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by acidburnNSA 2137 days ago
But then why this seemingly-ridiculous line from the article?

> Scientists are thinking of shielding astronauts and space objects with a layer of this radiation-absorbing protective fungus.

2 comments

Because the "article" is a clickbait Youtube video from a channel with videos like "Is the world ending in 2020?" and "Ghost caught on tape in my apartment." It doesn't even name the scientists.

I went searching for "NASA Chernobyl fungus" and found a paper about using it as a shield on mars: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.07.16.205534v1

>Estimations based on linear attenuation coefficients indicated that a ~ 21 cm thick layer of this fungus could largely negate the annual dose-equivalent of the radiation environment on the surface of Mars, whereas only ~ 9 cm would be required with an equimolar mixture of melanin and Martian regolith.

It makes more sense in the Mars context, where you might not have lead available, and where growing a large amount of fungus from a small seed packet is a big bonus.

Because NASA is no longer relevant, but desperately wants to be. So they publish anything, and anlways with a sensational headline: microbes that incorporate arsenic into biomolecules, reactionless microwave propulsion, and not fungal radiation shields.

That line doesn't just seem ridiculous, it is.