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When on the CEVIS,(Cycle Ergometer with Vibration Isolation Stabilization)

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I'm assuming the astronauts would say they are sitting.

When they secure their feet under a blue IVA rail

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do they say they standing or floating?

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    $\begingroup$ Are you just looking for a single example or some kind of consensus? $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 19, 2019 at 21:20
  • $\begingroup$ A single example is fine, but I'm curious if there is a consensus. $\endgroup$
    – Bob516
    Commented Nov 20, 2019 at 3:38

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I found a single potential example of using "standing" in an astronaut journal entry, anonymized and recorded in NASA/TM-2016-218603, Behavioral Issues Associated With Long Duration Space Expeditions:Review and Analysis of Astronaut JournalsExperiment 01-E104 (Journals) Phase 2 Final Report. This document, and its first phase companion are my go-to sources for astronaut thoughts.

This quote is from page 16 (26 if you count covers etc) of the first link, in the section Adjustment / Low Morale. Emphasis mine.

I actually got completely upset over a 100% trivial thing yesterday. I needed to record an experiment using a [specific] card in a camera. I had a bit of a headache [probably from high CO2 level] and we were really short of those cards. I was pissed because I saw zero reason to record me [doing nothing]. Not even moving, just standing. Plus, there was Ku coverage so the ground could have recorded it. Anyway, I wanted to call down and ask why. Cardinal error for a crew, and luckily both my crew mates jumped on me and talked me out of it. I was mad at them for a bit because they didn’t see my point of view.

I say potential because there's a quote later on where standing is used specifically in respect to the ARED, which is a weight machine, and it makes more sense in that context to talk about being standing or not.

I checked both documents for "float" too, and found that floating (in these journals, at least, over 20-ish examples) refers to movement or being unsecured, both for items and astronauts.

My memory says "hook" is the verb for using feet on rails or loops to hold yourself in place, but I haven't found a source for that yet and that word usage doesn't occur in the sources above. I'll keep checking.

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The greatest writeup on using a toilet in space ever penned, Chapter 15 The Void of Space in Clay Anderson's memoir "The Ordinary Spaceman", starts like this:

I was gently floating in the US lab module, my feet firmly anchored in the clever but overdesigned foot restraint device...

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    $\begingroup$ It's too bad there isn't a well-developed "ask an astronaut" resource for questions like this. Several have Twitter accounts that might be suitable for getting answers. $\endgroup$
    – Erin Anne
    Commented Nov 22, 2019 at 0:46
  • $\begingroup$ @ErinAnne Clay's quite responsive to questions on Quora. Too bad he hangs out there instead of here! Duane Carey participates here occasionally, but he didn't go to the ISS. I could ask a few of my former students, but I personally doubt there's a consensus answer on this. $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 22, 2019 at 1:13
  • $\begingroup$ Really! I would've thought that, just because of how language works, a word would have come into common usage for that action $\endgroup$
    – Erin Anne
    Commented Nov 22, 2019 at 9:45

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