SpaceX launched disease-causing bacteria to the International Space Station

SpaceX just launched the Crew-11 astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA — along with an interesting bacterial experiment.

The Earth is seen in the background, a cylinder is seen falling toward it, and in the foreground there is shiny material connected to what seems to be an engine.
This is a still taken just after 1st stage separation during the Crew-11 mission to the ISS. The Falcon 9 that blasted the crew off is seen falling toward Earth to the left of the image. On the right is the next stage, still attached to the cabin where the crew is seated.
(Image credit: SpaceX)

There's a secret, extra member of Crew-11 aboard the International Space Station right now: disease-causing bacteria.

Or, at least, such bacteria will be growing aboard the orbiting laboratory very soon. Scientists at the Sheba Medical Center in Israel, in partnership with U.S.-based space tech company SpaceTango, have developed a study that will examine how microgravity affects the growth of certain bacterial species that cause diseases in humans. To pull it off, researchers will grow different strains of bacteria under microgravity, freeze that bacteria at -80 degrees Celsius and then return the samples to Earth to see how they’ve grown differently than the same bacteria grown on the home planet.

Jessica Rendall
Space.com Contributor

Jessica Rendall is a reporter based in Brooklyn with a special interest in what keeps humans healthy — both on Earth and in space. Previously, she was a staff wellness writer at CNET and a freelancer who covered public health, music and lifestyle. She studied journalism at the University of Missouri and enjoys watching movies with subtitles on.