How do you sleep in space? It's not straightforward, aerospace professor sayspublished at 08:04 BST

As we've been reporting, the Artemis II's crew of four astronauts are currently working through a "pre-sleep" stage, but what exactly does this involve?
Speaking to BBC Radio 4, University College London aerospace professor Kevin Fong tells the Today programme that it largely means the crew is "winding down", though not in the same way you might on Earth.
"It's not straightforward going to sleep up there, you've got to strap yourself into a sleeping bag, Velcro yourself to the wall," Fong explains.
And that's before you've considered the adrenaline that will be coursing through the bodies of the four circling more than 30,000 miles above Earth.
"I just don't know anyone who's going to sleep," Fong admits, as the astronauts ready for their four-hour sleep window.
After hopefully getting some shut-eye, the crew will accelerate their way to the Moon's orbit - our science correspondent explains how.





















