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Researchers Launch a Wooden Satellite

The satellite will orbit Earth for a total of six months.

Takao Doi stands in a laboratory holding a small, cube-shaped satellite.

© Irene Wang/Reuters

In this October 25, 2024, photo, former astronaut Takao Doi holds a model of the wooden LignoSat satellite.

Could we one day plant trees and build wooden houses on the Moon and Mars? Scientists hope a wooden satellite called LignoSat will help them answer this question. 

Built by Japanese researchers, LignoSat was launched into space in November 2024 and entered orbit around Earth in December. The tiny satellite is scheduled to remain in orbit for a total of six months. 

LignoSat was designed to help scientists find out if wood can stand up to the harsh environment in space. (Most satellites are made of metal.) As it orbits Earth, the satellite will go from darkness to sunlight every 45 minutes and experience temperatures ranging from -148 degrees Fahrenheit (-100 degrees Celsius) to 212 degrees Fahrenheit (100 degrees Celsius). 

Scientists think wood might hold up well in space. On Earth, water and oxygen cause wood to rot over time. There’s no water or oxygen in space.

If wood does prove to be a strong space material, scientists hope to be able to use more of it. Wood will come in handy when scientists build settlements on the Moon and Mars. In both of these worlds, it may be possible to construct wood buildings and even plant trees!

Wood is also better for the environment than metal because it’s easier to get rid of when it’s no longer useful. When old metal satellites fall to Earth, they produce particles that can harm the atmosphere. LignoSat’s wooden frame will burn up and produce less pollution.

“With [wood], a material we can produce by ourselves [in space], we will be able to build houses, live and work in space forever,” astronaut Takao Doi told Reuters. Doi, an aerospace engineer (someone who designs materials for use in space), helped design LignoSat.

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Fun Fact!

It may seem hard to imagine trees growing anywhere other than on Earth. But in 2022, NASA scientists announced that they had grown plants in soil taken from the Moon!

Several test tubes are filled with soil and one of them holds a green plant.

© Tyler Jones, UF/IFAS

This little green plant grew in lunar soil.

The Space Junk Problem

Earth surrounded by many white dots.

© Johnson Space Center/NASA Orbital Debris Program Office

This computer-generated image shows objects that are in Earth’s orbit. About 95 percent of the objects are space junk.

Humans have done amazing things in space. We’ve gone to the Moon, sent spacecraft to distant planets, and used giant space telescopes to observe objects millions of miles away. We’ve also launched thousands of satellites into orbit. Without satellites, we wouldn’t have GPS or the ability to closely track storms and other weather systems. 

But all that space activity comes at a cost. We’ve left lots of our equipment in space, where it becomes what scientists call “space junk.” Experts say there are more than 30,000 pieces of large space junk and millions of pieces of small space junk floating around in space. We’ve also left a lot of junk on the Moon.   

Scientists are working on technology that can help clean up some of that junk. For future space missions, they hope to use more sustainable materials—like wood.

Beyond Earth

A rover is on the surface of Mars and its tracks are visible all around it.

© NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

NASA’s Perseverance rover has been on Mars since 2021. The rover used its robotic arm to take this selfie in 2023.

When did people begin to explore space, and where are we going next? You can learn more about the past and future of space exploration at Britannica!

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Word of the Day

debris

Part of speech:

noun

Definition:

: things that are lying where they fell or that have been left somewhere because they are not wanted

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