Building the First Lunar Greenhouse
When you are building the first ever lunar greenhouse, you have to make sure it is small, lightweight, strong and super space-age looking. Paragon has nailed all four.
Today we are unveiling a prototype design for a lunar greenhouse that can fly to the moon on our Google Lunar X PRIZE lander and grow a flower. In this case, an Arabidopsis flower. Arabidopsis is in the mustard family and is the lab standard for all plant geneticists. As such it is very well characterized and is an excellent choice to send to the moon to study how a plant responds to that unique environment. Although government space programs have grow plants in microgravity (orbiting around the Earth). No one has ever grown a plant in partial gravity- as you would find on the surface of the moon.
Lunar gravity is 1/6 Earth gravity. That means a person who weighs 180 lbs on Earth would only weigh 30 lbs on the moon. No one knows if the plants will grow taller, devote less resources to structurally reinforcing their stems, or change nothing at all. Being a biologist, especially one with a keen interest in bioregenerative life support systems, growing a plant on the Moon is a very exciting step. The first greenhouse on the surface of another world. Godspeed little plant!
We hope there are many more to follow you.
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