国際宇宙ステーションのインスタグラム(iss) - 8月13日 01時07分
The Expedition 60 crew is exploring stem cells and test-printing human tissue today while gearing up for a spacewalk planned for next week. Flight Engineer Andrew Morgan works with the BioFabrication Facility that is researching whether the weightless environment of space may support the fabrication of human organs. #nasa #astronaut #human #research #science #biology #international #space #station
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_krankenvagen
@boltonsgeneralaccount because it's getting old. "It's currently funded through 2024 from the US and international partners, with discussions to continue to 2028. The first elements will be 30 yrs old by then, so its anyones guess if they will continue to work. Structural problems are not easily mitigated: the night and day thermal cycling flexes the primary structure and WILL eventually wear it out. Rotary joints on the solar arrays will eventually wear out, and even though there is a redundant track, once it's gone, it's gone." - J Miller, NASA employee at JSC
agoofierbyte
@mrtomwhiting numb nuts, you have a specific starting point in a smaller venue, it grows with the instructions being implemented, the fibers would be woven denser to reassure its compatibility at earth’s proposed evolutionary “9.28m^2” that your “human” body would be gracious enough to have a programmed “RF” surgical system to implement, could even be reformatted internally using guided radio frequencies using something similar to HIV if you can believe it. Blah blah blah , somewhere to start, as there are infinite places
monroe206
That’s very interesting. I wonder if the fundamentals of how cells for and regrow will effect and react the same what the they do here on earth whilst the same might not be said in the presents of microgravity. Yet I am just speculating. I have no real knowledge of what actually happens. Yet the test printing of human tissues in and of itself is a difficult task. I do wonder what challenges they will face along the way. This has peaked my interest.
mrtomwhiting
@agoofierbyte a lot. Do you know what happens to it in microgravity? No, because no one does. No one knows how being in a microgravity environment will affect growing organs which is why they're experimenting with it.
atulchtr
@iss It's really great what you all do up there in the sky but I was just curious to know that how mankind or for that matter our earth will be benefitted with this experiment??!!!
fisher_boomer
If our leaders could launch a nuclear powered space probe to the nearest planet outside the solar system.. how much hope would that give the human race. Especially a fast one!
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