Showing posts with label International Space Station. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Space Station. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

China grows rice and vegetables on the Tiangong space station

China is gradually becoming an important player in space. It regularly carries out experiments in orbit and uses its own space station the Tiangong 1. The Chinese Academy of Science (CAS) confirms that astronauts aboard their Space Station have successfully grown rice and vegetables. China wants its astronauts to enjoy meals and have access to fresh food. Growing crops in space is totally different from growing crops on Earth. China conducted its experiments with thale cress and rice in an environment of zero gravity. The astronauts proved that it is possible to grow crops in space, far away from Earth. This will have massive implications for long-term exploration missions. China successfully grows rice and vegetables on the Tiangong space station. A researcher at the CAS Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences said - “Crops can only be grown in artificial environments that mimic Earth-like conditions. By comparing plant flowers, we can find crops more adapted to space and microgravity environments.”



The Chinese experiment began on July 29. That is when the astronauts planted the seeds of thal cress and rice on their space station. The team does not have any plan to bring the plants back home until the end of the year. Reports from the CAS mention about satisfactory progress with the plants in the short period since the beginning of the experiment. The stems of the rice seeds have grown 5 to 30 centimeters in length. Thal cress seeds have also sprouted with up to four leaves. This plant represents one specimen of a vegetable. Researchers are excited with the results and believe other crops like rapeseed, cabbage, and Brussels sprouts can successfully develop in space. Two years ago, a Chinese probe took rice seeds to the moon and back. They want to use these to grow new varieties of the staple grain on Earth. Incidentally, the International Space Station have already grown pepper, broccoli and flowers in space.



Some popular stories of this blogger –

The summer of 2022 was hottest on record in England and it tied with 2018

Second successive loss of India in Asia Cup 2022 – this time to Sri Lanka

A 6.6 magnitude earthquake hit southwestern China and left at least 65 dead

A mass stabbing incident in Canada left ten people dead and at least 15 others injured

Liz Truss, the current foreign minister, will become the next prime minister of Britain

Pakistan got the better of India in Dubai at their second Asia Cup 2022 contest

Catastrophic floods devastate Pakistan with death toll nearly 1300, hundreds of thousands of people are living in relief camps

Bengal appears to be a state where a fish trader turns out to be a another crorepati

China warns America of "counter-measures" following huge arms sale to Taiwan

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Three new crew members from US, Russia and Japan on their way to the International Space Station


Three new crew members from US, Russia and Japan were on their way to the International Space Station (ISS). One of them is a NASA biologist. They were successfully launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The three are Kate Rubins of NASA, Soyuz Commander Anatoly Ivanishin of the Russian space agency Roscosmos and Takuya Onishi of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. They are traveling in an upgraded Soyuz spacecraft.
This has been reported in thestatesman.com dated 7 July 2016.
The three of them will spend two days along with 34 Earth orbits in the course of testing modified systems before docking to the space station's Rassvet module on Saturday. With their arrival, the station's crew complement will come back to six.
Kate Rubins, Anatoly Ivanishin and Takuya Onishi will join Expedition 48 Commander Jeff Williams of NASA and Flight Engineers Oleg Skripochka and Alexey Ovchinin of Roscosmos. The plan for the Expedition 48 crew members is to spend four months conducting more than 250 science investigations in fields ranging from biology, Earth science, human research, physical sciences and technology development. Rubins holds a bachelor's degree in molecular biology and is also a doctorate in cancer biology.
Ivanishin and Onishi would remain aboard ISS till late October while Williams, Skripochka and Ovchinin will return to Earth in September.
One of the assignments for Expedition 48 crew members is to receive and install the station's first international docking adapter which will accommodate future arrivals of US commercial crew spacecraft. Among the various experiments are capabilities for sequencing DNA in space, regulating temperatures aboard spacecraft, understanding bone loss and tracking ships around the world and studying how to protect computers from radiation in space and also test out an efficient, three-dimensional solar cell.


Image courtesy wikimediacommons.org

Some more interesting links -

Prince Harry joins Coldplay on the stage in Kensington Palace in aid of charity

Beijing is sinking by 11cm per year due to over consumption of ground water

West Bengal government to install swings, see-saws and slides in schools to check dropouts


Moody embraces yoga, his medics could embrace poverty (satire)

Didi wants to promote small scale industries (satire)

Lord Shiva bamboozled by the storylines of TV serials (satire)


ISIS trying to enter India - 11 youths apprehended in Hyderabad

Gunmen strike a restaurant in Dhaka - 20 killed in the attack

36 killed and more than 147 injured in Ataturk airport suicide attack in Istanbul


Katy Perry creates microblogging history with over 90-million followers on Twitter

Meryl Streep, Freida Pinto and Michelle Obama in Morocco to promote education among girls

Kavita Kaushik to play the role of an Army doctor in TV show “Dr. Bhanumati on Duty”

Sunday, June 21, 2015

NASA selects Robonaut 2 humanoid robot for duties on board the ISS


#NASA #humanoidrobot, #robonaut #ISS NASA has selected Robonaut 2, a humanoid robot, to work on board ISS alongside astronauts during not just spacewalks but also to attend to other routine duties. NASA has labeled Robonaut 2 (or R2) as the Invention of the Year for 2014.
This has been reported in zeenews.com dated 21 June 2015.
R2 is positioned aboard the International Space Station (ISS), but a whole lot of technologies developed for R2 are being adapted for use on Earth. This is helping to hone its skills and give it the distinction of an outstanding invention.
The first Robonaut was R1 and it had been developed as a ground prototype to explore the potential for a humanoid robot to assist astronauts during spacewalks by preparing worksites as well as making available an extra pair of dexterous hands during maintenance tasks.
Later, R2 was co-developed with General Motors (GM) through a Space Act Agreement and has turned out to be faster as well as more dexterous than the earlier version R1.
The new technologies that have evolved from R2 include a robotic glove, a robotic exoskeleton and telemedicine applications. In fact, the R2 technology has given rise to a total of 39 issued patents, with several more in the pipeline and under review.
(Image curtesy wikimediacommons.org)

A few more must reads -
Airbus to showcase its E-Fan 2.0 silent plane in Paris Air Show

Music is a great healer – listen to classical music and lower your blood pressure

Taxi strike in Kolkata opens the doors for Uber and Ola cabs

Pickles and yoghurt help youngsters to tackle social anxiety


MI5 warns – extremists on the prowl in the streets of Britain

ISIS militants ambush and kill Taliban fighters in Afghanistan

British would-be jihadists are making detour to Syria via Canada to avoid detection


How retired persons keep themselves busy

Learn to embrace the mall culture

Time weighs down heavily on retired men

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Next chief of ESA wants a Moon Colony on the lines of the ISS


#MoonColony #ESA #NASA #NationalSpaceSymposium The European Space Agency (ESA) would be getting a new chief in Johann-Dietrich Wörner and, he wants a Moon Colony to be built on the lines of the International Space Station where specialists from all countries can work and pool their resources so that Man can venture beyond the Moon.
This has been reported in space.com of 1 May 2015.
The incoming leader of the European Space Agency Johann-Dietrich Wörner has expressed his enthusiasm for such a concept of a Moon Colony while speaking at the Space Foundation’s National Space Symposium. This is a gathering of global, commercial, civil, military and "new space" experts and the symposium was held in Colorado Springs last month. Wörner is currently the chairman of the executive board of DLR, the German Aerospace Center and his appointment as the next director general of the European Space Agency (ESA) had been announced on Dec. 18, 2014 and he would succeed Jean-Jacques Dordain, whose term of office ends on June 30.
Agreeing that the end of ISS operations was inevitable, he explained that there should be a permanent moon station as the successor of ISS. This station should be international, "meaning that the different actors can contribute with their respective competencies and interests."
NASA chief Charles Bolden also took part in the panel of space agency leaders during the symposium and, in his opinion, the moon as an interesting destination.

A few more must reads -

Nashik Kumbhmela 2015 – a once in 12-years pilgrimage

Trip to Nashik should take in Shirdi and the Ajanta and Ellora caves

Nashik, a tourist center with links to the epic Ramayana

Nashik, a tourist center with links to the Mahabharata

Kumbhmela 2015 in Nashik – guided tours to wineries and vineyards

Nashik transforms from a place of pilgrimage to an industrial hub


Durga Puja - priest dancing with devotee (YouTube video)


EU realizes the curse of plastic carry bags – to banish the bags

100 cities in India would turn into Smart Cities

Pet Pomeranians of Surat married off, 500 wedding guests enjoy the feast

Woman kills her husband because of his dark complexion

Baltimore on fire as protest over death of a black youth in police custody spirals out of control

‘Papri’ and ‘Barood’ - collection of Bengali short stories published from Nashik

British Army wants computer whizzkids to counter the growing menace of ISIS propaganda

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Japanese spacecraft Akatsuki Venus probe on 2nd orbital mission to Venus in December


#Akatsuki #JAXA #space #venus It would be a second chance for a Japanese spacecraft to orbit Venus in December – it would be five years after the first attempt failed. The Akatsuki probe was supposed to begin circling planet Earth's hellishly hot sister planet in December 2010, but the main engine of the craft failed during the crucial orbital-insertion burn.
From that day onwards, Akatsuki has been orbiting the sun and waiting for another opportunity to have a shot at Venus and that seems to have arrived.
It has been reported in space.com dated 6 April 2015 that officials at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) have settled on a fresh date of 7 December for the second attempt.
The $300 million Akatsuki probe was launched in May 2010 and its mission was to help researchers better understand how Venus, which was similar to Earth in the solar system's early days, ended up being so hot and seemingly inhospitable to life.
Akatsuki had blasted off on the same rocket as JAXA's IKAROS (Interplanetary Kite-craft Accelerated by Radiation Of the Sun) spacecraft, which had become the first probe ever to travel through deep space using a solar sail.
Incidentally, the Akatsuki mission was Japan's second attempt to explore another planet by means of a robotic space probe. Its first interplanetary spacecraft, the Nozomi Mars orbiter, had also been riddled with problems after its launch, which occurred in 1998.
From the date, it would be obvious that Japan was much ahead of other countries in space research and travels to distant planets. International Space Station had been launched in November 1998.

A few more must reads -

Nashik Kumbhmela 2015 – a once in 12-years pilgrimage

Trip to Nashik should take in Shirdi and the Ajanta and Ellora caves

Nashik, a tourist center with links to the epic Ramayana

Nashik, a tourist center with links to the Mahabharata

Kumbhmela 2015 in Nashik – guided tours to wineries and vineyards

Nashik transforms from a place of pilgrimage to an industrial hub


Teenage girl of Brighton sat on a needle in a bus and is now getting her blood tested for HIV

Stray dogs attend funeral of Mexican woman who fed them

Nationwide ban on cow slaughter on the cards says Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh

Health tips – lose weight without dieting

Auckland girl sweet talks thief to return stolen mobile phone

Anchovies can boost good cholesterol and reduce risk factors of the heart

Monday, January 26, 2015

NASA eyes humans on Mars by 2024 – Boeing and SpaceX to ferry astronauts to ISS


#NASA #boeing #SpaceX #CST100 #ISS NASA plans to tie up with commercial companies like Boeing and SpaceX to ferry astronauts to and from the International Space Station ISS by 2017 and, subsequently, to send humans to Mars by 2024. It may be recalled that the announcement of US$4.2 billion for Boeing and US$2.6 billion for SpaceX was made in September 2014. However, things are gradually hotting up.
Following the end of its 30-year space shuttle program in 2011, NASA has to rely on Russia and its Soyuz capsules but the cost charged is $US70-million per seat but, with the entry of private contractors like Boeing and SpaceX, the cost would reduce to approximately $US58-million.
As indicated by Commercial crew program manager Kathy Lueders, the cost per seat in the new US commercial industry would be approximately $US58 million – this would be an average cost teased out over the course of a five-year mission plan. The goal is to have two robust providers.
The tentative plans are to send a NASA astronaut and a Boeing test pilot in the first crewed test flight on the spacecraft called Crew Space Transportation-100, or CST-100 for short, in July 2017. This has been informed by John Elbon, Boeing's vice president and general manager of space exploration.
NASA administrator Charles Bolden has clarified that the rise of private industry in reaching low-Earth orbit would translate into greater benefits because the US space agency will then be in a position to focus on sending humans to Mars by 2024.
Of course, another major benefit for the US would be to end its costly dependency on the Russian space agency.