Archive for space life sciences

NASA’S Chief Technologist Visits Space Florida’s Space Life Sciences Lab …

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M12-240

NASA’S Chief Technologist Visits Space Florida’s Space Life Sciences Lab Monday

WASHINGTON — NASA Chief Technologist Mason Peck will visit Space Florida’s Space Life Sciences Lab, located just outside of NASA Kennedy Space Center’s security gates, on Monday, July 30 at 12:30 p.m. EDT. Peck will meet with Space Florida President and CEO Frank DiBello and small business leaders to discuss collaborative partnerships with NASA.
     
Reporters are invited to join Peck and lab officials during the two and a half-hour tour of the facility, which is located on Space Commerce Way. The lab serves as the primary gateway for payloads bound for the International Space Station and is a leader in innovative approaches to research and development work in space. Research at the lab includes efforts to analyze plant growth in space aboard the station.

To attend the tour, media representatives must arrive at the Space Life Sciences Lab by 12:15 p.m., Monday for escort into the facility. For more information about the lab, visit:

http://spaceflorida.gov/r-d/space-life-sciences-lab

For a biography of Peck and information about the Office of the Chief Technologist, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/oct

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Article source: http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2012/jul/HQ_M12-140.html

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NASA Names CASIS To Manage Space Station National Lab Research

NASA has finalized a cooperative agreement with the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS) to manage the portion of the International Space Station that operates as a U.S. national laboratory.

CASIS will be located in the Space Life Sciences Laboratory at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The independent, nonprofit research management organization will help ensure the station’s unique capabilities are available to the broadest possible cross-section of U.S. scientific, technological and industrial communities.

“The station is the centerpiece of our human spaceflight activities for the coming years,” NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. “This cooperative agreement allows us to expand the station’s use and achieve its fullest potential so we can reach destinations farther in the solar system and improve life on Earth. CASIS will help NASA make the station available to a diverse national market that will use this unprecedented resource in innovative ways.”

CASIS will develop and manage a varied research and development portfolio based on U.S. national needs for basic and applied research; establish a marketplace to facilitate matching research pathways with qualified funding sources; and stimulate interest in using the national lab for research and technology demonstrations and as a platform for science, technology, engineering and mathematics education. The goal is to support, promote and accelerate innovations and new discoveries in science, engineering and technology that will improve life on Earth.

NASA issued a cooperative agreement notice on Feb. 14 to seek a management partner for the portion of the station that was designated a national laboratory in 2005. The NASA Authorization Act of 2010, which extended station operations until at least 2020, also directed the agency to establish this organization. NASA began negotiations with CASIS on July 13. The cooperative agreement initially will have a value of up to $15 million per year.

Article source: http://www.iewy.com/33569-nasa-names-casis-to-manage-space-station-national-lab-research-2.html

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NASA selects newly formed nonprofit to manage space station lab research

The promise of a diverse science portfolio including experiments that could produce valuable products on Earth helped a Florida nonprofit win responsibility for non-NASA research on the International Space Station.

NASA on Friday formally announced a 10-year agreement with the Kennedy Space Center-based Center for the Advancement of Science in Space, or CASIS, which will manage the portion of the station designated a U.S. National Lab.

Agency officials said the center’s proposal, led by Space Florida, stood out from three others because of its process for evaluating not only basic science but experiments that might have useful commercial applications.

“The approach involved a diversified portfolio, it involved valuation, and we saw that as a differentiator,” said Mark Uhran, assistant associate administrator for the space station.

“The idea is to select good science and establish return on investment from completing that good science,” added Jeanne Becker, the center’s executive director.

With assembly of the 15-nation, $100-billion station completed during the final shuttle missions earlier this year, NASA and its partners are focusing attention on science research and “utilization” of the complex.

Congress designated the outpost a National Lab in 2005 and NASA was required to turn over its management to an independent entity.

The lab offers access to U.S., European and Japanese facilities inside and outside the station. Time allotted for U.S. research is split 50-50 with NASA, which will continue its own experiments.

The station is expected to operate until at least 2020, though a recent problem with a Russian rocket has already raised concerns about keeping it staffed through this year.

The center became a functioning entity last week and is in the process of hiring up to 30 or 40 staff members who will be based at the Space Life Sciences Lab at KSC and operate with $15 million from NASA.

Space Florida, the state’s aerospace economic development agency, considers the center’s selection a key win in its effort to diversify the area’s space industry after the shuttle program and to rebrand Kennedy as more than a place to launch rockets.

Frank DiBello, the agency’s head, said the initiative could attract a cluster of companies involved in space-based research if the station proves the value of that research to both taxpayers and the marketplace.

“Then in the long run we’ll see more space-based activity, perhaps even a longer life for the space station, and you’ll certainly see other platforms flying,” he said.

Contact Dean at 321-639-3644 or jdean@floridatoday.com.

Article source: http://www.floridatoday.com/article/20110910/BUSINESS/109100312/NASA-selects-newly-formed-nonprofit-manage-space-station-lab-research

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Could New Rover’s Wheels Deliver Germs to Mars?

Curiosity-wheel

Could the first terrestrial representatives to land on Mars be of the single-celled, hitch-hiking variety? Although the idea of “infecting” the Red Planet with our germs is nothing new, one microbiologist believes the next Mars rover may have a higher chance of becoming a microbe lifeboat.

Andrew C. Schuerger, of the University of Florida and the Space Life Sciences Lab at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, has been carrying out tests on models of the Mars Science Laboratory’s (known as “Curiosity”) wheels and found that the novel (and slightly scary — see why in the video at the end of this article) landing maneuvers of the Mini Cooper-sized rover could increase the chances of contaminating Mars with bacteria than any previous surface mission.

TumbleweedWATCH VIDEO: New concepts for Mars-probing rovers would use Martian wind to move around the planet.

SCIENCE: Mars Mission Timeline

But don’t get carried away with thoughts that single-celled organisms will set up camp and colonize Mars before we do. Schuerger points out that should any bacteria survive the sterilization processes before Curiosity’s launch and the vacuum (and freezing cold) of space for 10 months, the long-term microbe survival rate is pretty grim. Mars, after all, is humming with radiation and bathed in bacterial-killing ultraviolet light.

“Although this paper suggests we could be transferring bacteria to [the] Martian surface, we don’t know for certain yet,” Schuerger said. “We could very well be losing most due to the exposure to vacuum in space, cosmic rays and hard radiation. Even if cells are present on a rover wheel at launch, they might be dead by the time they get to Mars.”

PHOTOS: When Discovery News Met Mars Rover ‘Curiosity’

But why the concern about Curiosity’s wheels?

Previous Mars rovers (Mars Pathfinder’s “Sojourner” in 1997, and Mars Exploration Rovers “Spirit” and “Opportunity” in 2004) have arrived on the surface using air bags. Once the bags were deflated, and landers righted themselves, the landers opened revealing the rovers on raised platforms.

Sojourner waited on its platform for two Martian days (sols), whereas Spirit and Opportunity sat atop their platforms for 12 and 7 sols, respectively. Only then were the commands sent for the rovers to roll down the ramp and begin getting their tires dusty.

VIDEO: New Mars Rover to Land at Gale Crater

Curiosity’s landing on the Martian surface will contrast greatly with anything that’s gone before. After entering the Martian atmosphere, parachute jettisoned and heat shield ditched, the large rover requires something more powerful to control its landing. Using the much-discussed “sky crane” — a rocket-powered platform — to lower Curiosity to the ground, the first part of the rover to make contact with the regolith will be its wheels. This is the first time a Mars rover will use its wheels as its landing gear.

And herein lies the problem, says Schuerger.

Soujourner, Spirit and Opportunity’s wheels all had a period of time sitting under the sun, being baked by savage ultraviolet light, before coming into contact with the soil — any surviving bacteria would have been fried. Curiosity’s wheels, on the other hand, will make immediate contact with the soil. Should any hardy bacteria have survived the trip, nestled in the rover’s tread, they could be buried quite nicely into the uppermost layer of Mars regolith.

In fact, according to the study, a contaminated wheel would be quite effective at harvesting bacteria in the Martian regolith. 31.7 percent of the samples delivered into the simulated Mars environment showed growth. Sadly (for the bacteria), their survival rates plummeted soon after — the ultraviolet radiation and high carbon dioxide environment is a huge buzz-kill for microbe development.

SEE ALSO: Could New Rover Find Fossils on Mars?

So, there’s a tiny chance that if Earth Brand™ microbes make it past the sterilizing process, if they survive the harshness of the interplanetary environment during transit to Mars, and if they are fortunate to be buried deep enough by the rover’s wheels to be shaded slightly from the sun, then there might be a tiny glimmer of hope that our intrepid single-celled travelers live for more than a few minutes.

But, as pointed out by Astrobiology Magazine, the initial conditions for this experiment are grossly unrealistic: “…the researchers contaminated the rover wheels with perhaps 100,000 times more bacteria compared to what would realistically exist during any of the Mars rover missions. Some Mars rovers get sterilized three or four times, Schuerger said. He added that the journey through space may kill 75 percent of whatever survived after launch.”

Although this work may seem inconsequential when compared with the incredible science that will be done by Curiosity when it lands inside Gale Crater on Aug. 6, 2012, it sure would be a shame if a future headline reads: “Astronauts Discover E. coli In Martian Soil.”

Better to be safe than… a grossly mutated E. coli outbreak in a future Mars habitat greenhouse, I suppose.

SEE ALSO: Are We Infecting Mars With Our Germs?

Source: Astrobiology Magazine

Image: One of Curiosity’s wheels, photographed in April 2011 at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Credit: Ian O’Neill/Discovery News





Article source: http://news.discovery.com/space/could-new-rover-wheels-deliver-microbes-to-mars-110907.html

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Microbe Risk When Rover Wheels Hit Martian Dirt


Earth microbes trying to make it to Mars must survive sterilization in NASA’s clean rooms, harsh cosmic rays during months of space travel, and the Red Planet’s unforgiving surface environment. But any bacteria that successfully hitchhike aboard the wheels of NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory mission in 2012 might manage to scratch out a brief existence on the martian surface.

The finding comes from a study that examined how the new high-tech landing technique of the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) may affect the risk of contaminating Mars. The mission will use both a parachute and downward-firing thruster rockets to slow its descent so that its “sky crane” can lower the SUV-sized Curiosity rover onto the surface — a direct touchdown that may give microbes a brief chance to experience life on Mars.
That translates into a higher risk of contamination when compared to some past Mars rover missions, said Andrew C. Schuerger, a microbiologist at the University of Florida and the Space Life Sciences Lab at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. But he added that microbes still face tough odds for surviving space travel and martian conditions.

“Although this paper suggests we could be transferring bacteria to martian surface, we don’t know for certain yet,” Schuerger said. “We could very well be losing most due to the exposure to vacuum in space, cosmic rays and hard radiation. Even if cells are present on a rover wheel at launch, they might be dead by the time they get to Mars.”

Standing still

Schuerger and his colleague, Krystal Kerney, wanted to find out whether the wheels of Mars rovers past and future could contaminate the martian surface. They ran two experiments simulating the contamination possibilities for MSL versus the Mars Pathfinder mission of 1997 and the Mars Exploration Rovers (MER) that landed on the red planet in 2004.

The Mars Pathfinder rover, called Sojourner, sat on a landing platform for 2 martian days before rolling onto the surface. The twin MER rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, sat on their landing platforms for 12 and 7 martian days, respectively. Each martian day is just a little over 24 hours.

In the recent study, researchers simulated a Mars rover sitting on a landing platform for 1, 3 and 6 hours while being exposed to martian levels of ultraviolet (UV) rays. Even such short amounts of time killed between 81 percent and 96.6 percent of the Bacillus subtilis bacteria used in the experiment.

“We did very short UV exposures, and even there we see 96 percent [of bacteria killed] over 6 hours,” Schuerger told Astrobiology Magazine. “That’s a very dramatic and a very positive sign that a rover wheel which sits on a platform, like MER did, has a much better chance of being sterilized prior to roll-off than a direct to ground system.”

The number of survivors would likely have dropped to practically zero if the experiment had run for 7 or 12 days, Schuerger said.

Rolling in the dirt

By contrast, the second experiment simulated how a rover wheel in the future MSL mission would immediately come into contact with the martian surface. When the contaminated rover wheel rolled over the simulated surface, about 31.7 percent of the surface samples ended up showing bacterial growth.

But the contamination level dropped by 50 percent after 24 hours of exposure to simulated Mars conditions, such as UV radiation, low pressure, low temperature and high levels of carbon dioxide. The results pointed once again to the harshness of the martian surface environment for Earth life.

The second experiment doesn’t say anything definitive about the real risk of contamination, Schuerger warned. For instance, it didn’t test whether having multiple wheels rolling over the same surface area could bury microbes from the first wheel beneath the martian surface. It also didn’t simulate the weight of the SUV-sized Curiosity rover that could mash even more microbes into the ground.

On the other hand, the researchers contaminated the rover wheels with perhaps 100,000 times more bacteria compared to what would realistically exist during any of the Mars rover missions. Some Mars rovers get sterilized three or four times, Schuerger said. He added that the journey through space may kill 75 percent of whatever survived after launch.

The next test

What the experiments do suggest is that just having the Curiosity rover sit still for a number of days could help kill off much of the bacteria clinging to its wheels. But the researchers still have questions to answer.
“We need to repeat these experiments with much longer time exposures to martian conditions to see if we can get to a rover wheel completely sterilized sitting on a landing pad,” Schuerger explained. “We also need to see if 7 or 8 martian days would essentially get to zero amount of survivors, even if we accidentally transferred bacterial spores to the surface.”

Such contamination experiments could be done more easily once humans establish a Mars colony and can work alongside their robotic rovers, Schuerger said. But for now, he will have to make do with small Mars simulation chambers on Earth.

The study was detailed in the June 2011 issue of journal Astrobiology.

Article source: http://www.astrobio.net/index.php?option=com_exclusive&task=detail&id=4196

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