
3 Animals You Didn't Know Went To Space — One Might Still Be Out There, Waiting To Wake Up
You've seen the headlines. The James Webb Space Telescope detected methane and carbon dioxide on a distant exoplanet, stirring cautious excitement about the possibility of life beyond Earth. It's the strongest signal yet. But for now, it remains just a theory.
What's not theory is this: Life from Earth has already left the planet. And not just humans and dogs, either. Over the decades, we've launched a surprising cast of living organisms into space, from stray cats to microscopic indestructible micro-animals.
Their time out there may have been brief, but they crossed a boundary few lifeforms never will. Some may never return. Here are three you probably didn't expect.
There's a general misconception that Laika, the Soviet space dog, was the first animal in space. But the truth is quieter and smaller. On February 20, 1947, the United States launched a group of fruit flies aboard a captured German V-2 rocket. This swarm went down in history as the first living organisms from Earth to reach space, beating both dogs and humans by years.
The flies were recovered alive after a successful parachute descent, marking the silent start of life's journey off-planet. For context, Laika flew aboard Sputnik 2 in 1957, a full decade later. And Yuri Gagarin, the first human in space, followed in 1961.
Fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) have long been model organisms in science — small, easy to breed and genetically well-understood, even in the 1940s. Their short life cycles make them ideal for studying generational effects, and they require minimal life support systems, making them perfect candidates for early, high-risk flights.
The fruit fly continues to be widely used for biological research in genetics, physiology, microbial ... More pathogenesis and life history evolution.
More importantly, fruit flies are sensitive to radiation and share some fundamental biological responses with us, making them valuable analogs for studying the genetic effects of cosmic exposure. Researchers were especially interested in how cosmic rays, a largely untested threat at the time, would affect living tissue.
Under the microscope, they look almost like animated plush toys — slow-moving, water-bloated and oddly adorable. But tardigrades, also known as water bears or moss piglets, are among the toughest survivors evolution has ever carved out. And in 2007, they became the first animals known to survive direct exposure to the vacuum and radiation of space.
Less than a millimeter long, these water-dwelling, eight-legged micro-animals can endure boiling ... More heat, freezing cold, crushing pressure and radiation.
Sent into low Earth orbit aboard the European Space Agency's FOTON-M3 mission, dehydrated tardigrades endured ten days in outer space. When rehydrated back on Earth, most of the specimens protected from UV radiation came back to life. Some even went on to reproduce.
Their resilience comes from cryptobiosis, a kind of biological stasis in which they shut down nearly all activity and dry into a glass-like shell. In this 'tun state,' they can survive extreme cold, searing heat and even radiation.
And Earth's biological signature may still be out there. Thousands of tardigrades were aboard the Beresheet lander that crashed on the Moon in 2019. While the odds of survival are slim, and reactivation impossible without water, some may be lying dormant on the lunar surface, frozen in time.
On October 18, 1963, France launched a black-and-white stray cat, later named Félicette, into suborbital space aboard a Véronique AGI 47 sounding rocket. She was one of 14 female cats trained for spaceflight by the French Centre d'Enseignement et de Recherches de Médecine Aéronautique (CERMA).
The cats underwent rigorous training, including exposure to intense G-forces and confinement, to prepare for the mission. Félicette's short flight reached an altitude of 157 kilometers, 57 past the Kármán line, during which she experienced about five minutes of weightlessness. Electrodes implanted in her skull transmitted neurological data back to Earth, providing insights into the effects of space travel on living organisms.
Remarkably, she survived the flight and was safely recovered. Soon after, she was euthanized so scientists could learn more from her autopsy. Despite her contributions, Félicette's story remained largely unknown for decades. While other animal astronauts like Laika became celebrated figures, Félicette faded into obscurity. It wasn't until 2019 that she received formal recognition with a bronze statue honoring her contributions to space exploration.
Félicette eventually was immortalized with a bronze statue depicting her perched atop Earth, gazing ... More skyward. This was unveiled at the International Space University in Strasbourg, France, and honors her unique place in space exploration history .
After seeing just how far life from Earth has traveled, how connected do you feel to the life still here? Take the Connectedness to Nature Scale and discover your link to the wild.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UPI
7 hours ago
- UPI
SpaceX launches 24 satellites to polar areas to boost internet access
1 of 2 | SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 rocket Saturday night from Vandenberg Space Force Base near Lompoc, Calif. Photo courtesy of SpaceX July 27 (UPI) -- SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 rocket Saturday night from Vandenberg Space Force Base near Lompoc, Calif. The mission put 24 Starlink satellites into low Earth orbit. It will deploy the satellites into a polar orbit to boost internet service in polar regions. The Starlink 17-2 mission launched from Space Launch Complex 4 East at 9:31 p.m. PDT. The Falcon 9 ship with tail number B1075 took its 19th trip to space, including 16 Starlink missions. About 8 1/2 minutes after liftoff, the ship landed on the droneship "Of Course I Still Love You," in the Pacific Ocean. It was the 142nd landing for this vessel and the 481st booster landing for SpaceX. There are more than 8,000 Starlink satellites in orbit, according to astronomer Jonathan McDowell. On Thursday, Starlink users reported a rare full network outage of internet service. It began at 4 p.m. About 2 1/2 hours later, SpaceX announced most service had been restored. Then, 1 1/2 hours later, full service was back, Starlink reported.
Yahoo
10 hours ago
- Yahoo
2 stars in 'serpent god of destruction' system are hurling their blazing guts at each other, James Webb telescope reveals
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The James Webb Space Telescope has captured a stunning new image of two dying stars wreathed in a spiral of dust. The highly rare star system is located some 8,000 light-years from Earth, within our Milky Way galaxy. Upon its discovery in 2018, it was nicknamed Apep, after the ancient Egyptian serpent god of chaos and destruction, as its writhing pattern of shed dust resembles a snake eating its own tail. Now, a new image taken by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has captured the system in unprecedented detail, revealing that it doesn't contain just one dying star, but two — with a third star chomping on their dust shrouds. The researchers published their findings July 19 in two papers on the preprint server arXiv, and they have not been peer-reviewed yet. "We expected Apep to look like one of these elegant pinwheel nebulas," study co-author Benjamin Pope, a professor in statistical data science at Macquarie University in Sydney, wrote in The Conversation. "To our surprise, it did not." Nebulas such as these are formed by Wolf-Rayet stars. These rare, slowly dying stars have lost their outer hydrogen shells, leaving them to spew gusts of ionized helium, carbon and nitrogen from their insides. Wolf-Rayet stars explode as supernovas after a few million years of sputtering, at most. But until then, the radiation pressure from their light unfurls their innards, stretching them out into giant phantom jellyfish in the night sky. Related: Space photo of the week: James Webb telescope reveals mysterious 'light echo' in the broken heart of Cassiopeia These superheated contents, especially carbon dust that is later recycled into planets and the material in our own bodies, is so hot that it glows brightly in the infrared spectrum. By capturing these infrared photons with the Very Large Telescope in Chile, astronomers got their first peek at the system in 2018. Now, by training JWST's sensitive Mid-Infrared Instrument on Apep, the team has captured it in even more detail, revealing it to be even more unusual than first thought. RELATED STORIES —James Webb telescope shocks scientists with image of ancient galaxy roaring back to life —Dry ice 'geysers' erupt on Mars as spring hits the Red Planet —James Webb and Hubble telescopes unite to solve 'impossible' planet mystery "It turns out Apep isn't just one powerful star blasting a weaker companion, but two Wolf-Rayet stars," Pope wrote. "The rivals have near-equal strength winds, and the dust is spread out in a very wide cone and wrapped into a wind-sock shape." Making the situation even more complex is a third star — a stable giant that's carving out a cavity in the dust spit out by its dying siblings. Beyond making for a stunning picture, Pope said, studying Apep could tell us more about how stars die and the carbon dust they leave behind. "The violence of stellar death carves puzzles that would make sense to Newton and Archimedes, and it is a scientific joy to solve them and share them," Pope wrote. Solve the daily Crossword

Epoch Times
2 days ago
- Epoch Times
Russia Launches Iranian Satellite into Orbit
A Russian rocket has launched an Iranian telecommunications satellite into orbit—the fifth such launch since 2022. The Soyuz rocket, designed during the Cold War, carried Iran's Nahid-2 satellite into orbit on July 25, from a commercial launchpad at the Vostochny Cosmodrome in Russia's eastern Amur province.