Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 3 of 3
Technical Paper

Approaches in the Design of a Space Plant Cultivation Facility for Arabidopsis Thaliana

2004-07-19
2004-01-2459
The present suite of advanced space plant cultivation facilities require a significant level of resources to launch and maintain in flight. The facilities are designed to accommodate a broad size range of plant species and are, therefore, not configured to support the specific growth requirements of small plant species such as Arabidopsis thaliana at maximum efficiency with respect to mass and power. The facilities are equally not configured to support automated plant harvesting or tissue processing procedures, but rely on crew intervention and time. The recent reorganization of both spaceflight opportunities and allocation of limited in-flight resources demand that experiments be conducted with optimal efficiency. The emergence of A. thaliana as a dominant space flight model organism utilized in research on vegetative and reproductive phase biology provides strong justification for the establishment of a dedicated cultivation system for this species.
Technical Paper

Optimization of Extraterrestrial Plant Biology Research Through the Use of Standardized Plant Cultivation and Analysis Technologies

2006-07-17
2006-01-2213
The space flight environment presents a number of unique conditions which may be used to expand our understanding and enhanced utilization of various plant biology processes on Earth and in Space. While a significant level of research has been conducted using a range of plant species and space flight plant growth and research facilities, the use of a single standardized system may now prove to be a more effective investigative paradigm. Recent constraints in both launch opportunities and the availability of in-flight resources on the Shuttle and International Space Station has already focused the need for facilities that are more efficient and compact in design. Based on these various interests and the limited availability of funding, there is a compelling argument to promote the establishment of a single, compact and standardized facility, which is gravity independent and can support research equally on Earth, the Moon, Mars and beyond.
Technical Paper

The Performance of a Miniature Plant Cultivation System Designed for Space Flight Application

2005-07-11
2005-01-2844
Constraints in both launch opportunities and the availability of in-flight resources for Shuttle and Space Station life science habitat facilities has presented a compelling impetus to improve the operational flexibility, efficiency and miniaturization of many of these systems. Such advances would not only invigorate the level of research being conducted in low Earth orbit but also present the opportunity to expand life science studies to outer space and planetary bodies. Work has been directed towards the development of a miniature Plant Cultivation Facility (PCF) capable of supporting the automated and controlled growth and spectral monitoring of small plant species such as Arabidopsis thaliana. This paper will present data on the design and operational performance of the PCF plant cultivation module, and the extent to which such a system may be used to support plant growth studies in and beyond low Earth orbit.
X