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Recreating space on Earth - two facilities join ESA's platforms for spaceflight research
by Staff Writers
Human and Robotic Exploration

ESA offers young students opportunities for research. In the image, Justyna Barys, a graduate trainee working in ESA's technical centre.

Paris (ESA) Feb 07, 2019 Science is everywhere but opportunities to carry out research in space can be limited. To combat this, ESA works with institutes across Europe to maintain a network of ground-based facilities that recreate aspects of spaceflight.

From radiation to weightlessness, isolation and a lack of Earthly comforts, astronauts and robots on missions far from home face many challenges in space.

To help mitigate these, two new facilities have been added to Europe's roster of places where researchers can apply to run spaceflight experiments on Earth with ESA.

Random positioning machine simulates martian gravity
In Toulouse, France, the Scientific Group of Space Biology and Medicine with support from France's space agency CNES has a number of instruments that can recreate microgravity for plant experiments. One of these is a random positioning machine that moves its experiment along all axes as it rotates, turning it upside-down and left-to-right for long periods of time.

On average, over weeks or months, the effect of gravity negates to zero allowing researchers to study how plants grow in and react to different levels of gravity.

The facility in Toulouse also has a low-level radiation generator that bombards cells with similar levels of radiation levels to those that plants would receive on Mars or in Earth orbit. These kinds of plant-based experiments are paving the way for greenhouses in space and could see astronauts harvest their own food during long missions away from Earth.

Space simulation facilities in Germany
The second new addition comes from the German aerospace center DLR where Planetary Space Simulation Facilities focus on how biological and chemical materials react to spaceflight.

DLR facilities enable cells and particles to be exposed to ultra-high vacuum, gas compositions, extreme temperatures, UV radiation and x-rays, helping researchers better prepare their experiment or hardware for the realities of spaceflight.

"As with any expedition, preparing and testing equipment is key to successful exploration," says Jennifer Ngo-Anh head of ESA's human spaceflight research team, "the better prepared we are for the extreme environments humans and robots must face as we explore our Universe, the better the outcome of the missions.

"We offer researchers state-of-the-art facilities all over Europe and beyond our planet to carry out experiments and increase knowledge of our world. I am very happy to include these two sites in the roster with our partners and hope to see more ground-breaking research projects in the future."

European researchers can apply to run their experiment through ESA's continuously open research announcements here.


Related Links
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Human_and_Robotic_Exploration
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SPACEMART
How much do European citizens know about space?
Paris (ESA) Jan 17, 2019
Europeans are undeniably interested in space activities, and the idea of pooling resources between European countries is considered important unanimously by European citizens: just two of the fascinating findings from a recent survey of public perceptions of issues related to space. Carried out on behalf of ESA by Harris Interactive in December 2018, the survey questioned over 5000 people aged 18 or older and representative of the public in Europe's five most populous countries, Germany, UK, Franc ... read more

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