Illustration of BioSentinel spacecraft flying in heliocentric orbit. BioSentinel will detect and measure the impact of space radiation on living organisms, specifically yeast, over long durations in deep space. Credits: NASA/Daniel Rutter
NASA’s BioSentinel has carried living organisms farther from Earth than ever before –
more than one million miles. Aboard the shoebox-sized CubeSat are
microorganisms, in the form of yeast – the very same yeast that makes bread
rise and beer brew. On Dec. 5, BioSentinel was 655,730 miles from Earth when
the BioSentinel team at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon
Valley sent commands to the spacecraft to kick off the initial experiment for
the first long-duration biology study in deep space. Scientists are now able to
see how living organisms respond to deep space radiation.
Artemis missions at the Moon will prepare humans to travel on increasingly
farther and longer-duration missions to destinations like Mars. Because yeast
cells have similar biological mechanisms to human cells, including DNA damage
and repair, studying yeast in space will help us better understand the
risks of space radiation to humans and other biological organisms.
BioSentinel’s science results will fill critical gaps in knowledge about the
health risks in deep space posed by space radiation.
BioSentinel – which launched aboard Artemis I – is orbiting
the Sun, positioned beyond Earth’s protective magnetic field. There, the
CubeSat will run a series of experiments over the next five to six
months.
NASA invites the public to virtually ride along
with BioSentinel’s deep space journey using NASA’s “Eyes on the
Solar System” visualization tool, a digital model
of the solar system. This real-time simulated view of our solar system
runs on real data. The positions of the planets, moons, and spacecraft –
including BioSentinel – are shown where they are right now.
You can adjust the level of illumination on the spacecraft by clicking on the show/hide settings button in the bottom right of the screen. Once opened, you can toggle between flood, shadow, and natural lighting. Additionally, you can use time controls – at the bottom of the screen – to fast-forward or rewind time in the simulated view, to preview BioSentinel’s future trajectory or see a recap of its prior path.
For more
information/Source: First
Deep Space Biology Experiment Begins, Follow Along in Real-Time | NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment