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    Home » Sections » Science » World’s first wooden satellite heads to space

    World’s first wooden satellite heads to space

    The world's first wooden satellite, built by Japanese researchers, was launched into space on Tuesday.
    By Agency Staff5 November 2024
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    World's first wooden satellite heads to space - Takao Doi
    Takao Doi, a former Japanese astronaut and professor at Kyoto University, holds an engineering model of LignoSat. Irene Wang/Reuters

    The world’s first wooden satellite, built by Japanese researchers, was launched into space on Tuesday, in an early test of using timber in lunar and Mars exploration.

    LignoSat, developed by Kyoto University and homebuilder Sumitomo Forestry, will be flown to the International Space Station on a SpaceX mission, and later released into orbit about 400km above Earth.

    Named after the Latin word for “wood”, the palm-sized LignoSat is tasked to demonstrate the cosmic potential of the renewable material as humans explore living in space.

    With timber, a material we can produce by ourselves, we will be able to build houses, live and work in space forever

    “With timber, a material we can produce by ourselves, we will be able to build houses, live and work in space forever,” said Takao Doi, an astronaut who has flown on the Space Shuttle and studies human space activities at Kyoto University.

    With a 50-year plan of planting trees and building timber houses on the moon and Mars, Doi’s team decided to develop a Nasa-certified wooden satellite to prove wood is a space-grade material.

    “Early 1900s airplanes were made of wood,” said Kyoto University forest science professor Koji Murata. “A wooden satellite should be feasible, too.”

    Wood is more durable in space than on Earth because there’s no water or oxygen that would rot or inflame it, Murata added. A wooden satellite also minimises the environmental impact at the end of its life, the researchers say.

    Pitch to Musk

    Decommissioned satellites must re-enter the atmosphere to avoid becoming space debris. Conventional metal satellites create aluminium oxide particles during re-entry, but wooden ones would just burn up with less pollution, Doi said.

    “Metal satellites might be banned in the future,” Doi said. “If we can prove our first wooden satellite works, we want to pitch it to Elon Musk’s SpaceX.”

    Read: A new generation of telescopes could transform our knowledge of the universe

    The researchers found that honoki, a kind of magnolia tree native in Japan and traditionally used for sword sheaths, is most suited for spacecraft, after a 10-month experiment aboard the International Space Station. LignoSat is made of honoki, using a traditional Japanese crafts technique without screws or glue.

    Once deployed, LignoSat will stay in the orbit for six months, with the electronic components onboard measuring how wood endures the extreme environment of space, where temperatures fluctuate from -100ºC to 100ºC every 45 minutes as it orbits from darkness to sunlight.

    Irene Wang/Reuters

    LignoSat will also gauge wood’s ability to reduce the impact of space radiation on semiconductors, making it useful for applications such as data centre construction, said Kenji Kariya, a manager at Sumitomo Forestry Tsukuba Research Institute.

    “It may seem outdated, but wood is actually cutting-edge technology as civilisation heads to the moon and Mars,” he said. “Expansion to space could invigorate the timber industry.”  — Kantaro Komiya and Irene Wang, (c) 2024 Reuters

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    Hidden South African observatory quietly shapes our view of space



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