Medicine & TechnologyExplore how space research unveils cancer cell behavior in microgravity, offering insights and innovations for cancer treatment on Earth.
Research reveals space headaches as a significant challenge for astronauts, particularly those without prior headache issues, impacting their experiences on the ISS. Read the article to learn more.
Astronomers and healthcare experts consider the potential of microgravity in providing the ideal environment for drug manufacturing. Read the article to learn more.
After nearly eight months in orbit, Varda Space Industries' W-1 capsule returned to Earth in Utah carrying space-grown antiviral drugs. Read the article to learn more details.
While frying may seem easy, there are actually complex chemistry and physics principles that take place behind the activity. Now, the European Space Agency has been exploring how it may be possible to fry in microgravity conditions. Read to learn more.
Almost 3,000 microgravity research has been conducted on the International Space Station (ISS) since it opened over 20 years ago and now Expedition 68 crew greets the New Year with more experiments. Read the article to learn more details about them.
The changes found in the brains of first-time astronauts show that the body adjusts while they are in a microgravity environment in space. Read on to know the details.
Understanding how fire behaves in microgravity is important for the safety of future astronauts and for learning how to control it on Earth. Read on to learn what fire experiments were conducted in the past five years on the ISS.
University of Liverpool scientists have sent samples of human muscle cells to the International Space Station in hopes of better understanding age-related loss of muscle and strength for astronauts and the elderly population.
A brainless slime mold named Blob will be sent to the International Space Station (ISS) as part of the investigation of how microgravity will affect life. It will be carried into space aboard an uncrewed spaceship alongside other science experiments.
One of the main challenges of space travel has been food storage. While mankind has been sending people to space as early as 1961, there has never been any refrigerator to keep food cold and fresh during long missions.