Mars exploration: Overcoming the challenges of farming in space (2024)

This story is from Inside Science.

Scientists in Norway and the Netherlands may have brought us closer to workable space farms, which experts agree are necessary if astronauts are ever going to reach the red planet.

"Astronauts stay on the International Space Station for six months and they can bring everything they need in either freeze-dried or vacuum packs, but the next goal for all space agencies is to reach Mars where travel is much longer," explained Silje Wolff, a plant physiologist at the Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in Space in Trondheim, Norway.

In the best possible conditions, it would take a spacecraft between six and nine months to reach Mars and the same to get back -- not to mention the additional months they would likely spend there.

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"It's very challenging, if not impossible, for them to take everything they would need for such a long mission," she said.

Growing plants in space is tough -- low gravity means water distribution is difficult to manage, the roots are often starved of oxygen, and stagnant air reduces evaporation and increases the leaf temperature.

But in a recent study, published in the journal Life, Wolff conducted a sequence of trial-and-error tests to perfect the process of growing lettuce, data which the researchers plan to use to grow salad in space.

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By creating highly precise and optimal growing conditions, Wolff and her colleagues hope to offset the biological stress plants experience in space. The next step is to try out the experiments on the International Space Station.

"We grew the plants and germinated them and then we transferred them to different nutrient treatments and recorded data on everything going into and coming out of the leaf," said Wolff.

The European Space Agency considers lettuce a strong candidate for space agriculture because it grows quickly, which also makes it ideal for research purposes.

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"It's not the most nutritious plant so now we're working with beans with higher protein and nutritional value," said Wolff. "We foresee a multicrop system to fulfill an astronaut's nutritional requirements."

Wolff grew the lettuce in a closed system that replaced soil with a solution containing water and nutrients. Different lettuce plants were exposed to different nutrient concentrations and different overall volumes of the water solvent as well.

Other experts agree that such a hydroponic system makes sense for space.

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"Watering plants in space is really hard because water moves differently because there's no gravity. If you get the water onto soil particles, it'll just creep over the surface," said Simon Gilroy, a botanist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who researches the effects of gravity on plant growth. He was not involved with the new study.

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But a hydroponics system in space is not without its challenges.

Hydroponic solutions in space wouldn't mix as they do on Earth, because density and weight don't separate cold and warm water in the same way. So as soon as the lettuce roots extract the oxygen from the solution in its immediate vicinity, it would become oxygen-deprived.

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"The answer would be to bubble air through it, but if you inject air into hydroponics in space it just makes a foam that never goes away," said Gilroy.

That's why Wolff and her team propose putting their plants in a centrifuge when they take their experiment to the International Space Station. This will create at least some gravity for the lettuce.

"That's the most exciting part of this study," said Howard Levine, chief scientist at NASA's International Space Station Research Office, who was not involved in the study. "This system requires some level of gravity to control where the water is, hence the centrifuge."

Gilroy agreed with Levine.

"They're kind of cheating because they're running the system almost as if it's back on Earth, so it's a pretty clever approach," he said.

But while that may work for an experiment in space, it would be tough to equip a spacecraft with a centrifuge big enough to properly feed hungry astronauts.

"They're going to use a really small centrifuge on the space station," said Gilroy. "If you want to scale it up, then you're going to have engineering problems."

Nevertheless, Levine said that Wolff's experiments in space will be highly valuable for the space farming endeavor.

"There'll be some data on partial gravity levels and plants, which is a major gap in our knowledge. It could help us to know what it might be like to grow plants on Mars or the moon."

Inside Science is an editorially-independent nonprofit print, electronic and video journalism news service owned and operated by the American Institute of Physics.

Mars exploration: Overcoming the challenges of farming in space (4)

Mars exploration: Overcoming the challenges of farming in space (2024)

FAQs

What are the problems with farming on Mars? ›

Barriers to growing food on Mars include the soil, which isn't soil at all. “People talk about the 'soil' on Mars, but there is no soil,” Bugbee said. “Regolith is the term used to refer to mineral particles that have no life and no organic matter. Mars is covered with a non-living dust.

What are some of the challenges in exploring Mars? ›

Two hazards astronauts will face during a trip to Mars—and a stay there—are DNA-breaking radiation and the effects of weightlessness and microgravity. Astronauts have been exposed to the hazards of weightlessness and radiation in space since 1968. Here Owen Garriott retrieves an experiment outside Skylab in 1973.

What challenges do you face when it comes to growing things on Mars? ›

Some conditions would make it difficult for plants to grow on Mars. For example, Mars's extreme cold temperatures make life difficult to sustain. Sunlight and heat reaching that planet is much less than what the Earth gets. This is because Mars is about 50 million miles farther away from the sun.

How would we farm on Mars? ›

Inside the NUCLEUS capsule cubes, plants are grown in vertical crop systems, the method many scientists consider to be the best option for Martian agriculture. Vertical farming is a method of growing crops without soil in a controlled environment, delivering nutrient-rich water straight to a plant's roots.

What are the problems with farming in space? ›

The movement of heat, water vapor, CO2 and O2 between plant surfaces and their environment is also affected by gravity. In microgravity, these processes may also be affected by reduced mass transport and thicker boundary layers around plant organs caused by the absence of buoyancy dependent convective transport.

Will farming on Mars be a lot harder? ›

The soil found on Earth is full of organic matter that helps plants grow, while the soil on Mars is just ground up rock. The study reaffirms that, “if you want to grow plants on Mars using soil, you're going to have to put in a lot of work to transform that material into something that plants can grow in,” Cannon says.

What are 3 challenges that humans would have to overcome to survive on Mars? ›

Aside from the necessities to sustain life, there are other challenges that people would face if they were to live on Mars. For example, the temperature gets very, very cold at night, below -100 degrees Fahrenheit. Mars also has dust storms, high levels of radiation, and less gravity than Earth.

What is the biggest challenge of colonizing Mars? ›

3. Martian environment and challenges
  • 3.1. Radiation. One of the most pressing challenges for human exploration and potential colonization of Mars is the intense radiation from galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) and solar energetic particles (SEPs) [24]. ...
  • 3.2. Dust storms. ...
  • 3.3. Temperature variations. ...
  • 3.4. Low atmospheric pressure.

What are the challenges of space exploration? ›

These include space radiation, isolation and confinement, distance from Earth, gravity (and the lack of it), and closed or hostile environments.

What problems will there be on Mars with growing plants? ›

The plants would probably be housed in a greenhouse on a Martian base, because no known forms of life can survive direct exposure to the Martian surface, with its extremely cold, thin air and sterilizing radiation. Even then, conditions in a Martian greenhouse would be beyond what ordinary plants could stand.

What are the disadvantages of exploring Mars? ›

These are as follows: (i) radiation risks, especially from solar particle events, (ii) very long 0-gravity levels during interplanetary transfers, followed by very high gravity levels at Mars arrival (up to 6 g during aerocapture and landing) with severe consequences on the human body, (iii) almost no mission abort nor ...

What are some problems in Mars? ›

Mars has a much thinner atmosphere than Earth and lacks oxygen for us to breathe. Strong winds kick up large dust storms of Mars's reddish rusty soil. We have found dry lake beds, river beds, and water ice at the planet's poles that tells us Mars probably had rivers and lakes like Earth's.

Why can't we farm on Mars? ›

As Dr. Engle reminds us, Mars is incredibly cold and lacks other essential nutrients for plants to grow like water, sunlight and oxygen.

Which crops can grow on Mars? ›

A Variety of Martian Produce

With soil aeration and moisture levels accounted for, Guinan's students found that each of the plants they tested grew moderately well. However, sweet potatoes, carrots, onions, kale, dandelions, basil, garlic, and hops were particularly robust crops under Martian conditions.

How can exploring Mars help us? ›

Mars remains our horizon goal for human exploration because it is one of the only other places we know where life may have existed in the solar system. What we learn about the Red Planet will tell us more about our Earth's past and future, and may help answer whether life exists beyond our home planet.

What are 3 issues of colonizing Mars? ›

Difficulties and hazards include radiation exposure during a trip to Mars and on its surface, toxic soil, low gravity, the isolation that accompanies Mars' distance from Earth, a lack of water, and cold temperatures.

What are the food problems on Mars? ›

On Mars specifically, the soil is dry compared to that of Earth and there are no nitrogen fixing bacteria that are necessary for plant growth, making it very hostile to crops.

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