Research on extraterrestrial life and protection against extreme heat during space travel

Research on extraterrestrial life and protection against extreme heat during space travel

VUB researchers receive two Frank De Winne awards from FWO

Two young VUB scientists have each received a Frank De Winne fellowship from the Research Foundation – Flanders (FWO). Vjera Radonicic’s research focuses on the existence of life in extraterrestrial environments, while Enrico Anfuso is looking for ways to protect space capsules from extreme heat as they return through the atmosphere. A total of five Belgian researchers have received a fellowship.

Vjera Radonicic wants to build a detector to discover extraterrestrial life. She is originally from Montenegro and has just started her PhD at VUB. “Space research has always inspired me,” she says. “There is so much we don’t know and I would love to play a role in discovering it.”

The existence of life in extraterrestrial environments is one of the most intriguing scientific questions today. As the chemical composition of these organisms is unknown, a chemistry-independent life detector would be a suitable device to equip interplanetary landing probes with in their search for extraterrestrial life.

Vibrations of extraterrestrial life

A few years ago it was shown that all living organisms are animated by vibrations on the nanometre scale, which cease once the organism is dead. These small-scale oscillations seem to be a universal feature of life. Radonicic wants to develop an instrument that detects these cellular nanomotions. This detector will also be optimised to perform antimicrobial susceptibility testing in microgravity and evaluate disinfection methods to control microbial infections in space habitats.

Resisting extraterrestrial heat

Enrico Anfuso from Italy is conducting research on plasma wind tunnels that mimic the hypersonic phenomena experienced by space debris during atmospheric entry. Anfuso’s research aims to reduce the discrepancy between flight and ground testing.

“Space debris is defined as all the man-made objects in Earth’s orbit that are no longer functional. The large amount of space junk could be a threat for the active satellites,” he says. “As one of the possible solutions, space agency ESA has recommended that space debris be burned in the atmosphere. The design of the destruction is carried out in a plasma wind tunnel, but a deeper understanding of the phenomenon is fundamental in a global perspective of a cleaner space.

“This award made my day memorable. After my master’s degree, I worked in industry for a year. That was pretty depressing for me. I decided to change tack and come to Belgium. There I successfully completed a one-year research master’s at the Von Karman Institute. It was a tough year, but fundamental to my decision to start the PhD.”

Contact

Vjera Radonicic

[email protected]

0470 27 22 36

 

Enrico Anfuso

[email protected]

+39 3384 71 80 23

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