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Experimenting at the Final Frontier
Digit
|December 2016
The most interesting studies performed where Newton’s apple won’t fall.

Prepare for lift off
An integral part of the human spirit of conquest is the acquisition of knowledge. We isolate phenomena in the world and meddle with it to deduce descriptions that best fit our understanding. For performing science rigorously the ‘isolation’ becomes imperative because if there are many forces at play, it becomes harder to be sure of the proposed causal relations. There’s always a lot going on Earth, rendering space into an almost ideal playground. Other than understanding the playground itself, space offers the opportunity to perform experiments free from (technically speaking, controlled for) the effects of gravity. Well, almost free, since there’s always microgravity. Other than the escape from gravity, another motivation for these experiments is progress towards our future life in space. Here we present to you some of the coolest experiments performed in space!
Astro-wolverine (Space tissue loss - stem cell regeneration)
This experiment, conducted between March and September of 2010, studied some of the effects of the removal of ‘mechanical loading’ due to gravity, on the embryonic stem cells of mice. As they can differentiate into any cell of the adult body, the embryoid body is considered a model for studying how cells differentiate and develop. This experiment aimed to study the effects of microgravity on stem cell differentiation and the associated gene expressions of the process. As Earth’s gravity is crucial for the development and regeneration of our cells, long-term disuse or removal from this gravitational environment causes atrophy, both by degeneration of existing tissue as well as impeded stem cell regeneration. All cells come from stem cells, so it was hoped that this experiment would give crucial insights and pave the road for further studies of the regeneration mechanisms of our body, both on Earth and in space.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 2016 de Digit.
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