Skip to content

November 27, 2015

NASA to test sugary bacteria as space-based power source

by John_A

Following its successful harvest of red leaf lettuce, NASA has announced plans to launch genetically engineered bacteria into orbit to see if they can be harnessed by future astronauts as potent survival resource. The experiment is scheduled to take place in 2017 and will study the genus Anabaena. The sugars that these cyanobacterium photosynthesize can be fed to other genetically-modified bacteria in a system the agency calls PowerCell. These second-stage bacteria would, in turn, generate chemicals, food, fuel and even medicine for far-flung astronauts. “The first pilgrims who came to the Americas didn’t bring all their food for the rest of their lives,” Lynn Rothschild of NASA’s Ames Research Center, said in a statement. “You need to live off the land.”

Source: New Scientist

Read more from News

Leave a comment

Note: HTML is allowed. Your email address will never be published.

Subscribe to comments