Lunar Greenhouse Could Grow Food For Future Moon Colonies

Lunar Greenhouse Could Grow Food For Future Moon Colonies
Gene Giacomelli at the Lunar Greenhouse in the University of Arizona's Controlled Environment Agriculture Center. (Image credit: Norma Jean Gargasz/UANews)

A newcollapsible "greenhouse" could be the key to growing fresh andhealthy food to sustain future lunar or Martian colonies, a recent projectfound.

Scientistsat the University of Arizona's Controlled Environment Agriculture Center (CEAC)are experimenting with growing plants without the use of soil. Instead, theyare trying to demonstrate that potatoes, peanuts, tomatoes, peppers and othervegetables can be grown in only water?a process known as hydroponic growth.

The tubeswould be buried beneath the moon's surface to protect the plants and astronautsfrom deadly solar flares, micrometeorites and cosmic rays. As such, the buriedgreenhouse would differ from conventional greenhouses that let in and capturesunlight as heat. Instead, these underground lunar greenhouses would shield theplants from harmful radiation.

"We candeploy the module and have the water flowing to the lamps in just tenminutes," Phil Sadler, president of Sadler Machine Co., which designed andbuilt the lunar greenhouse, said in a statement. "About 30 days later, youhave vegetables."

"Wewant the system to operate itself," said Murat Kacira, an associateprofessor of agricultural and biosystems engineering at the University ofArizona. "However, we're also trying to devise a remote decision-supportsystem that would allow an operator on Earth to intervene. The system can buildits own analysis and predictions, but we want to have access to the data andthe control system."

"Onanother planet, you need to minimize your labor, recycle all you can andoperate as efficiently as possible," said principal investigator and CEAC directorGene Giacomelli.

Indeveloping such a system, there will likely be applications for our planet aswell, he said. "All that we learn from the life support system in theprototype lunar greenhouse can be applied right here on Earth."

"There'sgreat interest in providing locally grown, fresh food in cities, for growingfood right where masses of people are living," Giacomelli said. "It'sthe idea of growing high-quality fresh food that only has to be transportedvery short distances. There also would be a sense of agriculture returning tothe everyday lives of urban dwellers. I think that idea is as exciting asestablishing plant colonies on the moon."

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