Wednesday, 22 January 2020

Shape the future of European biology research in space














ISS - International Space Station logo / ESA & DLR - Columbus Lab Module patch.

Jan. 22, 2020

Intricate International Space Station

What biology research would you conduct on the International Space Station? As the world celebrates 20 years of astronauts living and working on the International Space Station, ESA is preparing for another decade of European research in humankind’s weightless laboratory.

Over the past two decades, European research revealed fascinating insights as to why plants grow in a corkscrew fashion – and the fact that they sense gravity at very low levels – and showed it takes just 42 seconds for immune cells to adapt to weightlessness.

Multigen Arabidopsis

Last month ESA issued a call for ideas to ramp up biology experiments in space and take these findings even further. It is time to move research from investigations on individual cells to larger tissues, and from individual plants to investigating how to harvest crops in space.

Larger-scale experiments could help astronauts become more self-sufficient as we explore farther from Earth. With destinations such as the Moon and the lunar Gateway in view, this is essential as astronauts have less access to supplies from Earth.