Tuesday, December 19, 2023

How do ISS tomatoes lost in space for 8 months look? NASA shares photo

Astronaut Frank Rubio may feel vindicated after produce that went missing on his watch was finally found aboard the International Space Station.

But many who learned about the news of the famed astronaut’s exoneration may have been left with a burning question: What does a tomato that’s been floating around in zero gravity for months actually look like?

Thanks to NASA, we finally have our answer. And in what may come as a surprising development, it’s not one tomato in question, but two.

Astronaut Frank Rubio was long suspected of eating tomatoes he had harvested aboard the International Space Station until what remained of the produce turned up months later. NASA shared this photo of what was found.

The space agency shared the photo last weekalong with a detailed description of the experiment that ultimately led to the fresh harvest vanishing without a trace. They were Rubio’s tomatoes, so he naturally took the blame – that is, until his fellow astronauts recently found the tomato remains and came clean.

“Other than some discoloration, it had no visible microbial or fungal growth,” NASA said of the fruit, which was found in a plastic bag dehydrated and slightly squished.

September 27, 2023: In this handout photograph taken and released by Roscosmos Expedition 69, NASA astronaut Frank Rubio (C) of the International Space Station (ISS) crew is helped by specialists after his landing in the Soyuz MS-23 capsule in a remote area near the town of Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan. The trio returned to Earth after logging 371 days in space as members of Expeditions 68-69 aboard the International Space Station. For Rubio, his mission is the longest single spaceflight by a US astronaut in history.

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‘I did not eat this tomato,” Rubio says

Astronaut Frank Rubio works with tomato plants growing on the International Space Station as part of a botany study.

NASA now says that Rubio accidentally lost track of the tomatoes while harvesting for the eXposed Root On-Orbit Test System (XROOTS) experiment he conducted in 2022 while aboard the space station. Previous media coverage has suggested the tomatoes were part of a different experiment, the VEG-05conducted in 2023.