The latest Carnival of Space is now available at the Mars Odyssey blog, where Nancy Houser has gathered space-themed materials from the past week, many of them dealing with the question of perchlorates on Mars and the implications of that possible discovery. I’ll send you straight to the Carnival for the perchlorate story, where many bloggers dissect it. My usual practice is to focus on Carnival items that connect to our theme here on Centauri Dreams — articles about deep space starting with the outer planets and moving to regions beyond. This week the entry that fits that bill is Brian Wang’s article in NextBigFuture on radiation shielding.

Although Brian couches this work in the context of solutions to radiation exposure following nuclear attacks, it’s also true that a drug that is 5000 times more effective at reducing the effects of radiation injury than the drugs we currently use has interesting space implications. The experimental drug, intriguingly named Nanovector Trojan Horses (NTH), is based on single-walled carbon nanotubes that are coated with antioxidant compounds commonly used as food preservatives. In this setting they seem to dampen the effects of serious radiation exposure.

The NTH work (led by James Tour at Rice University) raises the question of how useful radiation shielding becomes as we move out into the Solar System. It’s commonly assumed that a human presence on the large Jovian moons, for example, is all but ruled out by intense radiation there. But future breakthroughs in radiation shielding and treatment, perhaps one day leading to turbo-charged vaccines against radiation damage, could help change that picture and allow scientists to function in such settings. Boots on the ground in places like Europa may no longer be completely inconceivable, and given what we may find there or, perhaps, on Callisto or Ganymede, that could be useful news indeed.