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Moon China Space Science

Giant Leaf For Mankind? China Germinates First Seed on Moon (theguardian.com) 145

A small green shoot is growing on the moon after a cotton seed germinated onboard a Chinese lunar lander, scientists said. From a report: The sprout has emerged from a lattice-like structure inside a canister after the Chang'e 4 lander touched down earlier this month, according to a series of photos released by the Advanced Technology Research Institute at Chongqing University. "This is the first time humans have done biological growth experiments on the lunar surface," said Xie Gengxin, who led the design of the experiment, on Tuesday. Plants have been grown previously on the International Space Station, but this is the first time a seed has sprouted on the moon. The ability to grow plants in space is seen as crucial for long-term space missions and establishing human outposts elsewhere in the solar system, such as Mars.
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Giant Leaf For Mankind? China Germinates First Seed on Moon

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  • And so? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @12:43PM (#57966092) Homepage
    I'm really not sure what this is supposed to prove. Has anybody ever suggested, or is there any reason to believe, that seeds would not sprout on the moon?
    • Chia seeds will grow on terracotta pottery and water.

    • Earth soil (Score:5, Informative)

      by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:00PM (#57966236) Journal

      It appears it's Earth soil. I found nothing in the article to suggest it's using lunar soil here, which would be the real test. The article should have pointed that out; it's not a trivial admission.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:15PM (#57966348)

        "Fake moon soil, totally rigged, believe me! I told you Jiiina cheats, knew they would! Loser probe snuck cheating soil past Earth barrier. Need better barriers to keep out bad hombre probes, Earth is not sending their best. Make moon farmers pay for Space Wall, and Space Force must fix this! #MakeSoilGreatAgain!"

          - Orangebot AI test

      • Re:Earth soil (Score:4, Interesting)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:22PM (#57966376) Homepage Journal

        Could plants even grow in lunar soil? Not without something extra mixed in I would imagine. No nutrients, no moisture, no bacteria or animal life.

        • Re:Earth soil (Score:4, Insightful)

          by spaceman375 ( 780812 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:28PM (#57966424)

          Also no erosion, which leads to very pointy, sharp edged regolith. Not too comfortable for roots.

          • It would be possible to mill the regolith, however this comes with the danger of history recording it as “their orders were to go to the moon and pound sand”.
        • by es330td ( 964170 )
          Even on Mars Mark Watney had to mix waste in with the soil to make his potatoes grow.
        • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @03:05PM (#57967226) Journal

          Could plants even grow in lunar soil? Not without something extra mixed in I would imagine.

          Adding astronaut feces would be a good test. It's what colonists would probably have to rely on.

          I'd hate to be the person at NASA in charge of creating the poop experiment, though.

          "Dad, what do you do at work?"

          "Why, I prepare important poop for important rockets, Mikey."

          "Dad, is my poop important?..."

          (I avoided a Uranus joke; that alone should get me mod points.)

          • Adding astronaut feces would be a good test. It's what colonists would probably have to rely on.

             

            You mean:

            It's what colonists would probably have to rely on.

            colon-ists

        • Re:Earth soil (Score:5, Informative)

          by ElizabethGreene ( 1185405 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @05:17PM (#57968366)

          This experiment has been performed with Lunar Soil Simulant (JSC-1) here on earth. Plants were able to grew, poorly, in it directly. Adding organic matter and fertilizer improved growth significantly as expected.

          https://journals.plos.org/plos... [plos.org]

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Fascinating read, thank you. I'm very surprised at the result.

          • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

            The most surprising result from that is how the Martian soil did better than Earth soil.

            I think the researchers probably could've been a bit more careful in their choice of Earth soil. Clearly we have much better soil, such as potting soil, that should have outperformed the Martian soil simulant and would have made a more interesting comparison. After all, the alternative to using Martian soil is not average Earth soil, but the best kind of soil we can make.

            A comparison with hydroponics or aeroponics would

      • by Holi ( 250190 )
        not sure lunar soil would be viable as it would lack many nutrients plants require.
      • It appears it's Earth soil. I found nothing in the article to suggest it's using lunar soil here, which would be the real test. The article should have pointed that out; it's not a trivial admission.

        Obviously not, because robots don't poop.

        In a human station there would be fertilizer available.

    • Re:And so? (Score:5, Informative)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:04PM (#57966268)

      There is the 672 hour lunar day and night which could be an issue for plant growth, the the technology to make a bubble that can support prolong life in a hostile environment like the moon.

      • Re:And so? (Score:4, Funny)

        by Thud457 ( 234763 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:05PM (#57966282) Homepage Journal
        Should've sent kudzu, the moon would have had a breathable atmosphere by the end of Summer.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Why would you assume a 672 hour day/night cycle is difficult for plants? I mean, you are aware that plants grow in that area where you're near enough to the poles to have constant day and night but far enough as to not have permafrost. I've heard northern Alaska does very well growing things.

    • Re:And so? (Score:4, Funny)

      by Nkwe ( 604125 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:05PM (#57966274)
      Well it least it gave us a punderful headline.
    • Re:And so? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by careysub ( 976506 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:08PM (#57966300)

      After the sprouting comes growth. No one has ever raised a plant in a gravity field of 1/6 G. Never. Schemes to simulate it on Earth do not really do that, and while a centrifuge in orbit can do a proper simulation, no one has ever operated such a centrifuge over a plants life cycle.

      • by Anonymous Coward
        A centrifuge would need to be pretty large to give you a valid test. This is because the simulated gravity is higher at the outer edge where the seed would germinate, then gets weaker quickly as you get "higher" from the edge. The plant seed might start in 1/6th gravity but it might be generating leaves at 1/10th gravity as an example.
    • Re:And so? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:09PM (#57966310) Homepage Journal

      They are trying to create a completely self contained environment in which plants and fruit flies can live, and observe the effects of low gravity on them.

      Sure, we assumed it would be fine, but it's a good idea to prove that assumption before sending tonnes of soil and plants up there with a view to sustaining human life. It's also a useful test of the sealed environment idea and technology, in an environment subject to extreme temperature swings.

      Much of that tech will be applicable to Mars too.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        We already know that "it would be fine" is not true due to the biodome experiments. Trees and other freestanding plants sort of disintegrated and fell over. Without wind stressing and breaking fibers, the plants did not have enough strength to become rigid. It's like having an animal spend their entire life in a state of stupor with no muscle strain or growth.

        The two relevant stressors are wind and gravity. Without both, freestanding plants like cotton fail to thrive.

        We all know how much you hate western ev

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      Lack of any atmosphere, perhaps?

      Oh, and is it just me, or did this article headline remind anyone of the series 1 premiere of The Orville?

    • by es330td ( 964170 )
      This may be one of the more misleading headlines out there. The seed germinated "on the moon" in the same way a seed germinates "on the ISS." It is in an enclosed artificial environment that replicates growing conditions on Earth sufficiently to germinate elsewhere.
      • It is in an enclosed artificial environment that replicates growing conditions on Earth sufficiently to germinate elsewhere.

        Please explain how that environment replicates 1g in that 1/6g environment.

    • It proves that, as of today, there is life on one other rock in this Universe. It's not sustainable life and it didn't evolve independently, but it's life on something other than Earth.

      As to who suggested what, that is irrelevant. Until a thing is experimentally demonstrated there is always the chance that it might not be possible. If you can't see how awesome this is then I can't help you.

    • Before Neil Armstrong, did anyone ever suggest or was there any reason to believe that a man could not take a step on the moon?

      Doing something first on the moon is newsworthy. It's also an essential verification step before creating a moon base, and that's China's stated purpose.

    • Good question. I guess I would say that, given the large amount of processes that need to happen just right for the germination process to be successful, and that these processes were evolved to occur under a very specific gravitational context, it's possible that the low gravity of the moon could have interfered to such an extent that it could have resulted in failure. In any case it is a very interesting and hopeful outcome for the future of space exploration. *I believe germination and these types of ex
    • It's a shame Slashdot considers this "insightful".

      When you plan to colonize space, you have to test all aspects, step-by-step. Imagine if the experiment was trying to grow plants on the lunar surface. The test fails. What would that prove? First, you have to eliminate the possibility that it's impossible to grow stuff on the moon even if given the best conditions possible.

      When people here troubleshoot problems and debug code, do you all jump to the extreme case and test nothing else? Or do you test to
    • Maybe the research is with low gravity. In the ISS they grew some plants with zero gravity, similar but not really the same thing. Probably a sure thing that it will grow, but what's unknown is how well it grows, does germination work the same way, etc.

      But don't worry, they didn't go to the moon just to do this one experiment.

  • Surprising (Score:2, Insightful)

    by willaien ( 2494962 )

    I'm surprised that a scientific endeavor would allow for the potential of contaminating the surface with live biological samples.

    Regardless if there ever were anything on the moon, this makes studying that harder by its very existence.

    Also, we've already done zero-g growth experiments, what value did this add? It's not like the lander sourced soil and water for this.

    • by MobyDisk ( 75490 )

      It's in a sealed container.

    • I'm surprised that a scientific endeavor would allow for the potential of contaminating the surface with live biological samples.

      Regardless if there ever were anything on the moon, this makes studying that harder by its very existence.

      Also, we've already done zero-g growth experiments, what value did this add? It's not like the lander sourced soil and water for this.

      It's inside the lander, in earth soil. Sealed.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I'm surprised that a scientific endeavor would allow for the potential of contaminating the surface with live biological samples.

      So what? If it somehow grows into a cotten based Kaiju, it will just die on the moon. If it escapes the lander and magically makes the moon green and blue, all the better. At some point in the scientific process, you have to say "Let's roll!" and do the thing instead of worrying about contamination. We know the moon is hostile to terrestrial life. Adding terrestrial life won't hurt none, yo.

    • Re:Surprising (Score:5, Informative)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:06PM (#57966286) Homepage Journal

      It's all in a sealed environment. The idea is to create a viable, self-contained environment with some plants and fruit flies.

      In any case, that boat has probably already sailed as it seems that at least one of the Surveyor probes was contaminated. And you also have to ask if it's worth worrying about, given that we are fairly certain that the Moon is dead and not having to deal with it will make life a lot easier to establish a presence there.

    • Re:Surprising (Score:4, Informative)

      by careysub ( 976506 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @01:09PM (#57966308)

      Zero-G growth experiments are not 1/6-G growth experiments. This has never been done before.

    • I'm surprised that a scientific endeavor would allow for the potential of contaminating the surface with live biological samples.

      Regardless if there ever were anything on the moon, this makes studying that harder by its very existence.

      Also, we've already done zero-g growth experiments, what value did this add? It's not like the lander sourced soil and water for this.

      Not sure if there is a need for scientific qualms here, but if there is, China isn't going to have any. This is China we are talking about.

    • There were plenty of contamination events on the other side when the NASA astronauts visited in the '70s. I am pretty sure we didn't sterilize them or their equipment. I suspect there are containers of "waste" left behind to lighten the load to bring back the rocks and dust.
    • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

      The US had quite a few biological samples roaming around up there, and even driving a rover around.

  • I see nothing terribly impressive about this. We (the U.S.) could probably land a probe on an asteroid and grow potatoes there -- inside the probe, using Earth soil, and stored Earth atmosphere. We've been growing plants on the ISS for a while now haven't we? This is just a publicity stunt.
    • Re:So bloody what? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ElizabethGreene ( 1185405 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @05:42PM (#57968588)

      Have you looked at the US Space Program? I don't mean looking at our historic achievements, I mean looking at where we are today. While we were celebrating our wins, we allowed our Aerospace Industry to drive the cost of space so high that it strangled our ability to explore. Here's a news flash; Apollo 11's landing was 49.5 years ago. Most people who saw the it are retired or getting ready to retire.

      It's worse. Most NASA badges are currently drawing unemployment, and the few that are showing up to work aren't getting paid. We haven't had manned spaceflight capability in almost a decade, and the only reason we're on the ISS is because the Russians choose to let us ride along. With the current electile dysfunction there is a good chance we miss the window for the 2020 rover launch too.

      There are times for swinging your "My country is better than yours!" stick around; this isn't one.

    • NASA in 2013 had planned to launch pretty much this same exact experiment by 2015: http://blogs.discovermagazine.... [discovermagazine.com]

      NASA's version was far more of a publicity stunt, since it was all about involving kids in classrooms around the country. But apparently NASA didn't accomplish the mission. China did. Good for China.

  • Both the article and the summary agree, the plant is still a small shoot, so no giant leaves for mankind. Sorry, just a few very small ones!

  • Are they growing this thing in the dark? Is this a separate landfall on the moon? Did they land on one side and travel to the other?
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • I am impressed it sprouted at all, it should have been too cold or too hot, depending on whether it was moon day or night, for any kind of germination.

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