ESADelta MissionHuman Spaceflight and ExplorationAstronautsInternational Space Station
   
DELTA Mission
About the missionWhy DELTA?Mission factsBehind the scenesSoyuz spacecraftSoyuz launcherFactsheets (pdf)
Science programme
Experiment overviewPhysiologyBiology
Microbiology
Physical scienceEarth observationTechnologyEducation
Meet the crew
André KuipersGennadi PadalkaMike FinckeExpedition Eight
DELTA Mission live
Live webstreamingESA TelevisionMission briefings
Multimedia
Image galleryVideo gallerySoyuz training with Frank De WinneSoyuz mission: to ISS and back
Services
Mailing list
 
 
 
 
 
printer friendly page
Microbiology
 
   
 
Swab-sticks
Samples will be taken by rubbing swab-sticks over surfaces
SAMPLE
Study of the composition, physiology and possible adaptation of microbial communities exposed to weightlessness

The main scientific objectives of the experiment are:

  1. To evaluate which microbial species could unwantedly develop under the growth conditions in life support systems used for human spaceflight. The focus is on potentially infective and destructive microbes, and on the origin and distribution of species on different sample sites of the ISS.

    Samples will be taken by rubbing swab-sticks over a defined surface (e.g. buttons, keyboards, personal care appliances). Furthermore, wall panels and other places where condensation creates moist surfaces will be sampled. In addition, electrical wires that produce some heat that might favour microbial growth and places with visible microbial growth will also be sampled.

    Samples will also be taken from the astronauts from areas such as the nose and skin before, during and after the flight.

  2. To investigate how microbial species adapt to weightlessness. Is there adaptation to weightlessness by microbes and if so what kind of adaptation: long-term physiological adaptation or genetic selection? Does weightlessness affect the adhesive properties of microbes?

    To investigate this adaptation an E. coli bacteria will be grown in space inside a tube. The bacteria will be analysed back on Earth.

More about SAMPLE »»
 
 
Last update: 16 February 2004
 


 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2009 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.