NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Post

Picture it: Astronauts living on the Moon or Mars in homes created from fungi. This is the vision Lynn Rothschild's team has for future, more sustainable space habitats. With her new NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts award, she will continue her work on using fungi to grow structures off-planet. https://lnkd.in/eNphwZJU

  • A pile of bricks produced using mycelium, yard waste and wood chips. The bricks resemble traditional white bricks in shape and size, but have an inlaid squiggly pattern. Six bricks in all are visible, haphazardly stacked atop one another. Credit: NASA

Why did the mushroom walk onto the moon? Because it wanted to be a fun-guy in a new space! 🌕🍄

Mike Sisco

Full-Time Army Reserve | Transitioning Senior Enlisted Advisor | Secret Clearance | Background in Security, Investigations, Safety and People | Aspiring Kindle Author

1mo

We'll need to work better on teaching our children Math Literacy if we want to sustain our plans to visit other worlds.

Unless mushrooms have hidden properties to block radiation I think we are being feed mushroom fertilizers.

Troy LeGeaux

CAD Designer/Architectural consultant/Document management

1mo

Yes, what a wonderful idea, let's introduce more earth organisms to the moon that aren't native to it than we already have. We left a ton of equipment and trash there already, right. Also, as previously mentioned, where is the radiation protection? The best plan is to bring your RV (pre assembled living module) with you to the moon, or build with existing materials already on the moon. It may make more sense to have machinery that can manufacture multiple building components on or near the moon as your very expensive payload on your rocket rather than make many expensive trips or have to settle for transporting a very small living modules.

CEM OMA

PHILIPS Country Service Manager

3w

If we could heat Mars, everything would be solved. Using space mirrors to melt the polar ice caps is possible but not very godlike. Instead, we could create humanity's "Big Bang" on Mars by conducting intense thermonuclear bombardment w/ huge rockets. This would expose CO₂ to ionizing radiation, producing active oxygen atoms and carbon monoxide. The free oxygen atoms would then combine to form oxygen molecules, and subsequently, even ozone. As oxygen molecules form, they release heat. Using humanity's most powerful weapons to produce oxygen and initiate life on Mars could be revolutionary.

Adrià Cammerer-Llodrà

Mechatronics student at the Technische Hochschule Würzburg-Schweinfurt (THWS)

1mo

It's fascinating to imagine that the houses of future civilizations could grow on their own🍄.

Ran B.

Creator/Producer/provocateur The best Prog-Rock music you’ve never heard. check it out Start.Rocks On Spotify Apple Music YouTube Music Film/TV/Music credits .ranballard.com START the band start.rocks

1mo

We screwed up our own planet and we think moving to mars is the answer? You guys are the scientific genius’ you know that mars is not habitable, right. Stop wasting time and money and fix this planet

Radiation can impact the decay rate of biomass in space. High levels of radiation can damage the biomass and accelerate its decay. Curious about the long-term viability compared to regolith. Regolith is a natural shield that can be used to reduce the amount of radiation that penetrates to the surface, making it a vital asset for long-term human presence on the Moon. The density is around 1.6-2.7 g/cm³.

Christopher Austin

Graduate Teaching Assistant at Univeristy of Texas Rio Grande Valley

1mo

The fungus is among us 👨🚀

Mushroom stations are the strangest man-made structures In this method, scientists use fungal mycelium, recycled materials in nature and wood chips to prepare a special type of raw material for the production of space bases. Bricks produced using fungal mycelium, recycled waste in nature and wood chips are adapted to different climates in the planets of the solar system.

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