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Australian greenhouse payload approved for ISS mission

Australia's vision for next-generation space agriculture has taken a major step forward, with the iLAuNCH Trailblazer confirming its innovative greenhouse payload has received full approval for flight to the International Space Station (ISS).

The experiment is scheduled to launch aboard NASA's Crew-12 mission in February 2026 and return to Earth on SpaceX's SpX-34 mission in June 2026. The mission will advance global efforts to monitor plant health in space using low-cost, intelligent imaging systems.

The team has now completed a series of critical milestones bringing the research closer to orbit. The payload consists of two compact greenhouses, each measuring 200 mm x 100 mm x 100 mm, designed as closed terrariums containing agar and essential nutrients. During the mission, the greenhouses will be used to grow lettuce, selected as an ideal test species for studying early indicators of plant health in microgravity.

At the core of the experiment is a goal to demonstrate machine-vision algorithms capable of detecting plant stress at an early stage using low-cost cameras engineered to withstand the harsh conditions of space. The technology is intended to support future long-duration space missions, while also delivering immediate benefits for Earth-based controlled-environment agriculture.

Read more at Space & Defense

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