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A lack of vitamin C was all it took to
give sailors scurvy, and vitamin deficiencies can cause a number of
other health problems. Simply packing some multi-vitamins will not be
enough to keep astronauts healthy as they explore deep space. They will
need fresh produce.
Right now on the space station, astronauts
receive regular shipments of a wide variety of freeze-dried and
prepackaged meals to cover their dietary needs β resupply missions keep
them freshly stocked. When crews venture further into space, traveling
for months or years without resupply shipments, the vitamins in
prepackaged form break down over time, which presents a problem for
astronaut health.
NASA is looking at ways to provide astronauts
with nutrients in a long-lasting, easily absorbed formβfreshly grown
fresh fruits and vegetables. The challenge is how to do that in a closed
environment without sunlight or Earthβs gravity.
Veggie
The
Vegetable Production System, known as Veggie, is a space garden
residing on the space station. Veggieβs purpose is to help NASA study
plant growth in microgravity, while adding fresh food to the astronautsβ
diet and enhancing happiness and well-being on the orbiting laboratory.
The Veggie garden is about the size of a carry-on piece of luggage and
typically holds six plants. Each plant grows in a βpillowβ filled with a
clay-based growth media and fertilizer. The pillows are important to
help distribute water, nutrients and air in a healthy balance around the
roots. Otherwise, the roots would either drown in water or be engulfed
by air because of the way fluids in space tend to form bubbles.
In
the absence of gravity, plants use other environmental factors, such as
light, to orient and guide growth. A bank of light emitting diodes
(LEDs) above the plants produces a spectrum of light suited for the
plantsβ growth. Since plants reflect a lot of green light and use more
red and blue wavelengths, the Veggie chamber typically glows magenta
pink.
To date, Veggie has successfully grown a variety of plants,
including three types of lettuce, Chinese cabbage, mizuna mustard, red
Russian kale and zinnia flowers. The flowers were especially popular
with astronaut Scott Kelly, who picked a bouquet and photographed it
floating in the cupola against the backdrop of Earth. Some of the plants
were harvested and eaten by the crew members, with remaining samples
returned to Earth to be analyzed. One concern was harmful microbes
growing on the produce. So far, no harmful contamination has been
detected, and the food has been safe (and enjoyable) for the crew to
eat.
Our team at Kennedy Space Center envisions planting more produce
in the future, such as tomatoes and peppers. Foods like berries,
certain beans and other antioxidant-rich foods would have the added
benefit of providing some space radiation protection for crew members
who eat them.
Veggie Fact Sheet
Advanced Plant Habitat
The
Advanced Plant Habitat (APH), like Veggie, is a growth chamber on
station for plant research. It uses LED lights and a porous clay
substrate with controlled release fertilizer to deliver water, nutrients
and oxygen to the plant roots.
But unlike Veggie, it is enclosed
and automated with cameras and more than 180 sensors that are in
constant interactive contact with a team on the ground at Kennedy, so it
doesnβt need much day-to-day care from the crew. Its water recovery and
distribution, atmosphere content, moisture levels and temperature are
all automated. It has more colors of LED lights than Veggie, with red,
green, and blue lights, but also white, far red and even infrared to
allow for nighttime imaging.
When a harvest is ready for research
studies, the crew collects samples from the plants, freezes or
chemically fixes them to preserve them, and sends them back down to
Earth to be studied so scientists can better understand how space
affected their growth and development.
APH had its first test run
on the space station in Spring 2018 using Arabidopsis thaliana (the
βwhite mouse of the plant research worldβ) and dwarf wheat. The
time-lapse video of this was a popular social media release from the
space station worldwide.
Dr. Norman Lewis is the principal
investigator for the Arabidopsis Gravitational Response Omics
(Arabidopsis-GRO) consortium study, which will be the first study using
APH. He and his collaborators are especially interested in what happens
to plants in space at the gene, protein and metabolite level, and what
changes occur and why.
A key question they want to answer is the
relationship between microgravity and plant lignin content. Lignins in
plants have functions whose closest analogy is that of bones in humans.
They give structure and rigidity to plants and the means to stand
upright against gravity. We already know space causes bone and muscle
loss in humans because the physical demands are lower in space. So what
about lignins?
Lewis and his team also want to know if plants
genetically engineered to have less lignin can survive and function
normally in space. This could give space-grown plants several
advantages, including being better for nutrient absorption when humans
eat them and in making plant waste easier for composting. Lewis and his
team believe this fundamental science information will guide our
strategies for deep space exploration and colonization.
Lewis
knows space science has come a long way already β and that the
possibilities on the horizon were previously the world of fiction!
Biological Research in Canisters
The
Biological Research in Canisters (BRIC) is a facility used to study the
effects of space on organisms small enough to grow in petri dishes,
such as yeast and microbes. BRIC-LED is the latest version, which added
light-emitting diodes (LEDs) to support biology such as plants, mosses,
algae and cyanobacteria that need light to make their food.
Right
now, BRIC-LED is undergoing hardware validation tests. Scientists want
to ensure the LEDs donβt get too hot for the plants and do other system
checks. Soon, researchers such as Dr. Simon Gilroy of the University of
Wisconsin-Madison will use it to conduct studies.
Gilroy is
interested in how the Arabidopsis plantβs gene expression changes in
space. βThere are literally thousands of experiments done on Earth [on
Arabidopsis],β Gilroy explains. βCold shock. Touched them. Not watered
them. Too much water. Shouted at them,β he says with a chuckle. βThose
databases are all available to us. So we look and see if there are any
patterns anyone has found and what on the ground mimics what happens in
space.β
Some patterns that arise are expected, like when the
genes associated with gravity become altered. But two patterns that have
caught Gilroyβs attention have to do with the plantsβ immune system.
The
plants seem to have increased stress from oxidation. Normal chemistry
in the cells makes a very reactive oxygen-based chemical. Uncontrolled,
this βreactive oxygen speciesβ can react with the machinery that repairs
DNA and mess that up, or it can damage mitochondria. In a healthy
plant, the cells have ways of dealing with it. But in space, plants are
making more of it.
The other pattern is certain genes associated
with the immune system turn on and others switch off in space.
Scientists suspect this may compromise that plantsβ ability to fight off
infections.
There is anecdotal evidence, too, that plants in
space may be struggling to fend off pathogens. Once, the zinnias in
Veggie got a little overwatered, and there was a lack of air flow. A
fungus started growing on the plants, and some died. Astronaut Scott
Kelly delicately cleaned off the fungus, nursed the surviving plants
back to health and got them to flower. It could have been a fluke, but
it raised the question if space was weakening the zinniaβs health.
Rather
than intentionally making Veggie plants sick to test this theory,
scientists want to run gene expression studies using BRIC-LED and trick
plants into thinking theyβre being threatened. They do this by
manipulating protein receptors on the plants, which are constantly on
the lookout for signs of bacteria.
Bacteria use a whip-like
structure called a flagellum to help them swim, and flagella all share a
common set of 22 amino acids nicknamed βflag-22.β Plants are looking
for flag-22, and their defense systems kick on as soon as they pick up
on it. Scientists can squirt a harmless solution of flag-22 onto the
plants. βThe plant freaks out and thinks itβs being attacked,β Gilroy
explains.
In the BRIC-LED experiment, tiny plants are grown for
10 days, and then scientists squirt them with flag-22. An hour later,
the plants are fully defending themselves, and scientists douse them
with a chemical fixative to stop all biological processes. This fixative
does a great job of preserving the plantsβ response state, but as an
added step, the plants are put into a deep freeze. The plants are later
sent back down to Earth and ground up to have their RNA extracted and
analyzed.
Gilroy hopes to learn more about the effects of space
on a plantβs health this way. βThe patterns will tell us whether the
plant defense system is operating correctly or not,β he says.
Research like this will help NASA understand how to keep plants flourishing in space and better enable long-duration missions.
Sirisha Bandla Becomes Third Indian-Origin Woman To Fly Into Space
Virgin
Galactic’s VSS Unity, as the spaceplane is called, took off for the
1.5-hour mission above New Mexico following a 90-minute delay due to bad
weather.
Houston: Aeronautical engineer Sirisha Bandla on Sunday
became the third Indian-origin woman to fly into space when she joined
British billionaire Richard Branson on Virgin Galactic’s first fully
crewed suborbital test flight from New Mexico.
Virgin Galactic’s VSS
Unity, as the spaceplane is called, took off for the 1.5-hour mission
above New Mexico following a 90-minute delay due to bad weather.
Ms
Bandla joined Branson and five others on board Virgin Galactic’s
SpaceShipTwo Unity to make a journey to the edge of space from New
Mexico.
“I am so incredibly honoured to be a part of the amazing
crew of #Unity22, and to be a part of a company whose mission is to make
space available to all,” 34-year-old Bandla tweeted days before the
flight.
Sirisha Bandla
(https://twitter.com/SirishaBandla?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1410947220418011138%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es2_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ndtv.com%2Findians-abroad%2Fvirgin-galactic-sirisha-bandla-becomes-third-indian-origin-woman-to-fly-into-space-2484291)
@SirishaBandla
(https://twitter.com/SirishaBandla?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1410947220418011138%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es2_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ndtv.com%2Findians-abroad%2Fvirgin-galactic-sirisha-bandla-becomes-third-indian-origin-woman-to-fly-into-space-2484291)
Β·
I
am so incredibly honored to be a part of the amazing crew of #Unity22
(https://twitter.com/hashtag/Unity22?src=hashtag_click), and to be a
part of a company whose mission is to make space available to all.
Virgin Galactic
@virgingalactic
Join us July 11th for our first fully crewed rocket powered test flight, and the beginning of a new space age.
The countdown begins. #Unity22
http://virgingalactic.com. @RichardBranson
Sirisha Bandla
(https://twitter.com/SirishaBandla?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1410947220418011138%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ndtv.com%2Findians-abroad%2Fvirgin-galactic-sirisha-bandla-becomes-third-indian-origin-woman-to-fly-into-space-2484291)
@SirishaBandla
(https://twitter.com/SirishaBandla?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1410947220418011138%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ndtv.com%2Findians-abroad%2Fvirgin-galactic-sirisha-bandla-becomes-third-indian-origin-woman-to-fly-into-space-2484291)
I really didn’t need to tweet this since my friends flooded the feed yesterday with it
I
was overwhelmed (in a good way!) by messages of love, unrecognizable
capital text, and positivity yesterday. Slowly working my way through
them…one platform at a time!
“When I first heard that I was
getting this opportunity, it was just… I was speechless. I think that
that probably captured it very well. This is an incredible opportunity
to get people from different backgrounds, different geographies and
different communities into space,” she said in a video posted on the
Twitter handle of Virgin Galactic on July 6.
The primary objective for Unity 22 was to serve as a test flight for future commercial passenger flights by Virgin Galactic.
Ms
Bandla, who was born in Guntur district in Andhra Pradesh and brought
up in Houston, was astronaut No 004 and her flight role was Researcher
Experience. The other crew members were two pilots and three other
crewmates, including billionaire Branson, who turns 71 in a week.
She
became the third Indian-origin woman to fly into space after Kalpana
Chawla and Sunita Williams. Wing Commander Rakesh Sharma is the only
Indian citizen to travel in space. The former Indian Air Force pilot
flew aboard Soyuz T-11 on April 3, 1984, part of the Soviet Interkosmos
programme.
Ms Bandla moved to the US when she was 4-year-old and
graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree from the School of
Aeronautics and Astronautics, Purdue University in 2011. She finished
her Master of Business Administration degree from George Washington
University in 2015.
Ms Bandla wanted to be an astronaut for the US
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). However, her poor
eyesight meant she could not meet the requirements to become a pilot or
an astronaut.
When she was at Purdue University, a professor told her about an opportunity in the field of commercial space flights.
Virgin
Galactic - the business Branson started in 2004 - aims to fly private
citizens to the edge of space. The trips are designed to permit
passengers to experience three to four minutes of weightlessness and
observe the curvature of Earth.
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