SciShow Tangents - Experiments in Space
Episode Date: March 17, 2020Space… it’s big, it’s confusing, and there isn’t any gravity! That’s why we have a dedicated team of people up in the International Space Station running all kinds of experiments to try and ...figure out just what the heck is even going on up there. You truly have no idea how much of us ordering Popeye’s I had to cut out of this. This was definitely our longest recording session ever and I was livid!Follow us on Twitter @SciShowTangents, where we’ll tweet out topics for upcoming episodes and you can ask the science couch questions! While you're at it, check out the Tangents crew on Twitter: Stefan: @itsmestefanchin Ceri: @ceriley Sam: @slamschultz Hank: @hankgreenIf you want to learn more about any of our main topics, check out these links:[Truth or Fail]Chicken Fathttps://www.nasa.gov/topics/aeronautics/features/aafex_biofuels.htmlBone losshttps://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments/explorer/Investigation.html?#id=187Perfumehttps://www.nasa.gov/audience/forstudents/9-12/features/spacescents_feature.htmlhttps://spinoff.nasa.gov/spinoff2002/ch_1.html[Fact Off]Wake Shield Facilityhttps://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19920014405https://er.jsc.nasa.gov/seh/pg46s95.htmlhttps://uwaterloo.ca/molecular-beam-epitaxy/about/what-epitaxyhttps://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2002/03jan_bioniceyeshttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0042207X01003839https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S009457650000148XImage: https://archive.org/details/STS069-724-095 Mouse sperm experimenthttps://www.pnas.org/content/114/23/5988http://iss.jaxa.jp/en/kiboexp/theme/second/pmlatter/spacepup/ [Ask the Science Couch]Human pregnancyhttps://emergency.cdc.gov/radiation/pdf/prenatal.pdfhttps://www.livescience.com/33047-space-sex-pregnancy.htmlhttps://www.thoughtco.com/can-women-get-pregnant-in-space-3072590NASA sperm studyhttps://futurism.com/sperm-space-nasaSpace childbirth startuphttps://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/01/space-childbirth-babies/579064/Other animal developmenthttps://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/what-space-jellyfish-tell-us-about-interplanetary-travel/https://www.popsci.com/article/technology/space-born-jellyfish-hate-life-earth/https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/wnjkkw/making-babies-in-space-may-be-a-terrible-idea[Butt One More Thing]Flatworms in spacehttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/reg2.79
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, this is Sam. A lot has changed since we recorded this episode of SciShow Tangents
just a couple weeks ago. The spread of coronavirus is affecting everyone, and I speak for all of us
at SciShow Tangents when I say we hope you and your loved ones are safe. We feel lucky that you
choose to spend time with us every week, and we hope the podcast can take you off on a tangent
and be a reminder of fun and silly things during a stressful time. If you're looking for more
information on COVID-19,
our YouTube channel, youtube.com slash scishow,
has a few videos explaining the disease and the pandemic.
Thank you for being part of our socially distant community
because we're all fighting this together.
Take care of yourselves.
Now, on with the show. Hello and welcome to SciShow Tangent, the lightly competitive knowledge showcase starring some of the geniuses that make the YouTube series SciShow happen.
This week, as always, I'm joined by Stefan.
Hello.
What's your tagline?
Fucked up from the neck up.
What?
Expecting that.
I say it because I'm wearing a,
I mean, I think it's fair to say a snazzy shirt.
Yeah.
But I haven't shaven in days.
I haven't had a haircut in months.
I'm just, it just a mess up there.
We're also joined by Sam Schultz.
Sam, what's your most boomer
quality? I must have one,
but I feel like I'm pretty much young at
heart.
I do like mowing the lawn.
Oh yeah, that's pretty boomer.
I live on a second floor, so I have some
AstroTurf on my back porch.
I do like to go out and sweep it.
That's nice.
So maybe that yard carriage.
That's pretty boomer.
Yeah, I like that a lot.
What's your tagline?
Down with homework.
And Sari Riley is also here.
What's your tagline?
Rumbly tumbly.
Ooh.
And my name is Hank Green, and my tagline is the floppiest flippers.
Ew.
Every week here on SciShow Tangents, we get together to try to one-up, amaze, and delight each other with science facts.
We're playing for glory, but we're also keeping score and awarding Sam bucks from week to week.
We do everything we can to stay on topic, but sometimes we go on tangents.
And if the rest of the crew deems that tangent unworthy, you will be docked a Sam buck.
And I need every Sam buck I can get because I wasn't here for two episodes.
You're down in the mud with me.
Down in the mud with Sam.
Luckily, I get to drag myself out
one point at a time,
starting with the science poem
to discuss our topic of the day.
The science poem this week is from me.
Light a fire on the ground,
we know what it'll do.
Or how a mouse will procreate
or how a human poos.
We know the ins and outs of
life upon the planet's face, but there's always more to know. Just ask, but what's it like in
space? A sphere that spins in gravity spins different in free fall, and facets of microscopy
just aren't the same at all. We have to know where fire will go or how a crystal grows,
and the effect upon the body, well well there's so much more to know
it's good that we have orbiting a handy iss because when you ask if something's different
there the answer's always yes space experiments is our topic of the day sari what's a space
well it is any science that you do outside of the Earth's atmosphere.
Yeah, I guess.
It doesn't have to be in free fall, I suppose.
No.
Yeah.
If you like shoot something up past the atmosphere and it's like in low Earth orbit, a satellite would probably be a space experiment.
It doesn't even have to be in orbit.
Oh.
You can just get it up there.
And in free fall and in orbit mean the exact same thing, basically. Yes. Yeah. I mean, not exactly because you can be in free fall, but not in orbit. You can just get it up there. Does in free fall and in orbit mean the exact same thing, basically?
Yes. Yeah, I mean, not exactly
because you can be in free fall but not in orbit.
If you are in free fall and not in orbit,
you will run into the planet.
Or you're on a roller coaster
for a second.
I guess you don't have to run into a planet.
You will just have to be caught.
You will soon be caught by something.
Or you will run into the planet.
I didn't go in this direction, but I was wondering whether New Horizons counts as a space experiment.
Yeah.
What is New Horizons?
A probe that we send out to study other planets and things.
Yeah, sure.
I looked up the etymology of space.
The first use was maybe Paradise Lost, English poet John Milton's thing, to refer to anything beyond the Earth.
And so it's still kind of a vague word as far as is it the emptiness between planets?
Is an experiment on Mars a space experiment?
As long as it's not Earth, is everything space?
Yeah.
I would like to think that it's everything between planets. So, like, if it's a Mars rover, it's a Mars rover.
But if it's in space, it's, like, in the void.
Right. So, even if it's orbiting Mars, that's a space experiment.
Yes.
Okay.
I think so.
Or is that just a Mars experiment?
Yeah.
Or is it an Earth experiment?
Or, yeah, it feels kind of Mars-y to me.
Well, I mean, here's the difference.
When we're doing experiments on the ISS, we're doing them on space.
Yeah.
Like, we're thinking about, like, what's life like in space with, like, more electromagnetic radiation and you're, you know, you don't have gravity.
So, that's space.
Right.
Whereas if you've got a probe that's, like, circling the Earth and it's, like, taking pictures of Earth.
Yeah. But that's just a camera. That's just an Earth experiment, but a better angle.
But in space. It's an Earth experiment in space, from space.
We should have called this episode Experiments on Space, but my topic wouldn't fit anymore.
Well, yeah, I mean, we're doing experiments on space, but we're also doing experiments on things that are in space.
That's mostly what we're doing is like, what's this thing like when it's in space?
And pretty much all the ISS is doing is experiments in space.
Yeah, that's mostly what it does.
And like being like in space.
Yes.
A lot of what the ISS does is like stay up.
So just maintenance and keeping everything good, making sure there's plenty of food for the astronauts
and air and water and not
falling down. I thought you were referring
to it as a symbol of our human
economy. That too. It does also do that.
It does also put a bunch of humans
together in one place and it says, we are
not from any country, but we are
humans, which is not something we get
in many ways these days.
The area code for the phone number on the
ISS is apparently Houston, though.
So it's like a little bit American
in that respect. Yeah, yeah,
yeah. There's the thing where there's
some argument over what Catholic bishop
oversees the
moon.
Because the idea is that until
you set up a bishopric
or whatever in the new place,
the bishop from the place where the journey began is the bishop of the new land.
So basically, it's the bishop of Orlando is the bishop of the moon.
So if a Catholic person died on the moon, that too would go take care of that?
Yeah.
If you're raised on the moon
and you need
some Catholic
administration done
I think mostly
it's administrative
what the bishops do
rather than
because the local
preacher would
but I guess
you don't have one
right
so maybe you have to go
all the way up the chain
to the bishop
yep
put him in a rocket
just put a call to her
yeah
yeah I mean, doing a
confessional over
I guess there's probably a secure line you could
get on. What are we talking about?
That seems like a tangent.
That was definitely me.
How are you feeling about it?
I learned something. That was a very fun
fact. We're going to move on.
It is time for Truth or Fail.
One of our panelists has prepared three science facts for education and enjoyment.
But only one of those facts is true.
The other ones are big, fat, stinking lies.
And we have to guess which one is the true one.
And if we get it wrong, then Sam gets a Sam Buck because Sam is doing Truth or Fail.
In the grim darkness of the far future,
space is full of brands.
Space flight, advertising, publicity stunts,
an outlet wall on the moon,
it will all come to pass in the future.
But for now, a few brands have already gotten their foot in the door by funding space experiments.
Which of these are a real brand-funded experiment in space?
Number one, KFC-funded research into using chicken fat as an eco-friendly rocket fuel component.
Number two, Nike-branded shoes with sensors designed to monitor astronauts' feet while exercising to help fight bone loss.
Okay.
Or number three, a study funded by a perfume company to see if flowers smell different in space.
KFC, Kentucky Fried Chicken different in space. KFC.
Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Is it just KFC?
I think officially it's just KFC, but you can call it Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Okay, so just for clarity, for the people at home who may not be aware,
in America we have a thing called Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Other countries, too.
It's very popular in China.
Oh, never mind, then.
I just assumed by the Kentucky in it that it would be.
I think that's why they call it KFC.
People are like, I don't want to know about this.
They don't care where it's from.
So there's KFC sponsored chicken fat rocket fuel.
Rocket fuel?
Rocket fuel.
Nike sponsored shoes that have sensors in them to help protect against bone density loss.
Or a study funded by a perfume company to see if flowers will smell different in space?
What perfume company, Sam?
A perfume company.
Unspecified.
Unspecified perfume company.
Okay.
Would they smell different?
This is the thing.
Like, as my poem says, nothing is the same in space.
Everything is different.
And I think I have heard something about things smelling different in space.
I could see this being a lie, though, if it's an unnamed perfume company of just like some perfume company didn't want to see a flower smell different.
They just like sent up nice smelling things to the space station.
It's like, oh, you're stinky up there.
Here's like nice smells.
Yeah, that seems like more of a brand deal than like, I want to know what flowers smell like.
But you never know.
Maybe they just want to help science happen.
Yeah.
And I know that Nike has those things that they put in the shoes for a while.
Do you guys remember this?
They have things that they put in the shoes?
They hook up to an app or something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like go in your shoe and it will be under the sole and it would be basically like a Fitbit
but in your shoe
and I think that they
sort of got replaced
by Fitbits.
Oh.
I was going to say
it sounds better
to have the Fitbit
in the shoe.
But you're not always
wearing the shoe
whereas the Fitbit's
always on you
and it tells you
what time it is.
That seems very reasonable
to me especially
because it's like
if we could be the shoe
on the mission to Mars
that'd be pretty cool.
Oh heck.
I mean yeah
Nike's definitely
got to get that one.
You're not going to let
Under Armour be the
freaking sportswear
brand of the Mars mission.
It's got to be Nike.
Just do it.
A little swoosh
on the astronaut boot.
Swoosh on the boots.
I'm feeling perfume.
Really?
Yeah, I know.
I think it's wild
because it's,
but like, I don't know.
I'm not going to
rationalize it too much
because I don't want to
sway you to my side
and have you guys
get my points
because of my wisdom.
We didn't talk about
the chicken fat.
It didn't have to say,
it doesn't have to work necessarily.
They could just fund it
and like slap KFC
on the side of Rocket.
I think that's because
I'm hungry for lunch
and now I want fried chicken,
but I'm going to go with that one.
Oh.
Do they,
does KFC have Uber Eats?
I'm just wondering
if we should get an order
for everybody because that would sound good. By the time we finish, it'll be here. Yeah, that sounds good. You Do they does KFC have Uber Eats? I'm just wondering if we should get an order for everybody
because it'll sound good.
By the time we finish
it'll be here.
Yeah that sounds good.
We can't order KFC
in the middle of our podcast.
This is a minus one tangent.
I think this is all
this whole episode.
Who gets the minus one
tangent for the KFC?
Well
Hank for suggesting
that we should order
and then pulling out
his phone.
Just saying if it's available. I am also leaning towards the KFC one. It does sound sort of
plausible to me only because fats have a lot of calories compared to like protein and carbs.
And so I could see them processing it in some way that maybe it could be used as a fuel.
We definitely have turned fat into fuel, you know, biodiesel.
We can't get KFC, but they got Popeyes. Do you want Popeyes?
I would eat it. I'm hungry.
I'm getting some Popeyes for me and Sari. Do you want some, Sam?
I mean, if you're getting Popeyes, I'm not going to say no.
All right, we ordered Popeyes.
What's the answer?
Because it's been 100 years,
please remind me
what you all picked.
I picked KFC fat.
KFC fat.
And I picked the perfume.
The correct answer
is the perfume.
What?
So can I tell you
why I thought it was perfume
that I didn't tell everybody?
Yeah.
Because I don't think
that NASA likes it when there's too much closeness between the thing and the brand.
So if they were like actually saying like, does this perfume smell super good?
Then I'd be like, no.
But if it's like, we just want to know how people smell in space.
And then the perfume company can put out a press release that's like, we funded this scent study.
Whereas these other ones
seem too close.
Okay.
And NASA wouldn't like it.
That was my mistake.
Couldn't trick Hank.
So in 1998,
International Fragrance
and Flavors,
that's the name
of the company.
Nice.
Boring.
I like it.
Yeah, it's kind of
old-fashioned-y, huh?
Very 50s name.
That's a great
conglomerate name, yeah.
Yeah, it's a
fragrance conglomerate and they worked with NASA's Commercial of old-fashioned, huh? Very 50s name. That's a great conglomerate name, yeah. Yeah, it's a fragrance conglomerate,
and they worked with NASA's Commercial Space Product Development Program,
which is a whole wing of NASA devoted to that product development in space.
They sent a rosebud to the ISS in a plant growth chamber,
and when it bloomed, they took samples of its scent compounds,
and they reported that the smell had changed
from a very green, fresh, rosy smell to a more floral rose aroma.
Yeah, I can definitely know that.
That's very different from one another, I'm sure.
Rose was in both of them.
One was more green, though.
They both smelled like rose.
Who smelled it?
Just the astronauts? it just the astronauts
no the astronauts
collected samples
and then they brought
it back to
oh to like the
experts who smell
for a living
I think or something
like that
and then the experts
who smell for a living
were like ah
different
notes of green
they think this happens
because in the rose
the compounds
were mixing in
different ways
because it was just
in no gravity
so things were just
mixing together differently, I guess,
or sitting in one part of the flower longer than they would have
or less time than they would have.
The fragrance was deemed to be more pleasing
than the regular boring old earth rose fragrance.
And they started to mass produce.
The company started to mass produce and sell the space rose smell.
And there's at least one product that uses it
that I could find a Japanese perfume called Zin,
which is described as floral, woody, and spiritual incense.
It smells like the inside of your soul.
Yeah, and you can buy that if you want to smell like a space rose.
But they don't even advertise it as space smell?
They do not seem to, no.
Okay.
You'd think they would, but they don't.
The chicken fat thing was not funded by KFC and not a
rocket fuel, but in 2011, NASA
tested a jet fuel made of chicken
and beef fat to see if it was more
environmentally friendly than traditional fuel,
and it was by quite
a bit. They ran this jet airliner
idling, and it produced
90% less black carbon.
When they did the takeoff routine, it produced 60%
less black carbon.
That seems cool.
I couldn't find where they were getting all this chicken fat.
From around.
Maybe KFC.
Yeah, I mean, probably the place where the chickens get turned into food.
Into food, yeah, maybe.
KFC did fund some stuff in the 90s about egg development in space.
And the little box that the eggs went up in had a Colonel Sanders picture on it.
And then bone loss is not funded by any brand,
but there's a special pair of pants and shoes
that astronauts wear to determine
if they're basically getting enough exercise of their legs.
So there's different exercise machines
they can use up there to try to keep their bone density up
because it's a big thing in space
that your extremities bone density
will go down because you're not using them enough and so this one experiment was in 2002 through
2006 and it was called the foot ground reaction forces during space flight or as nasa shortens it
to foot which is not how those things work but that's what they call it and this particular one
determined that it was not even close. They were not getting
even close to the
right amount of exercise.
So then they went back
to the drawing board
and made up harder exercises
for them to do
in space.
So hard to be an astronaut.
It's one thing
to like exercise
and know you're not
really doing enough.
It's another
to have like
hundreds of people
examining how much
you're exercising
and then telling you
you're not doing enough.
Yeah.
And that your bones are now bent.
Right, soft and spongy.
I think if all I had to do was science and exercise, though.
That would be okay?
That would be okay.
I think I would exercise more if I didn't have to deal with, like, all the other things that come with living on Earth.
Right, laundry.
Cooking.
I bet they have to do laundry in space, though.
No, they, like, eject it out.
They just, like, don't wash their clothes.
They just put it into a pot and send it back down to Earth?
I think so.
Or, like, get it destroyed.
So they just incinerate it right there in space?
Not in space, but, like, in something that will get destroyed in the atmosphere.
Oh.
Instead of, like, getting it safely back.
So they just go up with, like, enough shirts and pants and stuff to last them for as long as they need?
I didn't look into this enough, but.
That's kind of what I do when I go on trips to Europe.
I just take what I need
and then buy new stuff
as it goes along.
Oh, really?
Yeah, I bring all my old underwear and I buy new, nice European underwear.
Do you leave the old underwear?
Yeah, I mean, I don't leave it for someone to find.
Yeah, I leave it in the trash.
Hank's really into geocaching with his own underwear
alright
we're gonna take a short break
and then it'll be time
for the fact off
welcome back everybody Welcome back, everybody.
Sandbuck totals.
Sarah's got nothing.
Stefan's got nothing.
I've got one, though I should have two.
No.
But I wanted Popeye's. Oh, yeah.
And Sam's got two as well.
All right.
Everything is as it should be.
Now it's time for the fact-off.
Two panelists have brought science facts
and presented the others
in an attempt to blow our minds.
And we each have a Sam Buck Tour Award to the fact that we like the most.
And to determine who's going to go first, I'm going to ask you these questions.
What year did dogs Belka and Strelka go into space with several of their rodent pals to become the first creatures born on Earth to go into orbit
and return back to Earth alive.
1953.
1953.
That's way earlier
than I would have thought.
1962.
The correct answer is 1960.
Well done, Sari.
Are they shooting things
into space in 1953?
Sputnik was 57.
It all happened in the 60s in my head, no matter when it actually happened.
A lot of it happened in the 60s.
I was a little too early.
It moved really fast from the first thing to being on the moon was 12 years.
And then we were like, let's never do that again.
We're good.
So I guess that means that, Sari, if you want to go first, you can.
Or you can make Stefan do it.
I will go first because last time I made Stefan go first, he won.
And then I won.
So you know the thing that happens when you're driving behind a semi-truck to save fuel?
It's called tailgating or drafting because the truck pushes air particles out of the way to reduce the air
resistance of your car as you're driving forward. Scientists in the 90s during a few space shuttle
missions wanted to do this experiment in space to see if they could create an ultra vacuum in low
earth orbit that's 1,000 to 10,000 times better than the best vacuum chambers on earth. So the
tool, the device they used to do this is called the Wake Shield Facility,
which is basically a four meter in diameter disc that they launched with a robotic arm. They like
let it go behind the shuttle and it would hover around 75 kilometers behind the shuttle. And I
think it just followed in the shuttle's wake. was described as a free-flying platform and i couldn't find anything to say that it had its own fuel or anything on it
so basically the shield would fly in the wake of the shuttle and then in the wake of the shield
it would push away any other like lingering particles that could be in space and the vacuum
the ultra vacuum was created behind this disc.
And it worked. And the reason for all this trouble is they wanted to test creating thin
film materials with a process called epitaxy, which is basically depositing really thin layers
of a substrate. And so I think on the back of this disc, they had a substrate that they wanted
like thin oxidized layers of crystal or something to to build up on
to research things like really really fine semiconductor layers photo cells which are
sensors that detect light that can be really thin and even research into bionic eyes because they
wanted to grow very very thin ceramic films to act as replacement retinas because silicon, which is, I don't know, they were trying it out, reacted really badly with eye tissue.
And so then ceramic was seen as more biocompatible.
And so they wanted to grow these like ultra, ultra thin films that you could only do in an ultra vacuum.
The last news that I heard about the bionic eyes,
because that was the coolest part, was in 2002.
So I don't know if anyone's still doing it or if it just like,
because the films worked, like they learned about vacuums here.
And this experiment worked two of the three times that they put it into space.
But as far as I could tell, they were just like,
seeing what could be done in an ultra vacuum.
Right. We did it.
Yeah.
We did it.
Huh. When you started that,
I was like, oh, they're going to launch two rockets
and have one follow the other so that
it uses less gas,
get a little bit better mileage.
I don't know. That seems iffy.
Yeah, no. They just
wanted to see what happens if you create an ultra vacuum.
And then deposit
crystal and stuff on a surface
very, very, very thin.
So we have talked about things that are like one micron thin.
Is a micron the smallest thing you can do?
Oh, there's smaller things.
Or is there just some things that you can only spread extremely thin
in a super vacuum like that?
I think it's like it spreads smoother in an ultra vacuum because in air there's a
bunch of other particles and even in like a good vacuum but not a great vacuum there's the chance
of something disrupting like a single layer of atoms being layered on top to form a perfect
crystalline structure and so it like just prevents contamination that there would be any other atom
just happening to float around and get
incorporated in the crystal structure.
Is that like more of a vacuum than space
space? Yeah, because there's still
some stuff in space
is to push whatever stuff
might come across the path
of this awake shield facility.
Push it out of the way to make even more of a vacuum.
Right, and it's moving too fast for stuff to rush in
there. I feel like we should say
that in
real life on Earth, when you're
driving, you shouldn't tailgate
trucks to try to get better mileage.
That's a super not safe thing to do.
Stefan knows.
No, I never tailed them that closely because I was
aware.
Yeah, that's probably a good safety metric.
I dabbled in hypermiling for a while.
It's also good to not drag yourself behind a space shuttle.
So, Stefan, can you follow that?
We'll see.
So, there's an experiment that was done by JAXA and the University of Yamanashi as a first step in figuring out how viable it is to store sperm long-term in space.
The idea is that in the future, the far
future, there will be colonies
or just long-term missions,
like multi-generation missions perhaps,
where we need some
kind of assisted reproductive
technology in space, both for
humans to maintain genetic diversity,
but also for
livestock and things.
And also they presented the idea
which I had never thought of, of just
storing genetic material off-world
in case of an emergency down here.
Like if something bad
happens.
A seed vault.
But like human seed.
On the moon or something.
But the problem is that if
cosmic radiation causes a lot of damage
to stored sperm, it could affect the future
generations that are produced with it.
So they collected sperm from 12
mice, separated them into two
sets of vials, and one was sent to the
ISS and one was kept on Earth.
They called that the ground control sperm.
And in both sets, the sperm were freeze-dried
and went through the same temperature changes
at the same times for the same durations.
And one of the things they pointed out is that
in other studies on reproduction in space,
the genetic material is not frozen,
and so it's actively metabolizing,
which means that DNA repair is happening.
And so you might not see exactly how much damage is taking place
because the cells are actively repairing themselves.
But if you're storing sperm long-term, they are going to be frozen.
And so after you thaw them out,
they have to be able to repair any accumulated damage.
And so that's kind of what they're testing here.
The freeze-drying part of this is also super weird to me
because freeze-drying sperm kills them.
But if I understood this whole thing correctly,
once you can still rehydrate them
and inject them into fresh oocytes,
and then the fresh alive cells
will repair the DNA of the sperm
and then get fertilized.
The oocytes will repair the sperm DNA?
I think that is what it is saying happens.
So they left these vials in a freezer on the ISS for nine months
and then brought them back and did a bunch of testing.
And there was no difference in the appearance of the sperm,
but the space sperm did have slightly more damage.
But when they injected all the spermies into the oocytes,
both groups...
Don't say that.
Can I continue? You can say spermies. the oocytes both groups I don't say that can I continue you can say spermies
if you say eggies
you can only say spermies
if you say eggies
otherwise it's the patriarchy
yeah
and you lose a hang
a sandbag
oh god
when they injected
all the spermies
into the little eggies
both groups
the space sperm
and the ground controlled sperm
went on to produce
little mice pups
at basically the same rate
how long were the
spermies up there?
nine months
if we're going to do
a seed vault
we need longer than that
that's why
I was saying
it's like kind of
a first step experiment
because
like
when we do artificial
insemination on earth
those things have been
in storage for like
over a decade sometimes
and so
like we need to be able to test very long-term storage bury them in the moon yeah yeah bury it
and shielded then that would be okay that was the that was kind of the thing is they were like yeah
you could we could make like an ice shield or you could stick these in a lava lava tube on the moon
or something and that would help protect it but But so far, based on these results, it seems like it is possible
to recover from whatever damage
is happening
in nine months
of being freeze-dried in space.
All right.
So, do we go with
Sari's wake shield facility
to create a super vacuum in space
or Stefan's holding on
to freeze-dried sperm for nine months
in the ISS to see if
mouse pups can happen from
space sperm. Sam,
are you ready to go? I'm ready. Three,
two, one, Sari.
Ooh. Interesting. What's the difference?
I like Sari's
because I like the idea that
space is not enough of a vacuum.
And we had to be like, let's spend a lot of money to make space extra vacuum-y.
I like Stefan's because he said spermies.
I was pretending.
All right, everybody, it's time for Ask the Science Couch.
We've got a listener question for our couch of finely honed scientific minds.
This one is from at Scared scared hippie and at clubja.
What could happen
if someone got pregnant
in space? It seems
bad. It does. It seems
like it's one of the most delicate
moments of
human life.
And as stated twice
already in this episode, everything is different in space.
Is anybody interested in actually learning more about human baby, like, embryonic development and, like, birth in space?
So, NASA is, and also a startup in the Netherlands.
So, not KFC.
I'm not excited about that.
Not KFC, not Nike.
So to follow up to Stefan's study, so they did the mouse sperm in 2017.
Is that what you said?
In 2018, apparently NASA sent a bunch of human and bull sperm to the ISS.
It's called Mission Micro 11.
They wanted to test whether if they're sent to space and back to see if the mobility of the sperm changes.
And I don't think they're actually using eggs, which makes it like ethically more sound.
But they're just seeing like, does it wiggle enough?
Right.
And in what way?
So is that the main concern?
Why there hasn't been a lot of like putting male and female mice in the same cage and seeing what happens?
Because they're just like sort of ethically concerned about the results of that.
You know, partially because it's iffy.
If we don't have a reason why we're doing this, then it seems like a lot to put a potential
baby mouse through.
And secondarily, like might just be bad PR.
Yeah, I think it's like we don't know what the radiation will do, even though that's
like an interesting question from a biological standpoint and better to experiment with mice or like a test organism.
Also, just like logistically having sex in space seems difficult.
And like, I feel like.
I don't buy this.
I feel like for animals.
An animal wouldn't even probably want to try.
Yeah.
Because they'd be in such a different, like I've read about ants and stuff in space,
and they don't even try to do anything it seems like.
Oh, man.
Yeah, I guess I could see that.
I don't know.
But my understanding of biology is basically that like if you can, then you will.
Unless maybe you're floating in the void of space.
But if there's a stressor that is big enough that makes you sort of think, that's not a thing to do.
I do not buy that no one has had sex in space.
I've got the tapes.
There's a company that doesn't want to make people have sex in space.
They want to send a pregnant woman up to space with a medical team to deliver a child they i don't know they
just like want to see what happens if a baby is born in space like at the moment of birth it
doesn't seem very useful for like a long-term study because then there's no development happening
no i hate that i've been there for a birth and you want gravity you want gravity so bad you want gravity. You want gravity so bad. You want to keep all that things going in a direction.
Yeah.
So it's like all the question of
fluids.
Gravity is not helping get the baby out.
But then also you can answer
questions like if a baby is born in space,
if your first breaths are
like oxygen in a spaceship
instead of like earth air.
I don't know how the composition is different.
Is that different?
It can be, yeah.
It usually isn't now.
We now, I think, just use the same nitrogen-oxygen mix that we use on Earth.
The big question is like how do you make it back to Earth with a baby also?
Yeah, I hate this on multiple levels.
This is a bad idea.
I don't see learning anything just from the having
other babies. It just seems like it's going to make things
harder and more dangerous.
And that's it. You don't really learn anything.
So the question is, what
would happen if you got pregnant in space,
right? So simply put, what could
happen? We don't know. Bad?
Probably more challenges
than there are on Earth in all
steps of the process.
And slightly more, like a higher probability of having a health problem.
You have to put a lot of tarps up on the International Space Station.
Yeah, I think suction tubes is definitely the thing to do.
Yeah.
Ultra vacuum.
I had that thought when I was reading about my thing because the livestock in space seems terrible.
Like you've got like chicken feathers all over the place.
Oh, yeah.
Tube them up.
Gravity is so helpful.
You never really think about how necessary it is.
Sometimes it's really annoying when you fall and you're like, ow.
But the rest of the time, gravity is great.
Yeah, it's like I'm glad my poop fell in the toilet.
If you want to ask your questions to the Science Couch,
you can follow us on Twitter at SciShowTangents where we will tweet out topics for upcoming episodes every week. if you want to ask your questions to the science couch
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this week
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final scores
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Thank you for joining us.
I've been Hank Green.
I've been Sari Riley.
I've been Stefan Chin.
And I've been Sam Schultz.
SciShow Tangents
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Thank you, and remember,
the mind is not a vessel to be filled,
but a fire to be lighted.
But one more thing. Flatworms, which are known to regenerate, got their heads and tails cut off and then sent to the ISS for five weeks.
And because they don't have an anus, I'm counting the tail as the butt.
And one of those that got sent to the space station and came back grew a head instead of a butt.
So it had two heads.
And when they cut off its two heads, it grew two more heads.
Usually,
very rare event.
But then,
because of space radiation,
this lost its butt forever.
What?
Lost its butt forever.
So sad.
What a sad tale.
That's it.
Is the Popeyes here yet?
It is.