The dangers of life in space are made scarily evident in Constellation, and while Paul Lancaster saving the day with baby wipes in episode 6 may seem bizarre, it’s not too far removed from what could happen in reality. Paul’s quick and unconventional thinking ultimately saves most of the astronauts on the ISS, but the commander’s idea isn’t actually as original as it may appear.
Alternate universes aside, the show takes a grounded approach to its storytelling – including Constellation‘s nod to an 89-year-old thought experiment. It does this by abiding by real scientific theories and principles that haven’t been created for the show. Apple TV+’s sci-fi drama may take some creative license with how these realistic elements are approached, but most of what the Constellation cast does and experiences is rooted in the real world. While this may exclude slipping between different dimensions, Paul’s on-the-spot solution is more authentic than it seems.
Constellation episode 6 surprisingly unfolds from Paul’s perspective, resolving some major mysteries surrounding the distortions in Jo’s reality.
The International Space Station (ISS) isn’t a work of fiction. The real ISS, which has been permanently staffed by a rotation of astronauts and cosmonauts since November 2000, experienced a drop in pressure due to a meteorite collision in 2018. Constellation‘s Paul Lancaster opted to plug his fracture in the glass with baby wipes in the throes of heat-of-the-moment thinking. While this seems unlikely to work, a real ESA astronaut named Alexander Gerst plugged a microfracture on the ISS using only his finger back in 2018. So, Paul’s solution isn’t so crazy by comparison.
The difference is that the damage to Gerst’s ISS was eventually repaired more permanently, whereas Lancaster’s crew was forced to abandon the station.
According to Daily Mail, Gerst’s solution to the damage was only temporary while his crew “Patched it with tape.” However, the difference is that the damage to Gerst’s ISS was eventually repaired more permanently, whereas Lancaster’s crew was forced to abandon the station. However, the presence of baby wipes on Lancaster’s ISS is another factor that ties the station to its real-world counterpart. Speaking on the NASA podcast Houston, We Have a Podcast in 2020, former ISS inhabitant Elisca Hicks confirmed her crew, “Have wet wipes, like a baby wipe on board as well.”
Constellation has undeniably fantastical elements as part of its formula. It’s for this reason that the story’s components that aren’t incredibly fictional need to align with real-world possibilities. Paul’s baby wipe scene on the ISS taking inspiration from actual events aboard the station, and the supplies a quick-thinking astronaut would have to hand, is a great example of how the show keeps itself as grounded as it can whenever possible. Another is the CAL, a real-world experiment. Constellation‘s devotion to authenticity during sequences such as these is part of what makes the show so believable despite its fictional components.
Constellation Season 1 Release Schedule |
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Episode Number |
Title |
Release Date (2024) |
1 |
The Wounded Angel |
February 21 |
2 |
Live and Let Die |
February 21 |
3 |
Somewhere in Space Hangs My Heart |
February 21 |
4 |
The Left Hand of God |
February 28 |
5 |
Five Miles Out, the Sound is Clearest |
March 6 |
6 |
Paul is Dead |
March 13 |
7 |
Through the Looking Glass |
March 20 |
8 |
TBA |
March 27 |
New episodes of
Constellation
are available each Wednesday on Apple TV+.
Source: Daily Mail, NASA
Constellation is a sci-fi psychological thriller written and created by Peter Harness for Apple TV+. After facing a crisis in space, Astronaut Jo returns to Earth only to discover nothing is quite the same – and that her sanity may be slowly slipping from her grasp.
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