 (pictured), Arceneaux had 外科 at St Jude to 取って代わる her 膝 and get a titanium 棒 in her left thigh bone