The International Space Station has a unique and extreme microbial and chemical environment driven by use patterns

Rodolfo A. Salido(University of California San Diego), Robert J. Knight(University of California San Diego), Yasin El Abiead(University of California San Diego), Daniel McDonald(University of California San Diego), Sawyer Farmer(University of California San Diego), Lucas Patel(University of California San Diego), Fathi Karouia(Ames Research Center), Ipsita Mohanty(University of California San Diego), Kasthuri Venkateswaran(Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Tara Schwartz(University of California San Diego), Ceth W. Parker(Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Paulo Wender Portal Gomes(University of California San Diego), Helena Mannochio-Russo(University of California San Diego), Cameron Martino(University of California San Diego), Robin Schmid(University of Münster), Allegra T. Aron(University of California San Diego), Kathleen Rubins(National Aeronautics and Space Administration), Pieter C. Dorrestein(University of California San Diego), Simone Zuffa(University of California San Diego), Renee Oles(University of California San Diego), Michael R. Barratt(Johnson Space Center), Hiutung Chu(University of California, Davis), Antonio G. González(University of California San Diego), Haoqi Nina Zhao(Peking University)
Cell
February 27, 2025
Cited by 18


Related Papers