Space Is Hard | How NASA Will Science Its Food and Drink for Interplanetary Travel
Released on 02/16/2016
(light techno music)
[Narrator] For decades, space food has been mostly
slurry in a tube.
Bust last year, astronauts aboard the ISS
enjoyed the first space salad grown 200 miles from earth.
That's awesome.
Tastes good.
Yeah.
[Narrator] It was one small leaf for man.
But making the step to zero G agriculture was pretty tricky.
Watering alone is a feat
since it wants to float around in bubbles.
So engineers have devised a system that carries moisture
directly to the plants' roots.
Basically, a space chia pet.
(Chia advertising song)
Astronauts even grew a nice bouquet of zinneas.
Hm, they really do tie the station together.
Keeping enough water around is also a challenge.
Right now, there's a pretty ingenious system
that transforms pee into usable water.
Here, aboard the ISS,
we turn yesterday's coffee into tomorrow's coffee.
[Narrator] But it can break down. Ugh.
If humans are going to travel to other planets,
we'll need a better water recycler.
So NASA is taking inspiration from the human gut
and using a water filter using genetically modified bacteria
to clean out the H20.
Ah, refreshing.
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