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biosatellites

Biosatellites are satellites carrying biological experiments designed to study the effects of spaceflight on living organisms and to test life sciences technologies in space. They may carry microorganisms, plant seeds, small animals, cell cultures, or tissue samples, and sometimes equipment to monitor physiology, metabolism, or environmental conditions. Data from biosatellites has informed our understanding of radiation biology, microgravity effects on development and reproduction, circadian rhythms, and the stability of biological systems in orbit. Some missions also tested life-support hardware and medical countermeasures for astronauts. Depending on the mission design, a biosatellite may return samples to Earth or be left in orbit to collect data for extended periods.

Historically, biosatellites were flown by major spacefaring nations during the early space age. In the United

Today most biological research in space is conducted aboard the International Space Station, but small, dedicated

States,
NASA
organized
a
dedicated
Biosatellite
program
beginning
in
the
1960s
that
conducted
several
missions
to
study
plants,
insects,
and
small
vertebrates
under
spaceflight
conditions.
The
Soviet
Union
carried
out
a
parallel
program,
notably
the
Bion
series,
which
conducted
long-duration
biological
experiments
aboard
orbital
platforms.
Other
countries
and
organizations
have
pursued
biosatellite
flights
to
support
university
research
and
technology
development.
biosatellites
and
CubeSats
continue
to
be
used
by
universities
and
industry
to
perform
targeted
experiments,
test
sensors
and
life-support
concepts,
or
return
biological
samples
for
analysis.
The
term
remains
in
use
to
describe
satellites
whose
primary
purpose
includes
biological
research
rather
than
Earth
observation
or
communications.