Biosatellite

Artificial satellite designed to carry plants or animals in outer space From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A bio satellite is an artificial satellite designed to carry plants or animals in outer space. They are used to research the effects of space (cosmic radiation, weightlessness, etc.) on biological matter while in orbit around a celestial body. The first satellite carrying an animal (a dog, "Laika") was Soviet Sputnik 2 on November 3, 1957. On August 20, 1960 Soviet Sputnik 5 launched and recovered dogs from Earth orbit.

ApplicationsTo carry plants or animals in outer space
Spacecraft typeArtificial satellite
Quick facts Applications, Specifications ...
Biosatellite
Drawing of Biosatellite and Retrieval
ApplicationsTo carry plants or animals in outer space
Specifications
Spacecraft typeArtificial satellite
Capacity
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NASA launched three such satellites between 1966 and 1969 in its Biosatellite program.[1][2]

Other notable biosatellites include:

See also

References

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