Samples of air removed from the stratosphere, at an altitude of 41 km, were previously found to contain viable, but non-cultureable bacteria (cocci and rods). Here, we describe experiments aimed at growing these, together with any other organisms, present in these samples. Two bacteria (Bacillus simplex and Staphylococcus pasteuri) and a single fungus, Engyodontium album (Limber) de Hoog were isolated from the samples. Although the possibility of contamination can never be ruled out when space-derived samples are studied on earth, we are confident that the organisms originated from the stratosphere. Possible mechanisms by which these organisms could have attained such a height are discussed.
A unified approach towards spectral shifts in general relativity brings the cosmological and gravitational redshifts within the same framework as the more familiar Doppler effect. This approach was first proposed by Synge [Relativity: The General Theory (North-Holland, Amsterdam 1960)] and is described here in a more simplified form.
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