Reuters
 
 
"Made in space" coming soon to a product near you


   
 
By _Chris  Wickham_ 
(http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=chris.wickham&;)  
Fri May 4, 2012 
BERLIN (Reuters) - The European Space  Agency is hatching plans for a 
branding campaign aimed at making people more  aware of the benefits of 
spending 
their hard-earned taxes on the International  Space Station (ISS).
   
The list of products and technologies that have their roots in space 
research  is long, from memory foam to the in-ear thermometer, but in a world 
struggling  to pay the bill from the financial crisis the billions of dollars 
spent on space  exploration are increasingly hard to justify. 
The branding plan is an indication that space scientists are concerned 
about  cuts to space agency budgets, and worried that their contribution to 
economic  growth is not fully recognized. 
"It frustrates people because we know we have a valuable asset,"  
International Space Station Director at NASA Mark Uhran told Reuters at a  
conference 
in Berlin of scientists from the 14 nations backing the  project. 
The European Space Agency estimates the bill for the space station will 
come  to about 100 billion euros ($131.53 billion), including running costs for 
the  next 10 years. The European share of 8 billion euros, it says, equates 
to 1 euro  a day from every European, or less than the price of a cup of 
coffee. 
"If we stop investing we will harm our economies," said Julie Robinson, ISS 
 Programme Scientist at NASA. Robinson points out that the construction of 
the  station was only fully completed last year but since then there has 
been a surge  in the amount of scientific work being done on board. 
Research on the space station cuts across disciplines, from biotechnology 
to  materials science, all in a series of laboratories stuffed with 
equipment, now  covering an area equivalent to a football field and orbiting 
the 
earth at more  than 17,000 miles an hour. 
It is run by the United States, by far the dominant player, Russia, Canada, 
 Japan and 10 of the 17 European Space Agency nations Belgium, Denmark, 
_France_ (http://www.reuters.com/places/france) , Germany, Italy, the  
Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland. 
What it offers science is a stable environment in microgravity, essentially 
 weightlessness, that can only be replicated in short bursts on earth 
through the  parabolic flight of aircraft used for spaceflight training and  
research.
 
COLD HARD CASH 
Research in microgravity has led to advances in metallurgy, particularly 
the  production of metallic foams - blocks of metal that contain bubbles - 
that are  strong, light and provide a cushioning effect on impact. Foams are 
unstable, and  therefore harder to study in gravity, said Professor John 
Banhart from the  Technical University of Berlin. The car industry is excited 
and 
lightweight  crane lifting arms are already using the technology. 
Turbine blades made from an alloy called titanium aluminide could lead to a 
 50 percent reduction in the weight of a typical jet engine, which would 
reduce  fuel consumption and emissions from air travel. This was another 
spin-off from  research in weightless conditions. 
"Without the research on the ISS this type of turbine blade would never 
have  been made," said Jean-Jacques Dordain, Director General of the European 
Space  Station. 
Station-linked research into "cold plasma", a version of the ionized gas 
that  exists at thousands of degrees and is used to sterilize surgical tools, 
has  found it can kill bacteria in a form closer to room temperature, and 
therefore  not harmful to human tissue. Germany's Max Plank Institute for 
Extraterrestrial  Physics is a leader in the field.
 
Such a breakthrough could become vital to medical science in the struggle 
to  fight superbugs that are increasingly resistant to antibiotics. 
"We may be looking at a total game change on how we control bacteria," 
NASA's  Uhran said. 
The behavior of bubbles in microgravity has also caught the attention of  
Nestle, the world's biggest packaged food company. Nestle research scientist  
Cecile Gehin-Delval told the conference that the Swiss group is carrying 
out  expensive research on the station to enhance the taste and shelf life of 
a range  of its products from chocolate mousse to coffee. 
WINNING HEARTS AND MINDS 
There are huge challenges in building more public support for space 
research  and convincing politicians and industry that the benefits are worth 
the  
expense. 
Uhran notes that the timescale of a typical research project is three to 
five  years, which doesn't easily mesh with corporate priorities like reaching 
sales  or profit targets for the next quarter, or even the next year.
 
But scientists are adamant that the economic dividend is  unquestionable. 
"One of the issues is that people don't really understand the process by  
which knowledge is turned into the things around us," Mike Cruise, a British  
scientist from the University of Birmingham who also works for the European 
 Space Agency, told Reuters. 
Cruise cites satellite navigation, digital cameras and even the tiny laser  
that runs a humble DVD player as innovations with roots in space  research. 
"If we are going to get the most out of the space station, we need to move  
concepts into action as quickly as possible," he said, adding that it can 
take  decades to go from idea to market. 
Cruise said it was impossible to predict how long some ideas could lie  
dormant and that although governments had a duty to balance their budgets every 
 year, more research inevitably resulted in a greater number of advanced  
products. 
It's a hard argument to sell to a _finance_ 
(http://www.reuters.com/finance)  minister or a chief executive,  but Cruise 
says the alternative would be 
much more alarming. 
"If you think knowledge is expensive, just try ignorance for a while." ($1 
=  0.7603 euros) 
(Edited by Paul Casciato)

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