China Daily Global Edition (USA)

THE SILK ROAD IN THE SKY

Chinese astronauts have completed an experiment proposed by fourHong Kong students to determine whether silkworms can live and spin outside the Earth’s atmosphere. reports fromHong Kong.

- Contact the writer at honeytsang@chinadaily­hk.com.cn

The unbroken thread of every silkworm stretches more than 1.5 kilometers. It is an apt symbol, tracing a silken strand from the earliest dawn of history to the present, where tiny wriggling silkworm larvae performed their dance of life aboard the Tiangong II space lab, 393 kilometers above the earth.

Early Chinese people held special affection for silkworms and their cocoons. Unwound, the cocoons produced the lustrous fiber that gave birth to an opulent culture, spawning a nation of traders who spread out along what came to be known as the Silk Road.

Silkworms, closely intertwine­d with Chinese culture and history, remain the subject of ongoing research. They have been fed artificial colorants to produce dyed, nontoxic fibers, and researcher­s are looking into silken biomateria­ls with five times the tensile strength of steel.

The tiny larvae taken on a “spacewalk” by Chinese astronauts were part of an experiment proposed by four high school students from the Christian and Missionary Alliance Sun Kei Secondary School in Hong Kong, who devised a pilot scheme to breed the worms in space. Their design won second prize at the Space Science Experiment Competitio­n, organized by the Hong Kong authoritie­s and theChinaAs­tronaut Research and Training Center.

Astronauts Jing Haipeng and Chen Dong, who conducted the experiment­s, set out to determine how microgravi­ty affects the biological functions of silkworm larvae. Cultural elements

“We wanted to come up with an experiment that applied Chinese cultural elements. That’s how we settled on silk farming, a time-honored agricultur­al practice that originated in China.” saidWong Tsoi-yin, 17, one of the students who came up with the idea for the experiment. “Above all, we wanted to find out whether it’s possible to breed silkworms in space, hoping that, if successful, this might advance space science.”

Simple as it may appear, the experiment involved nearly two years’ preparatio­n. The students admitted they were surprised at how much work was needed to turn their prototype into a fullblown, space-friendly experiment. China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, known as CASC, which focuses on aerospace research and spacecraft design, took on the responsibi­lity of modifying the proposal and bringing it to fruition.

The six larvae that became the subjects of the experiment were the products of thousands of generation­s of selective breeding, and were chosen as the best among 4,000 newly bred larvae.

Those used for the Shenzhou XI mission were produced at CASC’s Space lab No 5 Research Academy. Engineers at the corporatio­n had concluded that most silkworms could not survive the harsh environmen­t of space, so they set about breeding a new, hardier and healthier strain.

What followed was a series of rigorous screenings. The ideal larvae had to be bigger than their peers and whiter in color, according to Wei Xilin, an engineer at CASC, speaking on China Central Television.

The shortliste­d larvae were put through a final test, and the engineers finally chose the six healthiest, Wei explained.

In the early stages, experts from China’s Manned Space Agency provided the students with knowledge of conditions inside the spacecraft, as well as an understand­ing of how to breed larvae.

Leung Tsz-wan, 17, one of the students,

The 8.6-metric-ton space lab, the country’s largest space asset, was designed to provide a comfortabl­e, working environmen­t for astronauts to conduct 14 different, wide-ranging experiment­s.

They included examining the science of aerospace materials, cultivatin­g plants, applicatio­ns for robotic arms, and an experiment to see if silkworms can thrive in space.

Shang Mingyou, an engineer at the space laboratory system, told China Central Television that Tiangong II was built with a lower noise level than its predecesso­r, Tiangong I.

Measures were taken to reduce the noise emitted by moving fans or other rotating parts. The noise level was said the exchanges with space experts from the mainland were essential in shaping their ideas into a meaningful experiment. Blueprint

The blueprint proposed by the students was a large, square, transparen­t box fitted with an electric fan to extract the feces excreted by the larvae. In terms of shape and size, it was different from the end product forged by CASC that went into space and contained six compact capsulesha­pe containers, each housing an individual larva.

The principles of the capsules were not a major departure from the students’ original proposal. Speaking to China Daily when they revisited their prototype, the students saidmany larvae died of dehydratio­n during the early stages of the experiment because they were Breakthrou­ghs fed stale mulberry leaves rather than fresh ones. That led to the students proposing replacing the leaves with moistened food pellets.

Later, CASC optimized the students’ idea. Instead of using food pellets, the engineers modified the mulberry leaves into a greenish paste that locks in moisture. The paste was then smeared on the insides of both ends of each capsule, allowing the larvae to crawl through the tubes and feed, according to Zhao Danni, theCASCeng­ineerwho designed the capsule, in an intervieww­ith CCTV.

The inner walls of the capsules were also sheathed in shock-absorbent foam made from aerospaceg­rade polyuretha­ne and designed to prevent the larvae from coming to harm as the spacecraft juddered skyward, she said.

Once Shenzhou XI had completed astronauts on board, roared into space on a 15-day mission.

The Shenzhou XI mission, which started in October and concluded last month, is being seen as an important milestone in the country’s program of extended space exploratio­n.

A number of projects are ongoing and others are ready to be rolled out, including lunar probes, the BeiDou Navigation Satellite and the Gaofen observatio­n satellite program.

All are scheduled for completion by the end of the decade.

By 2020, more missions are expected to be undertaken, and the nation also plans to eventually send a probe to land on Mars. its automated docking procedure with the orbiting Tiangong II on Oct 19, the experiment was ready to begin.

“We observed, took care of the larvae and spruced up their homes on a daily basis,” Jing said, in a video taken aboard the space lab. He and Chen shared “fatherly” duties for the larvae for the first eight days of the mission, from Oct 19 to 26.

The student team explained that the excrement had to be cleaned up frequently because close contact with germs could have endangered the larvae during their days in space.

The original idea was to use an electric fan to suck away the waste product, but the astronauts tweaked the approach to save themselves time and energy. In a video shot onboard Tiangong II and released by Xinhua News Agency, Chen can be seen unscrewing the top of a capsule and shaking out black bits of feces that then driftedupi­nto a plastic bag.

In the same video, Jing, the mission commander, was seen drifting weightless­ly and carrying a pocketsize capsule that held one of the six larvae.

Through the windows of the six capsules, he observed and assessed how the larvae reacted and grew in space. “Look. The device is the home of the larvae,” he said. “And in fact, they are now in their second home, which is the Tiangong II space lab, 393 kilometers above the Earth.”

The experiment was one of three projects jointly designed by mainland space engineers and theHong Kong students. Their endeavors were to become part of China’s longest manned space mission.

The six larvae aboard Shenzhou XI were sent into space on Oct 17. The day before the launch, Wu Ping, deputy director of China’s manned space engineerin­g office, told a media briefing that the tasks undertaken during the 33-day mission, including the silkworm experiment, would be “engrossing” and “well worth seeing”. Triumph

The larvae fulfilled the hopes of the students and the mission scientists, as five of the six succeeded in spinning cocoons. The experiment was a triumph for all involved.

“Aerospace experiment­s were something very farfetched, they used to be a visionary dream to students inHongKong,” saidMak Tang Pik-yee, executive director of the Hong Kong Productivi­ty Council, who was a member of the organizing committee of the 2015 Space Science Experiment Design Competitio­n.

However, the astronauts carried through the students’ dreams, sending their designs from Earth into space, she added.

The larvae were frozen following their return to Earth on Nov 18. They will remain dormant in lowtempera­ture conditions while the groundwork is laid for follow-up experiment­s into the effects of microgravi­ty on spun silk.

“There was a timewhenwe­would never have anticipate­d that the students’ ideas could be brought into space,” said Chow Wing-hei, teacher and project adviser of the silkworm experiment. “Butwe’re allnowbask­ing in the glory of having those ideas tested and proven successful in space.”

In the history of China’s space program, other than humans, silkworm larvae were not the first creatures to venture into the great beyond.

When the program was inaugurate­d in the early 1960s, a wide variety of animals got a head start.

In July 1964, the pioneers were a group of white mice on board China’s first sounding rocket, T-7AS1, which carried measuring instrument­s. Two years later, the mice were followed by two dogs.

The chapter that prepared the way for China’s 2016 manned space exploratio­n was opened by the successful blastoff of Tiangong II on Sept 15. kept within 60 decibels, a safe level that did not hamper conversati­on or distract the astronauts while they conducted the tests, according to Shang.

In the past decade, China has made a number of breakthrou­ghs in manned space missions.

The first Chinese astronaut went into space aboard Shenzhou V in 2003. Shenzhou VII, with a crew of three, including Jing Haipeng (commander of China’s latest space mission), was launched in 2008, and astronaut Zhai Zhigang conducted China’s first spacewalk.

In 2013, Shenzhou X, with three

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Students from a Hong Kong secondary school celebrate winning second prize at the Space Science Experiment Competitio­n for their experiment to breed silkworms in space. They were presented with a model of Shenzhou XI docked with the Tiangong II space lab.
PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Students from a Hong Kong secondary school celebrate winning second prize at the Space Science Experiment Competitio­n for their experiment to breed silkworms in space. They were presented with a model of Shenzhou XI docked with the Tiangong II space lab.
 ?? XINHUA PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Left: Astronaut Jing Haipeng displays a capsule used to house silkworm larvae during the 33-day mission aboard Tiangong II. Above: A larva prepared for the experiment by the students from Hong Kong.
XINHUA PHOTO PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Left: Astronaut Jing Haipeng displays a capsule used to house silkworm larvae during the 33-day mission aboard Tiangong II. Above: A larva prepared for the experiment by the students from Hong Kong.
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