Turkish space-traveler starts scientific experiments
The first Turkish space traveler, Alper Gezeravci, began to conduct scientific researches on the International Space Station, the Turkish Space Agency (TUA) announced on January 22.
The Ax-3 mission, with Gezeravci on board, was launched from NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Florida at 4.49 p.m. ET (2149GMT) on a Falcon 9 rocket of private space exploration company SpaceX, Anadolu Agency reports.
Türk Uzay Bilim Misyonu İçin Start Verildi🏁
— Türkiye Uzay Ajansı (@tuajans) January 22, 2024
Astronotumuz @TURKastro deney çalışmalarına başladı.🧑🏼🚀🔬
Uluslararası Uzay İstasyonu’nda çalışmalarına başlanılan ilk deney EXTREMOPHYTE oldu.🌿
Gelin şimdi hep birlikte bu deneyi tanıyalım👇🏼#GururDuyTürkiye🇹🇷 pic.twitter.com/8bIK6n8Wt0
The crew, which docked at 5:42 a.m. EST (1042GMT), entered the ISS at 0716 EST. The four-person team will conduct more than 30 scientific researches during their 14-day stay, with Gezeravci responsible for 13 researches.
The TUA said the first experiment, named Extremophyte, was developed by Ege University in the Aegean city of Izmir.
The experiment aims to reveal the transcriptome by next generation sequencing in plants grown in space and on earth which are exposed to salt stress, and to compare some physiological and molecular responses of glycophytic and halophytic plants to salt stress in microgravity.