Interstellar impact
- 2 mins read
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Humanity鈥檚 move into space is gathering momentum. It鈥檚 widely predicted we could feasibly see lunar settlements as soon as the 2030s and crewed missions to Mars just a decade later. But significant hurdles remain鈥攏ot least, how to ensure a sustainable supply of many survival essentials: food, water, medicines and minerals. University of Adelaide research is meeting the challenge.
Adapting crops to thrive in space
An Adelaide team, led by Professor Matthew Gilliham, is adapting space-ready plants to enable astronauts to grow their own high-quality food.
鈥淲e鈥檙e working with a variety of crops to accelerate growth, increase nutrient efficiency and density, use less water and minimise waste,鈥 says Matthew.
Another key focus is identifying ideal gene combinations to cope with microgravity.
鈥淲eightlessness creates major problems,鈥 he says. 鈥淔or example, water doesn鈥檛 move down the soil profile, and can starve plants of oxygen by enveloping tissues.鈥
Producing stable 鈥渟pace smoothies鈥
Adelaide鈥檚 Professor Volker Hessel and his team have developed technology that will enable astronauts to rapidly produce nutritious fortified beverages.
鈥淲e鈥檙e using a space-proven method known as microfluidics to create stable nanoemulsions,鈥 explains Volker.
鈥淭he personalised approach we鈥檝e developed allows production in minutes, compared to hours for conventional batch technologies.鈥
Identifying extraterrestrial resources
The University of Adelaide is heavily involved in the multi-party Seven Sisters consortium, which will send nanosatellites and exploration sensors to the Moon in 2023 to search for water and minerals.
鈥淥ur involvement centres around the development of large arrays of wireless geophysical sensors for real-time seismic and heat-flow data mapping and analysis.鈥 says University team leader Professor Graham Heinson.
In related work, Adelaide鈥檚 Professor Nigel Spooner is leading an Australian Space Agency-funded project testing the use of 鈥渘ovel fluorescence鈥 sensing technology for real-time identification of minerals critical for extraterrestrial manufacturing.
Shielding medicines from cosmic rays
Another Adelaide space science project is the development of cosmic-ray-stable pharmaceutical compounds. Also led by Professor Volker Hessel, the University team鈥檚 approaches are currently being tested inside and outside the International Space Station (ISS) in the first Australian-led NASA-ISS experiment.
This partner story was provided by , Gold Event Partner of the Academy鈥檚 flagship event, Science at the Shine Dome 2021.
For more information on the University of Adelaide鈥檚 research, visit: ua.edu.au/research