Science China germinates first seed on moon

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From the Guardian:

A small green shoot is growing on the moon after a cotton seed germinated onboard a Chinese lunar lander, scientists said.

The sprout has emerged from a lattice-like structure inside a canister after the Chang’e 4 lander touched down earlier this month, according to a series of photos released by the Advanced Technology Research Institute at Chongqing University.

“This is the first time humans have done biological growth experiments on the lunar surface,” said Xie Gengxin, who led the design of the experiment, on Tuesday.

Plants have been grown previously on the International Space Station, but this is the first time a seed has sprouted on the moon. The ability to grow plants in space is seen as crucial for long-term space missions and establishing human outposts elsewhere in the solar system, such as Mars.

Harvesting food in space, ideally using locally extracted water, would mean astronauts could survive for far longer without returned to Earth for supplies.

The Chang’e 4 probe – named after the Chinese moon goddess – made the world’s first soft landing on the far side of the moon on 3 January, a major step in China’s ambitions to become a space superpower.

Scientists from Chongqing University, who designed the “mini lunar biosphere” experiment, sent an 18cm bucket-like container holding air, water and soil.

Inside are cotton, arabidopsis – a small, flowering plant of the mustard family – and potato seeds, as well as fruit-fly eggs and yeast.

Images sent back by the probe show a cotton plant has grown well, but so far none of the other plants had sprouted, the university said.

Chang’e 4 is also equipped with instruments developed by scientists from Sweden, Germany and China to study the lunar environment, cosmic radiation and the interaction between solar wind and the moon’s surface.

The lander released a rover, nicknamed Yutu 2 (Jade Rabbit), that will perform experiments in the Von Kármán crater.

The agency said four more lunar missions are planned, confirming the launch of Chang’e 5 by the end of the year, which will be the first probe to return samples of the moon to Earth since the 1970s.

“Experts are still discussing and verifying the feasibility of subsequent projects, but it’s confirmed that there will be another three missions after Chang’e 5,” said Wu Yanhua, deputy head of the China National Space Administration (CNSA), at a press conference.

According to Wu, the Chang’e 6 mission will be designed to bring samples back from the south pole of the moon and this will be followed by probes that will conduct comprehensive surveys of the area. The series of missions will also lay the groundwork for the construction of a lunar research base, possibly using 3D printing technology to build facilities.

Wu also revealed that China will send a probe to Mars around 2020.
 
Maybe the moon could be turned into a beach resort. There's already sun and sand, and it looks like plants can be grown. Maybe coconut palms can too?

But seriously, at least there's some progress in space travel.
 
>Inside are cotton, arabidopsis – a small, flowering plant of the mustard family – and potato seeds, as well as fruit-fly eggs and yeast.

Might as well send fruit flies as the first colonizers, nothing can kill them except a swim in my coffee.
 
This is exactly what it's for - to create a closed environment that people can live in. It's more expensive to bring soil and seeds and water than just food, but if water and soil can be reused, a permanent self-sustaining moon base is a possibility.


They didn't, the plant grows in earth soil inside a probe.
I'd be interested to see how long such a thing would hold up or if the microbiome that may be necessary to support the plants in the soil eventually collapses.

>Inside are cotton, arabidopsis – a small, flowering plant of the mustard family – and potato seeds, as well as fruit-fly eggs and yeast.

Might as well send fruit flies as the first colonizers, nothing can kill them except a swim in my coffee.
There's probably already Earth organisms on the moon from before this, even if just in a dormant state. Certain microbes can handle hard vacuum. Tardigrades can do the same, and they're actually animals.
 
Hard vacuum isn't that severe, it's less than 15 psi different from our atmosphere. Unlike what you may have seen in sci-fi, the vacuum of space does not cause humans to explode. It's also not good for you, as we're not made to have 15 psi pushing out instead of in(Although I suppose they're already depressurized at that point, so it's actually less than 15 psi).

My point isn't that humans do fine in vacuum, but that vacuum isn't as insanely hazardous to health as sci fi might have you believe. It's also not cold, it does not have a temperature.

However, what vacuum does do is reduce the boiling point of water to the point where there is no longer a liquid state, it goes directly from ice to steam. Humans have a lot of water in their body, and neither steam nor ice are valid configurations for that water. Also, when water (actually any liquid I think) evaporates, it takes some extra energy to change state, which cools its surroundings. This is what actually causes a person's face to freeze if exposed to a vacuum.

Contrast that 15 psi differential to what happens in the ocean. For every 10 meters deep you are, you have another 15 psi of pressure pushing down on you. At 40 meters deep you've got 60 psi extra, 75psi total of pressure.

So the ocean on earth in some ways is more dangerous to life (or has more extreme conditions) than the moon, or deep space. Of course the lack of stuff in space is a bigger problem than the pressure differential.
 
theyre going to fuck up the moon somehow, kudzus going to grow all over it and alter the orbit or gravitational field or something, the moonlight will stop shining and kill all the nocturnal animals and fuck up the ecosystem and the tides will stop and we'll all die
 
theyre going to fuck up the moon somehow, kudzus going to grow all over it and alter the orbit or gravitational field or something, the moonlight will stop shining and kill all the nocturnal animals and fuck up the ecosystem and the tides will stop and we'll all die
I have to admit, plants on the moon being the end of life on earth would be an ironic and unexpected ending.
 
There is a joke in Hungary .

"The moon became brown, but why?" Asks one man, and the other replies: "Gypsy problem solved!"

Rooks rike the moon wirr get even more yerrow soon!
 
theyre going to fuck up the moon somehow, kudzus going to grow all over it and alter the orbit or gravitational field or something, the moonlight will stop shining and kill all the nocturnal animals and fuck up the ecosystem and the tides will stop and we'll all die
Assuming that the chings-chongs actually can pull this shit off and it isn't them lying through their buck-teeth, that's my exact fear. We've seen how they treat their own country, you know the moon will be 10x worse.
 
Oh god no not the Chinese

At the very least have the Russians beat the Chinese
Well they still got a ways to go before they send a dog to Mars.

Still, while the Chicoms are germinating seeds on the moon, (((baizuo))) is busy social engineering to germinate PO-seeds in white women.
 
Assuming that the chings-chongs actually can pull this shit off and it isn't them lying through their buck-teeth, that's my exact fear. We've seen how they treat their own country, you know the moon will be 10x worse.

The only thing more dystopian than megacorps colonizing other planets? Space communists.
 
Why I have an eerie feeling then these Chinese seeds might end like that whale and Tom Cruise in South Park? ;-)
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