Researcher Dhruv Sareen sent some of his own stem cells into space to attempt to create huge amounts of a special kind of stem cell. These stem cells can generate almost every other kind of cell and can be used as a cure to many diseases. Exploration like the kind Sareen is doing in space can be vital to humans and save lives. That said, this study, and many other studies, such as the 2009 Kepler Mission (First space telescope designated to search for Earth-like exoplanets) have secondary purpose. They are done to find a second planet for humans to live. I don’t support moving entirely to a different world and trash the earth.
Humans have almost completely trashed the Earth. Although moving to another planet can temporarily solve that problem, humans are still going to do the same thing to that planet. Besides, if you spend all that time and effort trying to move to another planet, why not make your own Earth a better place? Earth itself isn’t trying to swallow humans up or kick us out. We are the ones doing all the damage.
NASA has been trying to find out if life exists on any other planets to see if people could live there for many years. NASA has launched many missions, such as the Saturn rockets, Viking missions 1 and 2, and many more for that purpose.
Humans are destroying the Earth by mass. We are polluting, burning fossil fuels, and deforesting way too much. There is also plenty of evidence that say humans are causing climate change. Research says 15.3 billion trees are chopped down every year. That’s one football field of forest lost in a single second. Other damaging effects are soil erosion, poor air quality, and undrinkable water.
Moving and doing the same thing to another planet just won’t do the job. Humans will have to change their acts.
We are not hopeless with Earth just yet. Scientists are finding greener fuels to replace the fossil fuels. You can even help out at home! Reduce, reuse, and recycle. Cut down on what you throw away. Also, try to conserve fresh water. We can still save the planet!!!
Links:
https:/ /s3.amazonaws.com/appforest_uf/f1658689079038x413436966542486850/Do stem cells grow better in space_ _ KidsNews.pdf
https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/discovery/missions/ – first-planetary-disk-observed
https://www.tutorialspoint.com/fundamentals_of_science_and_technology/space_exploration_timeline.htm
https://mars.nasa.gov/mars-exploration/missions/viking-1-2/
Humans have almost completely trashed the Earth. Although moving to another planet can temporarily solve that problem, humans are still going to do the same thing to that planet. Besides, if you spend all that time and effort trying to move to another planet, why not make your own Earth a better place? Earth itself isn’t trying to swallow humans up or kick us out. We are the ones doing all the damage.
NASA has been trying to find out if life exists on any other planets to see if people could live there for many years. NASA has launched many missions, such as the Saturn rockets, Viking missions 1 and 2, and many more for that purpose.
Humans are destroying the Earth by mass. We are polluting, burning fossil fuels, and deforesting way too much. There is also plenty of evidence that say humans are causing climate change. Research says 15.3 billion trees are chopped down every year. That’s one football field of forest lost in a single second. Other damaging effects are soil erosion, poor air quality, and undrinkable water.
Moving and doing the same thing to another planet just won’t do the job. Humans will have to change their acts.
We are not hopeless with Earth just yet. Scientists are finding greener fuels to replace the fossil fuels. You can even help out at home! Reduce, reuse, and recycle. Cut down on what you throw away. Also, try to conserve fresh water. We can still save the planet!!!
Links:
https:/ /s3.amazonaws.com/appforest_uf/f1658689079038x413436966542486850/Do stem cells grow better in space_ _ KidsNews.pdf
https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/discovery/missions/ – first-planetary-disk-observed
https://www.tutorialspoint.com/fundamentals_of_science_and_technology/space_exploration_timeline.htm
https://mars.nasa.gov/mars-exploration/missions/viking-1-2/