UW Assistant Professor Thomas Boothby will participate in the Story Time from Space program this Tuesday. Photo: University of Wyoming

WYOMING — A University of Wyoming molecular biologist whose research focuses on tardigrades will participate in the first live program, Story Time from Space. The program will be beamed from the International Space Station this Tuesday, Jan. 26.

UW Assistant Professor Thomas Boothby will join a live downlink for children featuring a story about tardigrades, also known as water bears. The program is scheduled from 10:30 a.m.-noon MST. To watch the program, go to www.storytimefromspace.com/live. Technical issues prevented the event from happening during its original date last September, Boothby says.

Astronaut Shannon Walker, aboard the space station, will read “Willow the Water Bear” by Houston Kidd and then answer questions from children around the world. Boothby, in the UW College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, will help answer questions about tardigrades and his research at UW. He and Kidd will join astronauts Alvin Drew and Bjarni Tryggvason, and author and astrophysicist Jeffrey Bennett.

Boothby and his UW colleagues are studying how the diminutive creatures — less than half a millimeter long — can survive being completely dried out; being frozen to just above absolute zero (about minus 458 degrees Fahrenheit, when all molecular motion stops); heated to more than 300 degrees Fahrenheit; irradiated several thousand times beyond what a human could withstand; and survive the vacuum of outer space.

For information about Boothby’s laboratory, personnel, and research, go to https://tboothby.weebly.com.

She's a lover of alliteration, easy-to-follow recipes and board games when everyone knows the rules. Her favorite aspect about living in the Tetons is the collective admiration that Wyomingites share for the land and the life that it sustains.