The Scotsman

Mining asteroids could open final frontier

● Scottish scientists create technology aimed at future manned settlement­s

- @Space_station By SHÂN ROSS sross@scotsman.com

Astronauts are to test the world’s first asteroid mining devices, developed in Scotland, in an advance that could open up a new frontier in space exploratio­n.

Prototype kits devised by scientists at the University of Edinburgh are being sent to the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS) to study how microscopi­c organisms could be used to recover minerals and metals from space rocks.

The ground-breaking study could aid efforts to establish manned settlement­s on distant worlds by helping develop ways to source minerals essential for survival in space.

Tests will reveal how low gravity affects bacteria’s natural ability to extract useful materials such as iron, calcium and magnesium from rocks, researcher­s say.

Their findings could also help improve the process – known as biomining – that has numerous applicatio­ns on Earth, including in the recovery of metals from ores.

Astrobiolo­gists from the UK centre for astrobiolo­gy at the university developed the matchbox-sized prototypes – called biomining reactors – over a ten-year period.

Eighteen of the devices will be transporte­d to the ISS aboard a Spacex rocket, which is scheduled to launch on Sunday from Cape Canaveral in Florida.

Upon arrival at the space station, small pieces of basalt rock, which makes up the surface of most asteroids, will be loaded into each device and submerged in bacterial solution.

Tests will be conducted in low gravity to find out how conditions on asteroids and planets such as Mars might affect the ability of bacteria to mine minerals from rocks found there.

The experiment will also study how microbes grow and form layers – known as biofilms – on natural surfaces in space.

As well as providing insights into how low gravity affects biofilms, the findings will also improve understand­ing of how microbes grow on Earth.

The rocks will be sent back to Earth after the three-week experiment, to be analysed by the Edinburgh team in a lab at Stanford University.

The project is led by the university, with support from the European Space Agency and the UK Space Agency, and funded by the Science and Technology Facilities Council.

Professor Charles Cockell, of the university’s school of physics and astronomy, who is leading the project, said: “This experiment will give us new fundamenta­l insights into the behaviour of microbes in space, their applicatio­ns in space exploratio­n and how they might be used more effectivel­y on Earth in all the myriad way that microbes affect our lives.”

Dr Rosa Santomarti­no, also of the university’s school of physics and astronomy, who is leading the study of the rocks when they return, said: “Microbes are everywhere and this experiment is giving us new ideas about how they grow on surfaces and how we might use them to explore space.”

Prof Cockell has been involved in a number of pioneering studies.

One of his earlier studies involved the ISS involved taking some rocks from a cliff in Devon and flying them on the outside of the manned space laboratory for 18 months to determine whether any microbes survived in space. The research found that one species survived. Further studies found this was partly due to it forming bio films.

 ??  ?? 0 Charles Cockell is leading the space mining project
0 Charles Cockell is leading the space mining project

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