Corinna Panitz
German Aerospace Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Corinna Panitz.
Astrobiology | 2012
Elke Rabbow; Petra Rettberg; Simon Barczyk; Maria Bohmeier; André Parpart; Corinna Panitz; Gerda Horneck; Ralf von Heise-Rotenburg; Tom Hoppenbrouwers; Rainer Willnecker; Pietro Baglioni; René Demets; Jan Dettmann; Guenther Reitz
The multi-user facility EXPOSE-E was designed by the European Space Agency to enable astrobiology research in space (low-Earth orbit). On 7 February 2008, EXPOSE-E was carried to the International Space Station (ISS) on the European Technology Exposure Facility (EuTEF) platform in the cargo bay of Space Shuttle STS-122 Atlantis. The facility was installed at the starboard cone of the Columbus module by extravehicular activity, where it remained in space for 1.5 years. EXPOSE-E was returned to Earth with STS-128 Discovery on 12 September 2009 for subsequent sample analysis. EXPOSE-E provided accommodation in three exposure trays for a variety of astrobiological test samples that were exposed to selected space conditions: either to space vacuum, solar electromagnetic radiation at >110 nm and cosmic radiation (trays 1 and 3) or to simulated martian surface conditions (tray 2). Data on UV radiation, cosmic radiation, and temperature were measured every 10 s and downlinked by telemetry. A parallel mission ground reference (MGR) experiment was performed on ground with a parallel set of hardware and samples under simulated space conditions. EXPOSE-E performed a successful 1.5-year mission in space.
Archive | 2011
Corinna Panitz
Planetary and space simulation facilities are laboratory devices aimed at mimicking extraterrestrial conditions, for example, the conditions of outer space (vacuum, temperature, radiation), of spaceflight or those of other planets (atmospheric composition and pressure, temperature fluctuations, radiation for ▶Mars) or moons (gas mixture, pressure, low temperature for Saturn’s moon Titan). They are valuable instruments in the preparation of flight experiments (selection of suitable biological candidates, chemical compounds, and hardware material for astro- and space biological experiments in Earth orbit), for assessing the habitability of other planets (e.g., of Mars), or for studying different physical or chemical processes (e.g., for Titan).
International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015
Corinna Panitz; Gerda Horneck; Elke Rabbow; Petra Rettberg; Ralf Moeller; Jean Cadet; Thierry Douki; Guenther Reitz
The experiment SPORES ‘Spores in artificial meteorites’ was part of European Space Agencys EXPOSE-R mission, which exposed chemical and biological samples for nearly 2 years (March 10, 2009 to February 21, 2011) to outer space, when attached to the outside of the Russian Zvezda module of the International Space Station. The overall objective of the SPORES experiment was to address the question whether the meteorite material offers enough protection against the harsh environment of space for spores to survive a long-term journey in space by experimentally mimicking the hypothetical scenario of Lithopanspermia, which assumes interplanetary transfer of life via impact-ejected rocks. For this purpose, spores of Bacillus subtilis 168 were exposed to selected parameters of outer space (solar ultraviolet (UV) radiation at λ>110 or >200 nm, space vacuum, galactic cosmic radiation and temperature fluctuations) either as a pure spore monolayer or mixed with different concentrations of artificial meteorite powder. Total fluence of solar UV radiation (100–400 nm) during the mission was 859 MJ m⁻². After retrieval the viability of the samples was analysed. A Mission Ground Reference program was performed in parallel to the flight experiment. The results of SPORES demonstrate the high inactivating potential of extraterrestrial UV radiation as one of the most harmful factors of space, especially UV at λ>110 nm. The UV-induced inactivation is mainly caused by photodamaging of the DNA, as documented by the identification of the spore photoproduct 5,6-dihydro-5(α-thyminyl)thymine. The data disclose the limits of Lithopanspermia for spores located in the upper layers of impact-ejected rocks due to access of harmful extraterrestrial solar UV radiation.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017
Elke Rabbow; Petra Rettberg; André Parpart; Corinna Panitz; Wolfgang Schulte; Ferdinand Molter; Esther Jaramillo; René Demets; Peter Weiß; Rainer Willnecker
On July 23, 2014, the Progress cargo spacecraft 56P was launched from Baikonur to the International Space Station (ISS), carrying EXPOSE-R2, the third ESA (European Space Agency) EXPOSE facility, the second EXPOSE on the outside platform of the Russian Zvezda module, with four international astrobiological experiments into space. More than 600 biological samples of archaea, bacteria (as biofilms and in planktonic form), lichens, fungi, plant seeds, triops eggs, mosses and 150 samples of organic compounds were exposed to the harsh space environment and to parameters similar to those on the Mars surface. Radiation dosimeters distributed over the whole facility complemented the scientific payload. Three extravehicular activities later the chemical samples were returned to Earth on March 2, 2016, with Soyuz 44S, having spent 588 days in space. The biological samples arrived back later, on June 18, 2016, with 45S, after a total duration in space of 531 days. The exposure of the samples to Low Earth Orbit vacuum lasted for 531 days and was divided in two parts: protected against solar irradiation during the first 62 days, followed by exposure to solar radiation during the subsequent 469 days. In parallel to the space mission, a Mission Ground Reference (MGR) experiment with a flight identical Hardware and a complete flight identical set of samples was performed at the premises of DLR (German Aerospace Center) in Cologne by MUSC (Microgravity User Support Center), according to the mission data either downloaded from the ISS (temperature data, facility status, inner pressure status) or provided by RedShift Design and Engineering BVBA, Belgium (calculated ultra violet radiation fluence data). In this paper, the EXPOSE-R2 facility, the experimental samples, mission parameters, environmental parameters, and the overall mission and MGR sequences are described, building the background for the research papers of the individual experiments, their analysis and results.
International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015
A. Bérces; M. Egyeki; Andrea Fekete; G. Horneck; G. Kovács; Corinna Panitz; Gy. Ronto
The aim of our experiment Phage and Uracil Response was to extend the use of bacteriophage T7 and uracil biological dosimeters for measuring the biologically effective ultraviolet (UV) dose in the harsh extraterrestrial radiation conditions. The biological detectors were exposed in vacuum-tightly cases in the European Space Agency (ESA) astrobiological exposure facility attached to the external platform of Zvezda (EXPOSE-R). EXPOSE-R took off to the International Space Station (ISS) in November 2008 and was installed on the External platform of the Russian module Zvezda of the ISS in March 2009. Our goal was to determine the dose–effect relation for the formation of photoproducts (i.e. damage to phage DNA and uracil, respectively). The extraterrestrial solar UV radiation ranges over the whole spectrum from vacuum-UV (λ<200 nm) to UVA (315 nm<λ<400 nm), which causes photolesions (photoproducts) in the nucleic acids/their components either by photoionization or excitation. However, these wavelengths cause not only photolesions but in a wavelength-dependent efficiency the reversion of some photolesions, too. Our biological detectors measured in situ conditions the resultant of both reactions induced by the extraterrestrial UV radiation. From this aspect the role of the photoreversion in the extension of the biological UV dosimetry are discussed.
International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015
Katja Neuberger; A. Lux-Endrich; Corinna Panitz; Gerda Horneck
In the space experiment ‘Spores in artificial meteorites’ (SPORES), spores of the fungus Trichoderma longibrachiatum were exposed to low-Earth orbit for nearly 2 years on board the EXPOSE-R facility outside of the International Space Station. The environmental conditions tested in space were: space vacuum at 10⁻⁷–10⁻⁴ Pa or argon atmosphere at 10⁵ Pa as inert gas atmosphere, solar extraterrestrial ultraviolet (UV) radiation at λ > 110 nm or λ > 200 nm with fluences up to 5.8 × 10⁸ J m⁻², cosmic radiation of a total dose range from 225 to 320 mGy, and temperature fluctuations from −25 to +50°C, applied isolated or in combination. Comparable control experiments were performed on ground. After retrieval, viability of spores was analysed by two methods: (i) ethidium bromide staining and (ii) test of germination capability. About 30% of the spores in vacuum survived the space travel, if shielded against insolation. However, in most cases no significant decrease was observed for spores exposed in addition to the full spectrum of solar UV irradiation. As the spores were exposed in clusters, the outer layers of spores may have shielded the inner part. The results give some information about the likelihood of lithopanspermia, the natural transfer of micro-organisms between planets. In addition to the parameters of outer space, sojourn time in space seems to be one of the limiting parameters.
Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2001
Gerda Horneck; Petra Rettberg; Günther Reitz; Jörg Wehner; Ute Eschweiler; Karsten Strauch; Corinna Panitz; Verena Starke; Christa Baumstark-Khan
Astrobiology | 2005
Charles S. Cockell; Andrew C. Schuerger; Daniela Billi; Ei Friedmann; Corinna Panitz
Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 2009
Elke Rabbow; Gerda Horneck; Petra Rettberg; Jobst-Ulrich Schott; Corinna Panitz; Andrea L’Afflitto; Ralf von Heise-Rotenburg; Reiner Willnecker; Pietro Baglioni; Jason Hatton; Jan Dettmann; René Demets; Günther Reitz
Astrobiology | 2012
Gerda Horneck; Ralf Moeller; Jean Cadet; Thierry Douki; Rocco L. Mancinelli; Wayne L. Nicholson; Corinna Panitz; Elke Rabbow; Petra Rettberg; Andrew Spry; Erko Stackebrandt; Parag Vaishampayan; Kasthuri Venkateswaran