BioSentinel: Difference between revisions
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== BioSentinel == | |||
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File:BioSentinel Enters Heliocentric Orbit (ACD22-0006-006).jpg|BioSentinel Enters Heliocentric Orbit | |||
File:BioSentinel CubeSat orbit.png|BioSentinel CubeSat Orbit | |||
File:Biosentinel 6U CubeSat format.jpg|Biosentinel 6U CubeSat Format | |||
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Latest revision as of 00:49, 20 February 2025
BioSentinel is a NASA mission that aims to measure the impact of space radiation on living organisms over long durations beyond Low Earth Orbit. The mission is part of the Artemis program, which plans to return humans to the Moon and eventually take them to Mars.
Overview[edit]
BioSentinel's primary goal is to develop a biosensor system for detecting, measuring, and identifying the impacts of space radiation on DNA repair over long durations beyond Low Earth Orbit. The mission will use the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a biosensor, and it will measure the yeast's response to ambient space radiation.
Mission[edit]
The BioSentinel mission is scheduled to launch as a secondary payload on the first flight of the Space Launch System, Artemis 1. The spacecraft will be deployed in a heliocentric orbit in cis-lunar space, where it will remain for 18 months.
Science Payload[edit]
The science payload of BioSentinel consists of a 3U CubeSat with a 14-kg dry mass. The payload includes a biosensor that uses the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to detect and measure DNA damage and repair.
See Also[edit]
References[edit]
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