Skip to main content

The science that the Crew Dragon astronauts are working on aboard the ISS

NASA’s Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley made history last week when they became the first astronauts to be launched from U.S. soil in nearly a decade, on the first crewed test flight of SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule. They arrived safely at the International Space Station (ISS) 19 hours later. But they aren’t resting or vacationing on the space station — they’re already being put to work on the ISS’s variety of science experiments.

One of their first jobs was to disassemble the station’s Advanced Plant Habitat, an enclosed, automated habitat used for plant bioscience research. The habitat’s environmental control system needs some maintenance work so it can continue to control factors including temperature, relative humidity, carbon dioxide level, light intensity, and spectral quality, allowing experiments on plants to run for up to 135 days.

They also worked on the Electrolytic Gas Evolution Under Microgravity experiment, which looks at how bubbles grow and form during the electrolysis of water in low-gravity environments. This has applications for the production of oxygen on the space station and other space environments like the moon and Mars, and also has applications on Earth, for developing ways to deliver medical drugs through skin patches.

NASA astronauts (from left) Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley
The International Space Station’s two newest crew members, NASA astronauts (from left) Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, are pictured having just entered the orbiting lab shortly after arriving aboard the SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft. NASA

The drug delivery project aims to make a pump which is smaller and more discrete than currently available options, by using a flexible bandage-like pump which infuses drugs directly into the skin instead of requiring an injection. This research is being done on the space station instead of on Earth because the microgravity environment makes it easier to study the precise way that fluids behave, in a field called microfluidics.

The pump design uses electrolysis, meaning the use of an electric current to induce a chemical change. And this process creates bubbles, which change the pressure within the pump to “push” drugs in a precise way. That’s why the astronauts on the ISS are looking at the formation of bubbles in microgravity.

The other astronauts aboard the ISS, NASA’s Chris Cassidy and Roscosmos’s Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner, are also busy as ever with projects including the servicing of spacesuits ahead of spacewalks planned for later this month and swapping out fuel bottles for an experiment into preventing spacecraft fires.

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
NASA astronauts will try to grow plants on the moon
An artist’s concept of an Artemis astronaut deploying an instrument on the lunar surface.

An artist’s concept of an Artemis astronaut deploying an instrument on the lunar surface. NASA

It was almost a decade ago when astronauts aboard the International Space Station sat down for a meal of historical significance as it was the first to include food -- albeit only lettuce -- grown and harvested in space.

Read more
Here’s the new science that’s launching to the ISS today
A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Dragon spacecraft lifts off from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, Nov. 9, 2023, on the company’s 29th commercial resupply services mission for the agency to the International Space Station.

Today will see the launch of not only a group of astronauts visiting the International Space Station (ISS), but also an uncrewed cargo mission sent to resupply the station. Scheduled for 4:55 p.m. ET on Thursday, March 21, a SpaceX Cargo Dragon will launch from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The cargo ship is expected to arrive at the ISS at 7:30 a.m. ET on Saturday, March 23.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Dragon spacecraft lifts off from Launch Complex 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Thursday, Nov. 9, 2023, on the company’s 29th commercial resupply services mission for the agency to the International Space Station. SpaceX

Read more
Take a high-speed ride on SpaceX’s emergency escape chute
A view from inside Crew Dragon's emergency escape chute.

SpaceX has put a Crew Dragon on Pad 40 at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida for the first time. This means that going forward, SpaceX will have two pads to choose from when sending astronauts to space.

Up to now, crews launching on SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft lift off from Pad 39A at Kennedy, but having another launch site available gives NASA and SpaceX greater flexibility when planning missions by easing pressure on teams if scheduling issues and traffic conflicts arise.

Read more