It's miserable enough to be under the weather in the comfort of your home, but
imagine coming down with a bad cold when you're stuck inside a small crew
module 200,000 miles from Earth. You're coughing on your fellow astronauts and
that space food you ate half an hour ago is now floating around your
zero-gravity spacecraft.
Luckily,
mission control packed some antibiotics into your survival pack... but will
they work in space?
Microgravity
can impact living organisms in a variety of ways, and now NASA researchers want
to find out how it affects pharmaceuticals. On May 5, a small satellite about
the size of a loaf of bread will launch as a secondary payload on a U.S. Air
Force Minotaur 1 rocket. Weighing in at about 10 pounds, the nanosatellite --
called PharmaSat -- houses a micro-laboratory with sensors that can detect the
growth, density, and health of yeast cells. When NASA spaceflight engineers
make contact with PharmaSat, which could happen as soon as one hour after
launch, they will send a command to the satellite to initiate a 96-hour
experiment, which involves administering an antifungal treatment to yeast cells
at three dosage levels.
After
PharmaSat separates from the Minotaur 1 rocket and enters orbit at
approximately 285 miles above Earth, it will begin transmitting radio signals
to two ground control stations, in Menlo Park and Santa Clara, California. The
primary ground station at Menlo Park will then transmit mission data in
near-real time to mission managers, engineers, and project scientists at NASA's
Ames Research Center for further analysis. The nanosatellite could transmit
data for up to six months.
In
addition to monitoring the yeast's reaction to the antifungal treatment,
PharmaSat will also record the pressure, temperature, and acceleration levels
that the yeast and the satellite are exposed to while orbiting Earth at 17,000
miles per hour. The results of the mission will help researchers learn more
about drug action and effectiveness in space.
"PharmaSat is an
important experiment that will yield new information about the susceptibility
of microbes to antibiotics in the space environment," said David Niesel,
PharmaSat's co-investigator from the University of Texas Medical Branch Department
of Pathology and Microbiology and Immunology in Galveston.Website: http://www.arjonline.org/physical-sciences/american-research-journal-of-chemistry/
No comments:
Post a Comment