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- Moon dust is less harmful than city air, new study shows - MSN
Recent studies reveal that moon dust, while irritating, is less harmful to human lungs than urban air pollution Apollo astronauts experienced respiratory issues, but lab tests using lunar dust
- Inhaling Moon Dust Is Somehow Less Toxic Than Urban Air Pollution - MSN
A study by the University of Technology Sydney published last month found that moon dust was far less toxic to our pulmonary system than the air pollution someone would encounter in a city
- Abrasive lunar dust is still less toxic than city pollution, study finds
As NASA prepares to send astronauts back to the moon for the first time in over 50 years, new research from the University of Technology, Sydney (UTS) has found that lunar dust is less harmful to
- Breathing Lunar Dust Is Bad for Our Bodies, But Not as Bad as City Dust . . .
According to the study authors, the results complicate the conclusions from the Apollo mission reports (from the 1960s and 1970s) and from past research, which asserted that the dust on the moon
- Moon dust could be dangerous. We may have figured out a new way . . . - MSN
A NASA study in 2005 noted the particles damaged instrument covers, spacecraft radiators and spacesuit seals and "generally coated everything with surprising tenacity " The floating, sticky dust
- Moon Dust and Human History: What Apollo Samples Revealed About . . . - MSN
Imagine holding in your hand a handful of dust older than any rock on Earth, packed with secrets about the birth of our planet and even the origins of life itself That’s exactly what happened
- Moon dust may help astronauts power sustainable lunar cities . . . - MSN
Constructing solar arrays out of moon dust would reduce launch costs and make lunar bases more plausible, according to a new study
- Nuisance Moon Dust Could Power Space Exploration - MSN
Troublesome lunar dust could soon be transformed into solar cells to help power moon bases and humanity's push to explore further out into space
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