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| The unique space rose note is now a perfume fragrance ingredient. |
The flavors
and fragrance industry is always seeking new ways
to dazzle and delight consumers senses. One company launched itself ahead of the competition by collaborating with NASA to create a new fragrance ingredient that is literally out of this world. International Flavors and Fragrances (IFF), Inc., of New York, New York, discovered this new scent, known as the space rose note, by flying a miniature rose plant, called the Overnight Scentsation, aboard NASAs
Space Shuttle Discovery Flight STS-95. IFF is the
leading creator and manufacturer of flavors and fragrances used by
others to impart or improve flavor or fragrance in a wide variety
of consumer products.
The Wisconsin
Center for Space Automation and Robotics (WCSAR) at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison, a NASA Commercial Space Center (CSC), is managed
by the Space Product Development Office at NASAs Marshall Space
Flight Center. WCSAR is the leading NASA CSC for the development
of space-based plant research technologies/facilities. IFF and WCSAR
partnered to fly the rose plant in a commercial plant research facility
for reduced-gravity environment research. The facility, known as
ASTROCULTURE,TM was developed in the mid-1990s by WCSAR,
and was later modified to incorporate IFFs proprietary technology related to sampling and analyzing essential oils. Although it was understood that plant physiology/biology changes in microgravity, there was no research on gravitys
effect on essential oils (or volatile compounds) produced by living
flowers, which provide all flavor and fragrance. Therefore, IFF set
out to use the rose plant to examine what would happen to the production
of essential oils in microgravity.
The company
expected the experiment to cause a shift in the scent of the rose,
because gravity would no longer hold the plant oils in the stem.
Even a slight shift would open up thousands of possibilities through
combinational chemistry. The end result, however, was much bigger
than the company anticipatedthe researchers discovered that
the rose had produced an entirely new scent that was definitely not
from Earth.
IFF has commercialized the unique space rose note, which is now a fragrance ingredient in a perfume developed by Shiseido Cosmetics (America), Ltd. The perfume, called Zen, combines three notes for a fragrance that the company describes as floral, woody, and spiritual. While this is the first commercial use of the space rose scent in a fine fragrance, further uses are anticipated. In addition to providing a light, crisp scent to the fragrance industry, the space rose oil can enhance food products flavors, offering new opportunities to the flavors industry.
The rose
experiment demonstrates a successful collaboration between a commercial
entity and a NASA-sponsored CSCa strong illustration of how
commerce can benefit from space-based research. Results from IFF
and WCSAR collaborations during the summer 2002 Space Shuttle mission
investigations are expected at a later date.
ASTROCULTURETM is a trademark of the Wisconsin Center for Space Automation and Robotics.
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