• Home
  • About
  • FAQ
  • Feeds
  • Glossary
  • Contact
Tours In Space
  • Home
  • Start Here
    • Intro to Commercial Spaceflight
    • How to Book a Space Tour
    • Is Space Tourism Safe?
    • Space Travel FAQs
    • View Earth from the Edge
    • What to Pack
  • Preparing for Your Trip
    • Insurance and Legal Waivers
    • Physical and Medical Requirements
    • Training Programs
    • What to Expect
  • Space Tourism Companies
    • Axiom Space
    • Blue Origin
    • SpaceX
    • Virgin Galactic
    • World View (stratospheric balloon flights)
    • Blue Origin vs Virgin Galactic
    • Comparison Chart: Features, Pricing, Booking
  • Space Tours
    • Custom & Luxury Packages
    • Duration, Training, Costs
    • Experiences
    • Future Moon/Mars Options
    • Orbital Flights
    • Parabolic Flight Experiences
    • Private Missions
    • Stratospheric Balloon Flights
    • Suborbital Flights
    • Zero-Gravity Flights
  • Spaceflight Technologies
    • Space Tourism Balloon
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Start Here
    • Intro to Commercial Spaceflight
    • How to Book a Space Tour
    • Is Space Tourism Safe?
    • Space Travel FAQs
    • View Earth from the Edge
    • What to Pack
  • Preparing for Your Trip
    • Insurance and Legal Waivers
    • Physical and Medical Requirements
    • Training Programs
    • What to Expect
  • Space Tourism Companies
    • Axiom Space
    • Blue Origin
    • SpaceX
    • Virgin Galactic
    • World View (stratospheric balloon flights)
    • Blue Origin vs Virgin Galactic
    • Comparison Chart: Features, Pricing, Booking
  • Space Tours
    • Custom & Luxury Packages
    • Duration, Training, Costs
    • Experiences
    • Future Moon/Mars Options
    • Orbital Flights
    • Parabolic Flight Experiences
    • Private Missions
    • Stratospheric Balloon Flights
    • Suborbital Flights
    • Zero-Gravity Flights
  • Spaceflight Technologies
    • Space Tourism Balloon
No Result
View All Result
Tours In Space
No Result
View All Result
Home NASA

Nutrition Research Arrives Aboard Space Station

Ensign by Ensign
April 14, 2026
in NASA, Space Station News
0
Nutrition Research Arrives Aboard Space Station
189
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
image

No matter how far humanity aims to travel or how ambitious the mission, nutrition will play a key role for the crew members on distant worlds. Before planning long-term stays on the Moon, Mars, and beyond, humans must learn to grow and care for plants and other sources of nutrition like algae to keep the explorers taking part in these adventures fed.

To solve this problem, NASA and its partners are conducting research aboard the International Space Station to better understand how the space environment affects nutrition-relevant organisms. Several investigations aboard Northrop Grumman’s 24th commercial resupply mission for NASA support efforts to maintain crew diets as humanity ventures deeper into the cosmos.

Certain plants have bacteria in their roots that can take nitrogen from the air and convert it into a form of food that plants can use for growth. NASA’s Veg-06 studies alfalfa (<em>Medicago sativa), a model organism, to determine how the plant interacts with this bacterium in space. This study also examines the effects of reduced lignin, which reinforces cell walls and helps plants to grow upright against gravity. In microgravity, plants may not need lignin, and reduced levels could allow plant parts to be more easily recycled, facilitating the growth of future plant generations.

Other forms of nutrition that could support crew health include spirulina (Arthorospira), a type of algae high in protein, B vitamins, and antioxidants. Spirulina also has an added benefit of converting carbon dioxide into oxygen, helping replenish a crew’s air supply. While spirulina is typically grown in water tanks, a JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) experiment called Space Surface Spirulina is testing a method to grow the algae on a thin-film surface. This method allows more efficient production of this high-protein food while conserving water and producing fresh oxygen aboard spacecraft.

The ESA (European Space Agency) investigation Seed Vigour exposes seeds from several plant species to spaceflight conditions aboard the space station to determine if seed growth is affected. The research builds on a 2015 study in which arugula seeds spent six months in orbit. After returning to Earth, the seeds were distributed to schools in the United Kingdom for further study. The data contributed to a 2020 publication which found that the space-flown arugula seeds took longer to sprout and demonstrated signs of partial aging, but spaceflight did not compromise seed survival or seedling development.

This new study, flying aboard the resupply mission aims to determine whether these findings apply to other plant species and could help researchers find better ways to protect crop seeds during long-duration space missions.

The Tomatosphere 9 investigation by the CSA (Canadian Space Agency) is exposing 1.8 million tomato seeds to microgravity conditions aboard the orbiting laboratory to give students an opportunity to study how the space environment affects plant growth. After the seeds return to Earth, they will be distributed to schools across the United States and Canada, where students can plant them alongside ground controls in a blind study to compare results.

Together, these studies aboard space station deepen researchers’ understanding of nutrition in space and inform ways to better grow and maintain food sources that will keep crews healthy on future missions to the Moon, Mars, and beyond.

Tags: MarsNASAspace missionspace station
No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • Scientists use rare ‘Einstein Cross’ to learn about young galaxy with surprisingly old stars
  • This Artemis 2 astronaut really loves Rise | Space photo of the day for April 14, 2026
  • Nutrition Research Arrives Aboard Space Station
  • The Lyrids are coming! How I watch meteor showers from the middle of a city
  • Talk about long distance! Watch the farthest-ever crew call in space between Artemis 2 and the ISS

Categories

  • Excursions
  • Kepler Mission
  • NASA
  • NASA Breaking News
  • Physical Preparation
  • Preparation
  • Space News
  • Space Station News
  • Spacewalks
  • Tours
  • Uncategorized
  • Weightlessness Training
  • What Not to Pack
  • What to Pack

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
  • Home
  • Start Here
  • Preparing for Your Trip
  • Space Tourism Companies
  • Space Tours
  • Contact

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Contact
  • Feeds
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Preparing for Your Trip
    • Insurance and Legal Waivers
    • Physical and Medical Requirements
    • Training Programs
    • What to Expect
  • Privacy Policy
  • Space Tourism Companies
    • Axiom Space
    • Blue Origin
    • Blue Origin vs Virgin Galactic
    • Comparison Chart: Features, Pricing, Booking
    • SpaceX
    • Virgin Galactic
    • World View (stratospheric balloon flights)
  • Space Tours
    • Custom & Luxury Packages
    • Duration, Training, Costs
    • Experiences
    • Future Moon/Mars Options
    • Orbital Flights
    • Parabolic Flight Experiences
    • Private Missions
    • Stratospheric Balloon Flights
    • Suborbital Flights
    • Zero-Gravity Flights
  • Spaceflight Technologies
    • Space Tourism Balloon
  • Start Here
    • How to Book a Space Tour
    • Intro to Commercial Spaceflight
    • Is Space Tourism Safe?
    • Space Travel FAQs
    • View Earth from the Edge
    • What to Pack
  • Tours in Space is your launchpad to the world of space tourism

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.