天体生物学
行星际空间飞行
国际空间站
行星际尘埃云
太空探索
空间环境
空格(标点符号)
环境科学
航空航天工程
太阳系
物理
计算机科学
天文
工程类
太阳风
操作系统
磁场
量子力学
作者
Yuko Kawaguchi,Shin-ichi Yokobori,Hirofumi Hashimoto,Hajime Yano,M. Tabata,H. Kawai,Akihiko Yamagishi
出处
期刊:Astrobiology
[Mary Ann Liebert]
日期:2016-05-01
卷期号:16 (5): 363-376
被引量:33
标识
DOI:10.1089/ast.2015.1415
摘要
The Tanpopo mission will address fundamental questions on the origin of terrestrial life. The main goal is to test the panspermia hypothesis. Panspermia is a long-standing hypothesis suggesting the interplanetary transport of microbes. Another goal is to test the possible origin of organic compounds carried from space by micrometeorites before the terrestrial origin of life. To investigate the panspermia hypothesis and the possible space origin of organic compounds, we performed space experiments at the Exposed Facility (EF) of the Japanese Experiment Module (JEM) of the International Space Station (ISS). The mission was named Tanpopo, which in Japanese means dandelion. We capture any orbiting microparticles, such as micrometeorites, space debris, and terrestrial particles carrying microbes as bioaerosols, by using blocks of silica aerogel. We also test the survival of microbial species and organic compounds in the space environment for up to 3 years. The goal of this review is to introduce an overview of the Tanpopo mission with particular emphasis on the investigation of the interplanetary transfer of microbes. The Exposed Experiment Handrail Attachment Mechanism with aluminum Capture Panels (CPs) and Exposure Panels (EPs) was exposed on the EF-JEM on May 26, 2015. The first CPs and EPs will be returned to the ground in mid-2016. Possible escape of terrestrial microbes from Earth to space will be evaluated by investigating the upper limit of terrestrial microbes by the capture experiment. Possible mechanisms for transfer of microbes over the stratosphere and an investigation of the effect of the microbial cell-aggregate size on survivability in space will also be discussed. Key Words: Panspermia—Astrobiology—Low-Earth orbit. Astrobiology 16, 363–376.
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