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Sea-Monkeys
in Space
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When
a former Upper St. Clair student learned that NASA would
evaluate student experiments for an upcoming shuttle trip,
she quickly contacted her former biology teacher, Pat Palazzolo.
Pat had been a finalist in the 1985 Teacher in Space competition
for the Challenger mission that sadly ended in disaster,
and she was still very interested in space studies.
She and her Fort Couch Middle School students brainstormed
about what living thing could be loaded on the shuttle in
the summer and wait for the launch in the fall. One student
suddenly thought of his Sea-Monkeys Live Eggs packet!
Under NASA's tight schedule and strict guidelines, Pat and
her 23 seventh graders put together an acceptable proposal
to test for differences in Sea-Monkeys sent to space from
those remaining on earth. With some help from a few Upper
St. Clair High School honors biology students, they planned
ways to test several variables and calculate the data. |
Many
last-minute phone calls and overnight delivery packages
later, everything was finally set to go -- well, notwithstanding
a postponement due to a hurricane! Nine lucky students were
able to attend the launch on October 29, 1998, when the
Sea-Monkeys went into orbit with John Glenn! The space-travelling
eggs withstood many dramatic environmental changes and physical
forces including weightlessness, exposure to radiation,
3 G's of gravitational force during reentry, and temperature
fluctuations equal to many trips between an oven and freezer!
To date, the Sea-Monkey eggs that hatched eight weeks after
their return have shown no significant differences from
their earthbound counterparts! After nine days in space
and about 3.6 million miles of travel, the conclusion is:
Sea-Monkeys have "the right stuff." |
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