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Aboard space station, astronauts grow fresh food with help from Madison scientists
Astronauts on the International Space Station can get a taste of home with the help of produce cultivation systems developed by scientists working in Madison.
madison.com
Astronauts on the International Space Station can get a taste of home with the help of produce cultivation systems developed by scientists working in Madison.
About 250 employees of the Nevada-based aerospace company Sierra Nevada Corp. work in the Madison area developing environmental systems that can support human life and grow fresh food in space as well as propulsion systems to get spacecraft to their destinations.
“We’re developing a huge core of talent for aerospace in Wisconsin,” vice president Thomas Crabb said. “This is all part of the growth of high-technology businesses that has already been happening in the state.”
SNC is furthering work on its Dream Chaser program, which will launch autonomous spacecraft with modular designs customized for various space missions. The first is set to launch under a NASA contract in 2022 to deliver and retrieve cargo from the space station.
The Madison team — formerly the company Orbitec, which SNC acquired in 2014 — works to develop the propulsion engines that launch rockets into space and on environmental systems that control airflow, temperature, lighting and more.
Leafy greens and some other vegetables are already growing aboard the space station and approved for astronauts to eat, though much of the food must still come back to Earth for further study.
Astronaut Peggy Whitson shows off plants grown aboard the International Space Station using Sierra Nevada Corp.'s systems.
NASA
On Nov. 30, astronauts harvested the first crop of radishes grown using equipment from SNC on the space station. The system used clay-based material preloaded with nutrients to grow the plants, which requires little maintenance from the crew. The radishes will be frozen and brought back to Earth to study the conditions the plants could best grow in.
The goal isn’t just to make some novelty crops to place onboard, but to develop an environmental system to both feed the crew and maintain the onboard ecosystem for longer periods of time.
One of the main benefits of more plant life on board could be improved air quality, principal scientist Bob Morrow said. Plants take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen, reducing the amount of oxygen crews would need to bring with them to the space station. It could also give astronauts more time to switch oxygen tanks in the case of an emergency.
Vegetables are also a great source for vitamins, Morrow noted, some of which degrade when stored.
“By growing a salad crop continuously, it can provide those missing nutrients more effectively to the crews,” Morrow said. “That’s going to be important for longer-duration missions, too.”
But growing plants in the microgravity of space isn’t as simple as shipping up some potting soil and seeds — there’s no gravity to pull the water down to the roots. Instead, sophisticated hardware systems are needed to get water to roots, circulate air around the leaves and light the plants in an energy-efficient way.
Morrow said most of the plants, aside from Chinese Cabbage for unknown reasons, have done well under their systems despite the lack of gravity.
Now, scientists need to determine whether these plants can grow for multiple generations, Morrow said, or whether seeds will be damaged over time by the radiation of outer space.
While simply growing food in space may seem like a lofty goal in itself, SNC’s Madison team has bigger ambitions. The company hopes NASA will use its agricultural systems on long-term missions — such as to Mars — and to set up sustainable habitats in space or on the moon using its technology.