Micra pacemaker goes on a space flight

These days astronauts are some of the healthiest and physically robust individuals that NASA can get a hold of. But one day we may see all kinds of people going to space, even those with heart conditions. Shelbi Klingsporn, a Nebraska high school student had the idea to test whether an existing pacemaker is able to handle the vibrations, radiation, and weightlessness of space to get a sense of whether pacemakers have a future in the final frontier.

Medtronic‘s Micra pacemaker is so small that it fits inside the heart and is delivered in a minimally invasive fashion. Conveniently, it is also small enough to fit inside a 4 cm square box that’s a standard size of the Cubes in Space project.

Cubes in Space relies on NASA sounding rockets to deliver a bunch of small high school experiments into space for a few minutes, but without putting them into orbit. The rocket flies in a parabolic trajectory and the flight lasts only about ten minutes. Nevertheless, this is long enough, and the flight is traumatic enough, to get a pretty good idea of the pacemaker’s performance.

The flight is scheduled for Thursday, 22nd June and can be seen live at this link. We wish the Micra a safe flight and hoping to hear that it will have worked just fine throughout the journey, as it will keep open the possibility of visits to space for a lot of people.

Keep Up to Date with the Most Important News

By pressing the Subscribe button, you confirm that you have read and are agreeing to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use
Previous Post

Network powerhouse features Open Compute capability

Next Post

Are e-cigarettes the next hacking risk?