<
From version < 9.1 >
edited by David Gschliesser
on 2021/08/26 12:45
To version < 8.1 >
edited by David Gschliesser
on 2021/08/26 12:45
>
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27 27  === Summary ===
28 28  
29 29  
30 -[[image:1629026551584-324.png||alt="MICRO-POTENTIAL_manifest.png" height="369" style="float:right" width="561"]]
30 +[[image:1629026551584-324.png||alt="MICRO-POTENTIAL_manifest.png" style="float:right"]]
31 31  
32 32  For missions to Mars, especially crewed ones, which aim to investigate biomarkers must be aware of contamination issues and how they might interfere with the investigation. It is impossible to remove live organisms and organic material completely from an Earth based spacecraft prior to launch. Some bacteria, in spore formation, have been shown to survive under thin layer of Martian soil after spacecraft sterilization techniques. Analog missions are relevant to test forward and backward contamination issues. Especially long-term analog missions, with several crew members provide a reliable, sustainable source of information for bacterial contamination analysis. By using advanced sequencing techniques, the MICRO-POTENTIAL experiment aims to study the effect of human missions on bacterial and eukaryotic dispersion in the vicinity of the habitat.
33 33  
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38 38  1. ** **Few species (<10) will be present in all samples regardless of distance.
39 39  1. At a given geographical location, microbial population composition will vary with time
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44 -(% class="wikigeneratedid" %)
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50 50  === Experiment Data ===
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52 52  |=(% style="width: 127px;" %)Date|=(% style="width: 1510px;" %)Files
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