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Astronauts Use Bacteria and Fungi to Harvest Metals in Space
It’s a well-known fact that if humanity wishes to explore deep space and to live and work on other planets, we need to bring Earth’s environment with us. This includes life support systems that leverage biological processes – aka. Bioregenerative Life Support Systems (BLSS) – but also the many species of microbes that are essential to living systems. Humans already bring microbes with them when they travel to space, in particular, to the International Space Station (ISS). These microbes become part of the natural environment, sticking to surfaces, growing in nooks and crannies, and getting into everything.
Given their constant presence, it’s paramount that we understand how they survive in space. In addition, they have potential uses that could enable greater self-sufficiency in space. For example, certain types of bacteria and fungi extract minerals from rocks as a source of nutrients. In a recent study aboard the ISS, researchers from Cornell and the University of Edinburgh investigated how these species could be used to extract platinum from a meteorite under microgravity conditions. Their results suggest that this could be an effective method for obtaining mineral resources in space and lessening dependence on Earth.
The study was led by Rosa Santomartino, an assistant professor of biological and environmental engineering in Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS), and Alessandro Stirpe, a research associate in microbiology at Cornell and the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Edinburgh. They were joined by researchers from the Medical University of Graz in Austria, Rice University, Cancer Research UK, the UK Centre for Astrobiology at the University of Edinburgh, Kayser Space Ltd, and Kayser Italia. Their study was published on Jan. 30th in npj Microgravity.
*A bioreactor, produced by the BioAsteroid project at the University of Edinburgh. Credit: University of Edinburgh*
The work was part of the BioAsteroid project, a collaborative effort between the University of Edinburgh and the European Space Agency (ESA). This project is led by Charles Cockell, a professor of astrobiology at the University of Edinburgh and a senior author on the study. Cockell and his colleagues developed “biomining reactors” that were deployed to the ISS in late 2020/early 2021 to investigate how gravity affects the interaction between microbes and rock in microgravity.
These reactors contained samples of an L-chondrite asteroid that were treated with the bacterium Sphingomonas desiccabilis and the fungus Penicillium simplicissimum. These microbes are promising for resource extraction because they produce carboxylic acids that bind to minerals and release them from rocks. However, there is still some ambiguity as to how this mechanism works. To this end, the experiment also included a metabolomic analysis, in which a portion of the liquid culture was extracted and analyzed for biomolecules and secondary metabolites. As Santomartino said in a Cornell Chronicle press release:
This is probably the first experiment of its kind on the International Space Station on [a] meteorite. We wanted to keep the approach tailored in a way, but also general to increase its impact. These are two completely different species, and they will extract different things. So we wanted to understand what and how, but keep the results relevant to a broader perspective, because not much is known about the mechanisms that influence microbial behavior in space.
The experiment was conducted aboard the ISS by NASA astronaut Michael Scott Hopkins while the researchers conducted their own control version in the lab. This allowed them to examine how the experiment would work in microgravity compared to Earth’s gravity. Santomartino and Stirpe then analyzed the experiment data, which revealed that of the 44 different elements, 18 were extracted through biological processes. Said Stirpe:
We split the analysis to the single element, and we started to ask, OK, does the extraction behave differently in space compared to Earth? Are these elements more extracted when we have a bacterium or a fungus, or when we have both of them? Is this just noise, or can we see something that maybe makes a bit of sense? We don’t see massive differences, but there are some very interesting ones.
NASA astronaut Michael Scott Hopkins performs the insertion of the experiment containers in KUBIK (left) and the six hardware units inserted into the KUBIK onboard the ISS (right). Credits: ESA/NASA/
Their analysis revealed that the microbes had consistent results in both Earth gravity and microgravity. However, it also showed distinct changes in microbial metabolism, especially with the fungus samples. In microgravity, the fungus increased its production of carboxylic acids and other molecules, leading to the extraction of more palladium, platinum, and other elements. Meanwhile, the non-biological leaching experiment proved to be less effective in microgravity than on Earth. Said Santomartino:
In these cases, the microbe doesn’t improve the extraction itself, but it’s kind of keeping the extraction at a steady level, regardless of the gravity condition. And this is not just true for the palladium, but for different types of metals, although not all of them. Indeed, another complex but very interesting result, I think, is that the extraction rate varies a lot depending on the metal you are considering and on the microbe and gravity conditions.
This experiment has successfully demonstrated the potential for “biomining,” which could be used by future astronauts exploring the Moon and Mars. In addition to life support systems that rely on cyanobacteria and other photosynthetic organisms to clean the air and generate edible algae, microbes and fungi could be used to leach minerals from the local regolith. These, in turn, could be used to generate building materials for structures and tools, reducing the amount of supplies that need to be sent from Earth.
In addition, biomining has potential applications here on Earth, providing a biological means for extracting metals in resource-limited environments or from mine waste. This technique could also lead to biotechnologies that facilitate the emergence of a zero-waste, circular economy. But the team cautions that more research is required, as there are many variables and uncertainties regarding the impact space has on microbes.
“Depending on the microbial species, depending on the space conditions, depending on the method that researchers are using, everything changes,” Santomartino said. “Bacteria and fungi are all so diverse, one to each other, and the space condition is so complex that, at present, you cannot give a single answer. So maybe we need to dig more. I don’t mean to be too poetic, but to me, this is a little bit [of] the beauty of that. It’s very complex. And I like it.”
Further Reading: Cornell Chronicle, npj Microgravity.
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Kyiv, Ukraine, Hit in Russian Missile Attack
Buildings rattled in the Ukrainian capital for hours early Sunday. Russia launched an Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile for only the third time in the war.
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SpaceX’s Next-Gen Starship Passes Its First Flight Test Despite Snags
SpaceX’s next-generation Starship V3 rocket got off to a glorious start for its first test flight, and although not all of its engines fired fully according to plan, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said the mission “scored a goal for humanity.”
This was the 12th Starship launch, but the first one since SpaceX completed a thorough redesign of the rocket’s Super Heavy first-stage booster, the second stage (known as Ship), the Raptor rocket engines and the launch facilities at SpaceX’s Starbase in south Texas.
Super Heavy lit all 33 of its Raptor V3 engines at liftoff, and successfully sent Ship on its way over the Gulf of Mexico. But after stage separation, Super Heavy shut down its engines prematurely. As a result, the booster tumbled through the atmosphere to an uncontrolled but safe splashdown in the gulf. SpaceX had planned for a controlled splashdown but hadn’t planned to recover the booster, so it was no great loss.
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Only five of the six Raptor engines on the second-stage Ship remained lit for the next phase of the test flight. “I wouldn’t call it a nominal orbital insertion but … it’s within bounds,” SpaceX commentator Dan Huot said.
During the coast phase of the mission, SpaceX had to pass up an opportunity to try relighting one of the engines in space. It was, however, able to follow through with the deployment of 20 satellite simulators, plus two “Dodger Dog” satellites that were modified to test new technologies for SpaceX’s Starlink V3 satellites.
One of the modified satellites captured video looking back at Ship as it drifted away, and then transmitted the video back to Earth via SpaceX’s Starlink network. Huot said the video monitoring procedure would come in handy for making in-space inspections of Ship’s heat shield during future flights. “That’s one we’ve been chasing for a while, so [it’s] really cool to see it,” he said.
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About an hour after launch, Ship made a fiery atmospheric re-entry over the Indian Ocean. Onboard cameras showed the glow of superheated plasma surrounding the rocket stage, followed by occasional flashes of flame. In the moments just before splashdown, Ship fired up two of its Raptor engines — as opposed to the three that would typically be used for a landing — and flipped itself upright just in time for the end.
When the rocket hit the water, it burst into flames. Meanwhile, hundreds of SpaceX employees watching the webcast burst into applause. “USA, USA, USA!” they chanted.
“We guaranteed excitement at the beginning of the show, and I would say Starship delivered,” mission commentator Jake Berkowitz said.
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SpaceX CEO Elon Musk was quick to congratulate his team for “an epic first Starship V3 launch and landing.”
“You scored a goal for humanity,” he wrote in a posting to X.
SpaceX’s team members emphasized that they didn’t expect everything to go right the first time. “This is a flight test,” Huot said. “We’re trying to intentionally find where our limits are.”
The day before, SpaceX had to postpone launch when a pin on the launch pad’s quick-disconnect arm failed to release itself properly. Engineers made changes to the ground-system software and hardware — including some welding at the pad — to fix the issue for today’s launch.
The 407-foot-tall Starship V3 is slightly bigger than the previous version of SpaceX’s super-rocket, but the biggest changes are on the inside. Here are a few highlights of the redesign:
- Streamlining the design of the methane-fueled Raptor V3 engines and increasing their liftoff thrust from 507,000 to 551,000 pounds per engine. Super Heavy is now capable of 18 million pounds of liftoff thrust, which makes it more than twice as powerful as the Apollo-era Saturn V or its modern-day successor, NASA’s Space Launch System.
- Putting an integrated hot-stage ring between the booster and the second stage, which is expected to streamline reusability.
- Replacing the previous four stabilization fins on Super Heavy with three larger, heavier grid fins, which should improve control and durability.
- Beefing up Starship’s satellite deployer, which is nicknamed the “Pez Dispenser.” The deployer is designed to deal out as many as 60 Starlink V3 satellites per mission.
- Installing shorter “chopsticks” on the launch tower, which is expected to make it easier to catch Starship’s stages when they fly themselves back to the launch pad.
- Fortifying the base of the pad and improving the flame-diverter system, which should cut down on the time and energy required for post-launch refurbishment.
In the near term, SpaceX is banking on the Starship system to facilitate the expansion of its Starlink satellite broadband network — which is currently the only profitable part of the SpaceX’s business, according to documents filed this week in preparation for the company’s initial public offering.
Putting Starship into operation is a key step in Musk’s plan to send a million solar-powered satellites into space to process data for artificial-intelligence applications. It’s also a key step for a wide array of other commercial space ventures that are hoping to take advantage of Starship’s larger payload capacity and cheaper access to space.
A modified version of Starship is due to serve as the lunar lander for NASA’s Artemis 4 mission, which is currently scheduled for as soon as 2028. NASA is already deep into preparations for an Artemis 3 mission that’s aimed at testing the Starship lander and/or Blue Origin’s Blue Moon lander in low Earth orbit next year.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman alluded to that mission today on SpaceX’s webcast. “We’re looking forward to meeting up next year in Earth orbit,” he said.
In the longer term, Musk envisions creating a fleet of Starships that could transport thousands of spacefarers to settlements on Mars. SpaceX hasn’t yet scheduled any Mars missions — but this week, crypto investor Chun Wang announced that he intends to be on Starship’s first Mars flyby, whenever it takes place. “It will light the fire. It will ignite the imagination, and it will build the momentum,” he said.
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How will the Orange County chemical crisis be resolved? Here is what we know
• The temperature inside the failing tank has risen to 90 degrees, up from 77 a day earlier. The boiling point of the toxic chemical is 101 degrees Celsius.
• The main hope to avoid an explosion is to keep spraying water on the tank, keeping temperatures cooler.
• It’s possible an explosion can be avoided if the chemical reaction occurring inside the tank is slowed down.
The battle to keep a highly toxic chemical from exploding took a step backward Saturday.
The temperature in a critically failing tank filled with a highly toxic chemical and at risk of exploding in Orange County is rising, not falling, officials said.
By Saturday morning, the temperature in the pressurized tank at an aerospace firm in Garden Grove was 90 degrees, up from 77 degrees a day earlier. Temperatures are increasing about a degree per hour, Craig Covey, an Orange County Fire Authority division chief, said Saturday morning.
But with the chemical crisis in its third day, new details are offering more insight into how it could be resolved, though no one is sure when.
The question, experts say, is whether officials can somehow deal with the dangerous chemicals in a way that does not end in a blast or the type of spill that causes environmental degradation.
Chemical leak at GKN Aerospace
The Garden Grove facility neighbors an elementary school and residential neighborhood.
Trying to cool damaged tank
An increase in temperature raises the risk of an explosion.
The boiling point of the chemical inside the tank, methyl methacrylate, is 101 degrees Celsius. The temperature gauge on the tank detects temperatures only up to 100 degrees. Officials haven’t disclosed at what particular temperature would they think that an explosion is imminent.
It’s not necessarily the case that the tank would explode at 101 degrees, said Elias Picazo, assistant professor of chemistry at USC.
“It depends on the integrity of the tank, and the composition of the tank, and the pressure capacity of the tank,” Picazo said. “But, yes, above 100, the pressure starts to increase dramatically, because the liquid phase becomes gas phase, and gas takes up any space available. It’ll take up more volume and become highly pressurized.”
What does it mean that the temperature is rising?
The fact is that the temperature in the tank indicates that the liquid MMA molecules — monomers, essentially a bunch of single molecules — are reacting with one another to form polymers, forming a solid, according to Picazo. “The reaction is releasing heat. That’s going to initiate more reaction to happen, so it might even cascade.”
The big fear is producing what’s known as “thermal runaway reactions.”
Covey has said that if the temperature in the tank exceeds a certain threshold “we know the tank is going into thermal runaway, and we’re going to pull everybody out of the area, make sure it’s safe, and let the tank do what it’s going to do.”
The fact that some liquid in the tank is reacting to become a solid is probably what happened to gum up the valve leading into the tank. The primary solution to resolve this crisis would’ve been to pump a neutralizing agent into the problem tank, quenching it and making it no longer explosive.
But that valve is clogged up, and so there is no way to get the neutralizing agent inside the tank. Nor is there a way to slowly drain the tank of the MMA toxic chemical.
Keeping the tank as cool as possible could be a workable approach to prevent an explosion.
How are officials gaming out scenarios?
There remains the possibility that the tank will still explode or rupture in a massive leak that could send the chemical to foul up waterways and the ocean. Officials have marked a huge evacuation zone — anywhere from about 1 to 3 miles from the tank — affecting an estimated 40,000 residents covering portions of the cities of Garden Grove, Anaheim, Buena Park, Cypress, Stanton and Westminster.
It is clear that the spraying of water on the tank is helping.
Even though the temperature is rising inside the tank, not putting any cool water on it at all would have allowed the tank’s interior temperature to rise far more quickly, Picazo said.
So the main solution right now is for crews to do their best to keep the tank as cool as possible — and buy time.
How keeping the tank cool could avoid an explosion
Continuing to pour cool water on the tank could allow the liquid chemical inside to cure at a slower rate — becoming a solid at a slower speed — and reduce the buildup of pressure inside the tank, Covey said.
“Like an ice cube that freezes from the outside in — this stuff cures, it heats up and cures from the outside in. While it’s doing that process, it’s building that pressure,” Covey said.
The tank has some capacity to hold in some pressure. There is empty space between the surface level of the MMA chemical to the ceiling of the tank.
“We’re hoping that that space can absorb a slower cure rate and not over-pressure and blow up,” Covey said.
In other words, continuing to cool the tank could slow down the chemical reaction occurring inside in a way that avoids an explosion.
Picazo agreed.
“One of the best-case scenarios is to let the [MMA] monomers react, but you do it in a controlled way,” he said.
“Maybe if it’s slow enough, you can form solid within the tank and cause the monomers, the reactive monomers, to stay apart from one another.
“If they don’t come into contact, therefore they cannot react,” Picazo said. “You need contact for reactivity, and you can’t have contact if you have solid state.
At that point, “then you can start to think about other solutions of how to quench the unreacted starting material.”
Can the worse-case scenario be prevented?
Firefighters said they’re hopeful they can prevent an explosion.
“We’re optimistic,” Covey said. “We’re bringing people in from all over the country, talking to people all over the place, trying to come up with additional options.
“Letting this thing just fail and blow up is unacceptable to us.”
Why crews erroneously thought temperatures were cooling inside the tank
Officials on Friday had thought spraying water was actually cooling down the problem tank — and not merely reducing the speed at which the temperature was increasing.
On Friday evening, Picazo said drone thermometers indicated the tank was at 61 degrees, and the goal was to get the tank down to 50 degrees, which would be its “happy place.”
But as it turns out, the drone thermometers were detecting the temperatures only on the outside of the problem tank, not its inside.
Officials discovered the error of their assumptions when a crew of workers returned overnight to the problem tank, which has an estimated 7,000 gallons of MMA in it. Adjacent to the problem tank is a second tank, which has 15,000 gallons of chemicals in it, but is not at immediate risk of failure.
Nonetheless, officials wanted to inject a neutralizing agent into that second tank, so that if the primary failing tank explodes, it doesn’t cause an even greater blast by igniting the second tank. So there was an overnight operation of chemists and first responders sent in to try to get that done, which was attempted even though it put them “in harm’s way,” Covey said.
When they arrived, they were able to again manually read the internal temperature gauge of the failing tank. (That gauge isn’t visible unless someone is there to read it; it’s covered by the cooling sprays of water and cannot be seen from a distance, nor by putting a drone with a camera near it, Covey said.)
And that’s when the crew realized that the tank’s internal temperature was at 90 degrees, and that relying on drones to estimate the temperature from afar showed only the temperature of the outside of the tank, not the inside.
Staff writers Hailey Branson-Potts, Hannah Fry and Eric Licas contributed to this report.
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