Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Thousands of water bears stranded on the Moon after Lunar Lander crash

- By Mindy Weisberger

When you look up at the moon, there may now be a few thousand water bears looking back at you.

Th e Israeli spacecraft Beresheet crashed into the moon during a failed landing attempt on April 11. In doing so, it may have strewn the lunar surface with thousands of dehydrated tardigrade­s, Wired reported.

Beresheet was a robotic lander. Though it didn’t transport astronauts, it carried human DNA samples, along with the aforementi­oned tardigrade­s and 30 million very small digitized pages of informatio­n about human society and culture. However, it’s unknown if the archive — and the water bears — survived the explosive impact when Beresheet crashed, according to Wired. [ 8 Reasons Why We Love Tardigrade­s]

The tardigrade­s and the human DNA were late additions to the mission, added just a few weeks before Beresheet launched on Feb. 21. Much like Cretaceous fossils locked in amber, the DNA samples and tardigrade­s were sealed in a resin layer protecting the DVD-size lunar library, while thousands more tardigrade­s were poured onto the sticky tape that held the archive in place, Wired reported.

But why send tardigrade­s to the moon? Tardigrade­s, also known as moss piglets, are microscopi­c creatures measuring between 0.002 and 0.05 inches ( 0.05 to 1.2 millimeter­s) long. They have endearingl­y tubby bodies and eight legs tipped with tiny “hands”; but tardigrade­s are just as well-known for their near-indestruct­ibility as they are for their unbearable cuteness.

Tardigrade­s can survive conditions that would be deadly to any other form of life, weathering temperatur­e extremes of minus 328 degrees Fahrenheit ( minus 200 degrees Celsius) to more than 300 F ( 149 C). They also handily survive exposure to the radiation and vacuum of space.

Another tardigrade superpower is their ability to dehydrate their bodies into a state known as a “tun.” They retract their heads and legs, expel the water from their bodies and shrivel up into a tiny ball — and scientists have found that tardigrade­s can revive from this dehydrated state after 10 years or more.

In other words, if any creature were capable of surviving a crash- landing in space, it would probably be a tardigrade. Whether any of the Beresheet tardigrade­s are biding their time in a lunar impact crater until they can be resuscitat­ed, only time will tell.

Courtesy Live Science

 ??  ?? Artist impression: If any creature could survive a crash-landing on the moon, it would probably be a tardigrade. Credit: Shuttersto­ck/NASA
Artist impression: If any creature could survive a crash-landing on the moon, it would probably be a tardigrade. Credit: Shuttersto­ck/NASA

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