logo
Australian scientists aiming to grow plants on the moon prepare for launch of Lunaria One

Australian scientists aiming to grow plants on the moon prepare for launch of Lunaria One

An Australian team attempting to grow plants on the moon is finalising a prototype designed to carry an assortment of plants and seeds to the lunar surface.
If the plants and seeds survive the journey, the team is hoping they will be able to thrive on the moon's surface.
The project, which is being headed by Australian company Lunaria One, will hitch a ride on the exterior of a lander built by USA-based Intuitive Machines, and is currently scheduled to launch in March or April 2026.
The goal of the mission is to discover how plants and seeds respond to the low-levels of gravity on the moon.
Mission lead Lauren Fell said the project was intended to be the first step down a path that would eventually allow humans to have a sustainable presence on the moon.
To achieve this goal, Lunaria One, along with partners from industry and universities, has developed a bio-module capable of keeping the plants warm and hydrated, while keeping the harsh vacuum environment of space out.
Under current time frames, Lunaria One's bio-module and plants have to be ready for installation on the lunar lander that will carry them to the surface of the moon by the end of the year.
A prototype built at RMIT University in Melbourne is being tested to make sure it can handle the high vibration and temperatures it will be subjected to during launch, as well as the potential radiation and temperature extremes it can experience in space.
At the Centre for Accelerator Science nuclear lab in Lucas Heights near Sydney, another team is investigating which plant species to send into space.
In a small plastic box, seeds and plants were bombarded with radiation equivalent to four days, eight days and five years on the lunar surface.
"We are testing to see where those boundaries are," Ms Fell said.
"Life is very resilient, and we have chosen species on purpose that have a lot of resilience – lichens for example have been shown to survive outside the International Space Station."
The mission, named the Australian Lunar Experiment Promoting Horticulture, or ALEPH, is backed by a $3.6 million grant from the Australian Space Agency's Moon to Mars Demonstrator Mission Grants, with contributions from industry.
It is hoped the mission will help incubate a domestic space industry, with the team developing as much of the equipment onshore as possible.
One headache for scientists trying to get the plants to survive the trip to the moon is the weight limit.
The entire project can only weigh 500 grams.
Within that limit they must accommodate the pressurised bio-module, internal heating system, electronics, sensors, lighting, water, the plants themselves, and a space-rated camera that will watch for growth.
Professor Caitlin Byrt, a biologist consultant on the team, was blunt about the plants' survival chances.
There would be many things that could kill them on the journey, she said, including massive shaking at take-off, solar radiation, temperatures hundreds of degrees above boiling and below freezing, risk of module breach and water venting into space.
"I think it's going to be a huge challenge to have something that's still kicking with life by the time it gets to the moon."
A lunar day lasts about two weeks, and after touching down in the lunar dawn, the plants have about 72 hours to live before the environment simply becomes too hot.
"After that it's show over," Professor Byrt said.
"A little sprout growing — that's what I dream of, that's what I'd love to see."
The mission was not an idle curiosity, Professor Byrt said, and may have applications back on Earth.
Just as tech developed for the International Space Station led to better water recycling here, she said ALEPH could teach people how to grow food in inhospitable locations or after disasters.
"Imagine if you could deliver systems that are super well optimised despite challenging conditions, that communities can use to be growing plants and supplying their own food," she said.
Studies of microbes on the International Space Station showed new "alien" varieties had developed, and Dr Byrt said it was "probably inevitable" efforts to grow plants on the moon would create unique organisms, as nature found a way to balance a new closed ecosystem.
ALEPH is hoped to be the first in a series of planned missions, all working towards human habitation on the moon, with subsequent missions to go for longer durations and carry more biomaterial.
Intuitive Machines's chief technology officer Dr Tim Crain said what happened to plants at lunar gravity was almost completely unknown.
"We've done a lot of experiments on the International Space Station for micro gravity, to see how living things respond to zero [gravity]. But this is an opportunity to see one-sixth gravity — does it inhibit growth, does it promote growth?" Dr Crain said.
"It's a human story of exploration and we are proud that Australia is a part of that."
ALEPH will be carried on Intuitive Machines's third lunar lander, and Dr Crain said the team needed three months to integrate the bio-module and install the lander on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
As well as growing a domestic space industry, there were plans to use ALEPH to teach kids science at home.
Lunaria One has partnered with science education company Stile Education to develop kits that could be sent to schools, allowing students to see whether different plants would grow in similar conditions to the moon.
"It's curriculum-aligned so teachers will be able to know it works into the curriculum," Ms Fell said.
"We want to make an Australia-wide connection to the project."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Friends' School in Hobart boycotts STEM programs sponsored by weapons manufacturers
The Friends' School in Hobart boycotts STEM programs sponsored by weapons manufacturers

ABC News

time4 hours ago

  • ABC News

The Friends' School in Hobart boycotts STEM programs sponsored by weapons manufacturers

A leading Tasmanian school will no longer send students to two national STEM programs, due to the events being sponsored by major weapons manufacturers. The Friends' School in Hobart is the world's largest Quaker school with about 1,300 students — and Australia's only Quaker school. It has scrapped its involvement with the National Youth Science Forum and the Science Engineering Challenge, which both offer opportunities for students interested in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. The science forum is sponsored by Lockheed Martin Australia, while the engineering challenge is sponsored by Boeing. Friends' School principal Esther Hill said the institution had "become aware" of the sponsorships and "decided to take action" to align with the school's peaceful philosophy. The school's website says it is based on "fundamental values such as the intrinsic worth of each person, the recognition of 'that of God' in everyone, the desirability of simplicity and the need to establish peace and justice". It states "core Quaker values" informing it are simplicity, peace, integrity, community, equality and earthcare. "Our students have loved being a part of those events, and so the stance that we're taking is not about their involvement in those events," Ms Hill said. "We have pretty clear policies and guidelines in education about sponsorship — we wouldn't want to see fast-food companies or tobacco companies, or alcohol companies, or companies that produce guns, for example, sponsoring school programs and school events. Ms Hill said the school had "always stood for peace" and cited the role of weapons in major world events including Israel-Gaza, Russia-Ukraine, the Myanmar civil war, and World War II. "We recognised 80 years since the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki … which saw such mass destruction on the back of using these weapons which are being manufactured," she said. "And we are still seeing across the world, not only in Gaza but in other places, we're seeing these weapons being used to destroy communities and to take lives and to cause all sorts of destruction. "So we feel there is very little, in many ways, here in this little corner of Australia that we can do and this is one way that we can stand up for what it is that we believe — which is that weapons manufacturing and production and sale is contributing to that problem." Ms Hill said the school's Board of Governors recently approved a policy which meant its students "would not take part in activities that are sponsored by, affiliated with, or promote military organisations or weapons companies". Teachers for Peace, a not-for-profit organisation with the aim of promoting "peace and disarmament", said The Friends' School was the first Australian school to make the move. Queensland, New South Wales and Victorian governments have altered their policies to tighten restrictions on the weapons industry sponsorships or partnerships in schools. Last year, the Australian Education Union condemned the growing affiliation between Australian STEM education programs and global weapons corporations. It cited a report by the Medical Association for Prevention of War which identified 35 Australian STEM programs in 2022 affiliated with weapons companies, up from 27 the previous year. In May, the union's Northern Territory branch passed a motion which called for the state's education department to prohibit programs that are sponsored or partnered with companies promoting or manufacturing weapons from being run in schools. Ms Hill said the Friends' School had written to Lockheed Martin and Boeing and the two programs and received "varied responses". She said educational institutions running programs for students had a responsibility to seek sponsors that are more appropriate for schools. "I think schools should be developing an awareness of the programs that they're involved in and who's sitting behind those programs," Ms Hill said. The Science and Engineering Challenge is a nationwide STEM outreach program presented by the University of Newcastle in New South Wales. The program is in its 25th year, with last year's event involving nearly 25,000 students from almost 900 Australian schools. The National Youth Science Forum began in 1983 and runs programs nation-wide and overseas offering students STEM experiences and opportunities. Its flagship program encourages young people entering year 12 to take up the subjects, with the website stating it has drawn more than 15,000 students. Both programs have been contacted for comment. Lockheed Martin and Boeing have also been contacted for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store