Flight-Scope: microscopy with microfluidics in microgravity
Thomas Wareing, Alexander Stokes, Katrina Crompton, Koren Murphy, Jack, Dawson, Yusuf Furkan Ugurluoglu, Connor Richardson, Hongquan Li, Manu, Prakash, Adam J. M. Wollman

TL;DR
Flight-Scope is a novel microscopy platform designed for real-time cellular imaging during short microgravity periods on parabolic flights, enabling biological research in space-like conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a microfluidics and microscopy system capable of live imaging in microgravity, addressing challenges of vibration and limited time during parabolic flights.
Findings
Successfully imaged yeast glucose uptake in microgravity
Operated reliably during ESA parabolic flights
Demonstrated feasibility of real-time biological experiments in space-like conditions
Abstract
With the European Space Agency (ESA) and NASA working to return humans to the moon and onwards to Mars, it has never been more important to study the impact of altered gravity conditions on biological organisms. These include astronauts but also useful micro-organisms they may bring with them to produce food, medicine, and other useful compounds by synthetic biology. Parabolic flights are one of the most accessible microgravity research platforms but present their own challenges: relatively short periods of altered gravity (~20s) and aircraft vibration. Live-imaging is necessary in these altered-gravity conditions to readout any real-time phenotypes. Here we present Flight-Scope, a new microscopy and microfluidics platform to study dynamic cellular processes during the short, altered gravity periods on parabolic flights. We demonstrated Flight-Scopes capability by performing live and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpaceflight effects on biology · Planetary Science and Exploration · Space Exploration and Technology
