A blog to document our Cubes in Space science experiment, in which we hope to prove that Texas Prickly Pear Cactus can survive space travel.
Thursday, September 29, 2016
Launch! 2.0
Ladies and gentlemen, the research balloon has launched! Unfortunately, Julius and I were in class while it was launching, so we could not watch it live, but Cubes in Space has some awesome pictures of the launch that I want to share with y'all.
Friday, September 9, 2016
It Will Lauch Eventually!
Yet again, the launch of the research balloon has been delayed due to weather! :-(
Julius and I will keep y'all updated, and hopefully NASA will be able to launch it next week.
Julius and I will keep y'all updated, and hopefully NASA will be able to launch it next week.
Thank you for reading!
-Edith
Tuesday, September 6, 2016
Science Will Prevail!
The research balloon carrying our experiment should launch on Friday at 8:30 a.m. Central time!
You can watch it with us live HERE!
Wish us luck, and keep your fingers crossed for no more rain!
Thank you for reading!
-Edith
Research Balloons are Awsome! (and cacti are cool too)
This week was full of rescuing the cacti from sudden downpours, constantly checking the weather in New Mexico, and being amazed at the sheer amount of helium that will be going into the research balloon.
Weekly Update #4
What a week! One minute the sun is shining, the next it is raining cats and dogs! Julius and I were stumped as to whether we should put the samples out in the sun, or hide them from the rain. In the end, we did a bit of both, and we may-or-may-not have run out into a downpour yelling "Save the cactus!".
The first sample seems to be doing the best,
as it is getting steadily greener.
|
The second sample is still trying to recover from rot. |
And the Control cactus is somewhere in-between the two. |
Also, Julius and I have been waiting for the research balloon to launch, but so far we have not had any luck. (Annoying rain!) In the meantime, Cubes in Space has been posting some awesome photos of NASA's preparations for launch.
Look at the size of those Helium tanks! We can hardly wait to see the balloon launch, and then see how our experiment survived space travel!
Thank you for reading!
-Edith
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