Right: Launch of our apparatus
(MaRVIn-TABOOS) on Northrop Grumman's 19th Cargo Mission.
Below: Launch and docking of
SpaceX-31 carrying our TABOOS samples to study thermophoresis.
Samples making it to space intact!
MaRVin with our samples loaded
What it looks like now...250 miles in orbit!
First "screenshot of a screenshot" shows particles in channels (they didn't leak!).👍
Great day of science after getting things set over the last couple of days. Nothing works perfectly in space, but we were pretty happy with the results!
Getting our samples mixed by an astronaut!
Science happening!
Timelapse of our work for a day.
Our experiments were in the clip used on the
Today Show (NBC)
(see our apparatus featured at 1:51 and 2:32)
Today went great! The second set of samples were loaded first thing in the morning and got a lot done today! Updates to follow...(had to teach remotely tonight!)
We hoped to do at least 1 temperature sweep each day - today we did 3 even with limited signal and having to fly home tonight.
Each day presents new challenges and gets more exciting!
Graduate student Nazrin Hasanova at the helm collecting data.
Example data (images have been manipulated to greyscale and enhanced contrast).
Left - Brownian motion.
Right - thermophoresis and Brownian motion.
Working remote - Lehigh's "Mission Control" is running from Professor Gilchrist's office in HST where Nazrin has been at the helm working with Jim McClellan all day taking a record amount of data!
When you are running experiments in space, you invite your astronaut colleague to share stories of his adventures. Terry Hart was on the Space Shuttle back in 1984. Thanks Terry for stopping by!
His Bio:
https://engineering.lehigh.edu/faculty/terry-j-hart
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Hart
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/sts-41c/
Our first appointment on Monday morning was with an astronaut to swap out our samples for the 3rd set. We projected our meeting and his work on the big screen in HST - lots of fun seeing folks confused as they watched him work 250 miles in orbit - live!
We wrapped up our experiments with few other posts since some of our discoveries may end up in a future patent. Wait and see where the data analysis takes us!
We are back running experiments on the International Space Station. More posts to come soon.
NASA description of our project - https://www.nasa.gov/mission/station/research-explorer/investigation/#id=8855
From left to right: Nazrin Hasanova, Jim McClellan, Mala Thompson, Scott Gilley, and James Gilchrist
Dr. Maria Chiara Roffin and Nazrin Hasanova working on sample fabrication and microscope testing at the HST Building on Lehigh's campus.