Honda to Test Hydrogen Fuel Tech on ISS

Rahul Somvanshi

Honda just sent something incredible to space that could solve the Moon's biggest problem.

Photo Source: NASA (CC BY-NC 2.0)

The solution was hiding in plain sight: everyday water becomes space-grade power through a two-step process.

Photo Source: NASA (CC BY 2.0)

Solar energy splits H2O into hydrogen and oxygen, then combines them back for electricity plus clean water.

Photo Credits: Roy Bury (Pixabay)

Honda's system compresses gases at 700 times Earth's atmospheric pressure, shrinking storage tanks dramatically.

Photo Source: Pexels

Sierra Space's Tenacity space plane carries the equipment, landing like an airplane instead of crashing into the ocean.

Photo Source:- Keli Michals (CC BY-NC 2.0)

"We never thought this kind of technology was imaginable in previous decades," says Ken Shields from Sierra Space.

Photo Source: NASA

Honda's decades of hydrogen fuel cell work in cars finally finds its space application.

Photo Source:- European Space Agency

One system tackles three lunar challenges: breathable air, equipment power, and water recycling.

Photo Source: Global Honda

Two-week Moon days power water-splitting; two-week nights run on stored gas electricity.

Photo Source: Freerange

Honda's new Space Development Division in America joins 12 factories and 23 research centers already operating.

Photo Source: Tima Miroshnichenko (Pexels)

Zero gravity and extreme temperature swings will prove if this Earth-born technology survives space.

Photo Source: Defense Visual Information Distribution Service

Space research often improves life on Earth—this could revolutionize renewable energy storage here too.

Photo Source: Global Panorama (CC BY-SA 2.0)