Space Station Gets a New Laser, Fruit Flies and Wriggly Worms, Too

Posted: January 28, 2015 at 8:45 pm

Two robotic arms recently completed an unprecedented handoff in orbit, attaching a NASA laser-firing instrument to the exterior of the International Space Station.

NASA's Cloud Aerosol Transport System (CATS) instrument arrived at the orbiting lab Jan. 12 inside the unpressurized trunk of SpaceX's unmanned Dragon cargo capsule. On Jan. 22, operators on the ground used a NASA-controlled robotic arm aboard the station to remove CATS from Dragon, then passed the experiment to a Japanese-controlled arm.

"The Japanese-controlled arm installed the instrument to the Space Stations Japanese Experiment Module, making CATS the first NASA-developed payload to fly on the Japanese module," NASA officials wrote in a statement, adding that the maneuver marked "the first time one robotic arm on station has worked in concert with a second robotic arm." [Science Gear on SpaceX's Dragon Delivery to ISS (Infographic)]

CATS is now powered on and going through checkout procedures. When it's operational, the instrument will use lasers to measure the global distribution of clouds and the tiny particles that make up smoke, haze, dust and air pollution in Earth's atmosphere. CATS' data should help researchers improve their climate-change models, mission team members have said.

CATS was just one of many science payloads brought up to the station by Dragon, which launched atop SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket on Jan. 10. Another experiment, for example, included a set of fruit flies that will be put under artificial gravity to better understand how the human body fights infections.

Julie Robinson, NASAs International Space Station program chief scientist, assured reporters in a prelaunch news briefing that any holes in the fruit flies' container are too small for them to fit through.

"It's sealed up tight enough so those flies can't get out," Robinson said Jan. 5 of the "fly cassette," a small habitat for the fruit flies that also contains food for them to get the energy they need. The cassette also includes built-in lights to simulate Earth's daytime and nighttime, allowing researchers to get an accurate sense of their behavior.

The artificial gravity will be created using a centrifuge, and is required to help researchers isolate the effects of weightlessness from other aspects of the space environment, such as increased radiation levels. If necessary, the centrifuge can be modified to simulate the gravities of the moon or Mars, other destinations NASA plans to target.

Dragon also carried up planarian flatworms, creatures that can rebuild their organs and nervous systems if they are damaged.

Included in the experiment are intact worms, as well as other ones that had their tails or heads removed immediately before they flew into space. The animals' regeneration processes will be studied in space before the flatworms are returned to Earth to see how they performed compared to flatworms on our home planet.

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Space Station Gets a New Laser, Fruit Flies and Wriggly Worms, Too

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