On-Orbit and Ground Performance of the PGBA Plant Growth Facility 972366
PGBA, a plant growth facility developed for commercial space biotechnology research, successfully grew a total of 50 plants (6 species) during 10 days aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavor (STS-77), and has reflown aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia (STS-83 for 4 days and STS-94 for 16 days) with 55 plants and 10 species. The PGBA life support system provides atmospheric, thermal, and humidity control as well as lighting and nutrient supply in a 33 liter microgravity plant growth chamber. The atmosphere treatment system removes ethylene and other hydrocarbons, actively controls CO2 replenishment, and provides passive O2 control. Temperature and humidity are actively controlled.
Citation: Hoehn, A., Chamberlain, D., Clawson, J., Forsyth, S. et al., "On-Orbit and Ground Performance of the PGBA Plant Growth Facility," SAE Technical Paper 972366, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/972366. Download Citation
Author(s):
A. Hoehn, D. J. Chamberlain, J. M. Clawson, S. W. Forsyth, D. S. Hanna, M. B. Horner, P. Scovazzo, K. S. Sterrett, L. S. Stodieck, P. W. Todd, A. G. Heyenga, M. H. Kliss
Affiliated:
University of Colorado, NASA Ames Research Center
Pages: 10
Event:
International Conference On Environmental Systems
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
SAE 1997 Transactions - Journal of Aerospace-V106-1
Related Topics:
Life support systems
Spacecraft
Hydrocarbons
Humidity
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