Astronauts Eat First Space Grown Salad
Released on 08/11/2015
Woohoo! Cheers!
Cheers! Cheers!
[Voiceover] Hey, astronauts! Looks like you've just grown
something sweet in your hydroponic garden.
Oh. It's just lettuce.
(astronauts laughing)
For the first time, astronauts ate
a few Red Romaine lettuce leaves they'd grown aboard
the International Space Station.
That's awesome. Good.
Tastes good? Yeah!
[Voiceover] It wasn't the first time plants
have been grown in space,
but it was a giant leap for fresh, edible food in orbit.
The space salad could be a key
to future manned missions to Mars,
or even space colonies.
And it's technology may find wider use on Earth,
for growing... 'plants' indoors.
For thirty three days, the lettuce grew
bathed in red, blue, and green LED lights,
which are highly efficient,
but don't make the plants very mouthwatering;
but as humans consider spending more and more time in space,
NASA says that gardening may be good for both nutrition
and for crew recreation and well-being.
After all, it's a long trip to Mars, man.
Historian Answers Revolution Questions
Has The U.S. Become A Surveillance State?
Sydney Sweeney Answers The Web's Most Searched Questions
Economics Professor Answers Great Depression Questions
Palantir CEO Alex Karp On Government Contracts, Immigration, and the Future of Work
Historian Answers Native American Questions
Cryogenics, AI Avatars, and The Future of Dying
EJAE on KPop Demon Hunters and Her Journey to Success
Why Conspiracy Theories Took Hold When Charlie Kirk Died
Historian Answers Folklore Questions