Astronauts to collect microorganisms on spacewalk
- Published
Two of Nasa's astronauts will be taking part in a spacewalk with a difference outside of the International Space Station (ISS) on Thursday.
Tracy C. Dyson and Matt Dominick will leave the ISS to scrape samples of microorganisms off the side of the space station.
The samples will then be examined for research.
It's hoped this will help provide more information about if and how the tiny organisms are able to both survive and reproduce while living on the outside of the ISS.
Examination of the microorganisms could also give researchers more insight into how life on Earth first began.
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How do the microorganisms survive?
Depending on which direction the International Space Station is facing, compared to the Sun, te conditions can either be super-hot or super-cold.
Also, as space is a vacuum with no atmosphere, air or water, most creatures couldn't survive at all.
Scientists are very interested in which organisms can survive in space, and how.
For instance, back in 2008 scientists from the European Space Agency reported how tardigrades - sometimes known as water bears - have survived outside the Earth鈥檚 atmosphere.
鈥淭he space vacuum, which entails extreme dehydration and cosmic radiation, were not a problem for water bears,鈥 says project leader Ingemar J枚nsson, from the University of Kristianstad in Sweden.
Other ESA experiments have shown that lettuce seeds and lichen were also able to survive exposure to space.
What is the ISS?
The ISS is essentially a huge floating laboratory.
It was launched back in 1998 and has been in space for more than 25 years.
Astronauts (people trained in the US, Canada, Europe and Japan to work in space) and cosmonauts (trained in Russia) travel 250 miles above Earth to live, work, and conduct science experiments in orbit.
What else will happen during the spacewalk?
Thursday's spacewalk is expected to last more than six hours.
As well as collecting microorganisms from the ISS, the astronauts will also be removing a faulty electronics box from a communications antenna on the space station.
The spacewalk will be livestreamed by Nasa, allowing audiences to follow what's happening.
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