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The germ: Salmonella, best known as a culprit of food poisoning. The trip: Space Shuttle STS-115, September 2006. The reason: Scientists wanted to see how space travel affects germs, so they took some along — carefully wrapped — for the ride. The result: Mice fed the space germs were three times more likely to get sick and died quicker than others fed identical germs that had remained behind on Earth.
"Wherever humans go, microbes go, you can't sterilize humans. Wherever we go, under the oceans or orbiting the earth, the microbes go with us, and it's important that we understand ... how they're going to change," explained Cheryl Nickerson, an associate professor at the Center for Infectious Diseases and Vaccinology at Arizona State University.
Ray
New York, New York, United States
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at 12:10 on September 25th, 2007
There have been many documentaries on NASA and the work they do to make sure they don't send any germs into space, as well as trying to protect us when objects come back from space. There are very fine tolerances involved because of the difficulty in getting rid of all germs -but the thought that there could be some new germ from space is very scary.
Good stuff.