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Astronauts eat first radishes grown in space as 2020 ends

By Paul Brinkmann
Astronaut Kate Rubins harvests radishes Wednesday aboard the International Space Station. Photo courtesy of NASA
1 of 3 | Astronaut Kate Rubins harvests radishes Wednesday aboard the International Space Station. Photo courtesy of NASA

ORLANDO, Fla., Jan. 1 (UPI) -- Astronauts aboard the International Space Station celebrated the New Year in part by eating radishes, the first vegetables grown in space besides leafy greens.

The space radishes were grown from seeds over the past 27 days in the microgravity of orbit as part of NASA's program to develop space agriculture.

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The astronauts appreciated having fresh produce on the orbiting space laboratory, where fresh produce delivery is very limited, Karl Hasenstein, lead researcher for the radish growing project, said Friday.

Astronaut Kate Rubins "commented that the radishes were just as tasty as what she'd grown in her garden," said Hasenstein, who is a professor of biology at the University of Louisiana.

Rubins harvested the radishes Thursday, clipping off their leaves first to preserve some for scientific study after they return to Earth.

Rubins and astronaut Mike Hopkins "stated that eating something fresh was a most enjoyable experience," Hasenstein said.

He said astronauts also harvested similar radishes in late November, but NASA prevented astronauts from eating them as the agency evaluated possible contamination that could occur with the small orbiting farm operation.

"The radishes grown on the space station are cleaner than anything you'd buy at the store," Hasenstein said.

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The space station has the largest crew in years living and performing scientific experiments on board -- four U.S. astronauts, two Russian cosmonauts and a Japanese astronaut.

The five astronauts in orbit posted a short video on Twitter on Wednesday wishing those on Earth a happy new year. It showed Rubins lofting a blowup Earth ball into the air as the crew counted down.

"We hope this inspires you to celebrate in your own way. Three, two, one!" Rubins said.

It was only a coincidence that the New Year's celebration coincided with the first consumption of radishes grown on board, said Dave Reed, director of Florida operations for Techshot, the Indiana-based company that makes the growing chamber for the vegetable.

"The radishes looked great. We harvested 19, and nine were offered to the crew to eat," Reed said. "The other 10 radishes were frozen for return to Earth and for post-flight analysis."

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The radishes are grown in a bed of small clay balls, which retain moisture, and fertilizer, with artificial light. The growing chamber, or Advanced Plant Habitat, is a container about 20 inches in height, width and depth, Reed said. It's part of NASA's Plant Habitat-02 experiment.

What crops NASA will tackle for space farming next depends on how the radish evaluation turns out, Hasenstein said.

"We hope to get some of the frozen radishes back in March and compare them to radishes grown on Earth under the exact same conditions," he said.

20 years aboard the International Space Station

The International Space Station is photographed by Expedition 56 crew members from a Soyuz spacecraft after undocking on October 4, 2018. NASA astronauts Andrew Feustel and Ricky Arnold and Roscosmos cosmonaut Oleg Artemyev executed a fly-around of the orbiting laboratory to take pictures of the space station before returning home after spending 197 days in space. Photo courtesy of NASA/Roscosmos

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