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  1. Retweeted
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  2. Retweeted
    Aug 11

    Super happy to share our latest paper in where we demonstrate a *very* simple method to convert CO2 to a biopolyester with a potential application on Mars

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  3. Retweeted
    Jul 19

    Congrats to and the CUBES team for our new overview for Space Systems Biomanufacturing in Frontiers: !

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  4. Retweeted
    Jul 13

    New PhD and postdoc opportunities bridging philosophy, history, and astrobiology!

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  5. Jul 12

    Moon enthusiats, you may want to attend the lunar marathon organized by : a "24h live show with lunar experts and connected telescopes". When: July 17th to July 18th, 10 am UT. Details:

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  6. Retweeted
    Jun 8

    Instead of sending lunar samples all the way to Earth, we might as well analyze them on site. 10 sciencists describe what a on the could look like: 🍾🚀🌖

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  7. May 5

    My student , as seen by his samples.

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  8. Mar 29

    The result was uneggspected.

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  9. Retweeted
    Mar 19

    Idée de sortie 2.0 avec la ce soir à 19h sur Twitch On va parler missions, loin et longtemps comme vers Mars, avec les excellents et Les infos 👇

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  10. Retweeted
    Mar 19

    L’astrobiologiste et était le chef de mission du 14ème hivernage à la station de recherche Concordia. Dans notre livre de la semaine il vous embarque dans une expédition extraordinaire sur la planète blanche de l'Antarctique❄️.

    Book cover Un Hiver Antarctique
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  11. Retweeted
    Feb 21
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  12. Retweeted

    Hello, world. My first look at my forever home.

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  13. Retweeted

    I’m safe on Mars. Perseverance will get you anywhere.

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  14. Feb 17

    "Des bactéries pour nourrir les futurs explorateurs martiens" : un résumé grand public (et en français) de nos derniers résultats au , par .

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  15. Feb 15
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  16. Feb 15

    Those results could greatly improve the feasibility of cyanobacterium-based bioproduction on Mars and, by doing so, make long-term missions to Mars more sustainable. (3/3)

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  17. Feb 15

    Here we show that cyanos could get carbon and nitrogen from gases available on Mars, at a low atm. pressure (> Mars, but ~ 1/10th of Earth). They remained able to get the other nutrients they need from water and Mars-like dust, and to feed other microbes. (2/3)

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  18. Feb 15

    In short: it had been argued that could be grown using Martian materials. That they could make oxygen, food and more, but also be used to feed other microbes, and plants, that in turn could produce other consumables. (1/3)

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  19. Feb 15

    It has been a long shot. It took writing a proposal in , getting funding (thanks, !), founding a space biolab at the () and building our own experimental device… before starting lab work.

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  20. Feb 15

    Delighted by the latest results from our lab! They deal with how cyanobacteria can help us live on . Original paper (open access) below; here is a summary by :

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