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Volunteers to begin Mars500 isolation

2010-06-03 06:11:21

By Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News Mars500 Crew (IBMP) On their

own: Communication with the outside world will be restricted

Would you volunteer to be locked away for 18 months in a sealed container with

no windows and have only e-mail contact with the outside world?

Six men - three Russians, two Europeans and a Chinese man - have agreed to do

just that in a project that will try to simulate a mission to the Red Planet.

The Mars500 study begins on Thursday at a medical institute in Moscow.

Scientists say the experiment will help them understand how humans would cope

on a long journey to another world.

The project has been designed to be as realistic as possible even though some

elements - such as the weightless conditions of spaceflight - cannot be

recreated here on Earth.

"They will have to cope with limited consumables, for example," said Dr Martin

Zell from the European Space Agency, a key partner in the project.

Continue reading the main story

When the very first human steps on Mars, I will be able to say, 'yeah, I helped

do that'

Diego Urbina European Mars500 participant

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"That means everything will be onboard at the start. There will be no re-load,

re-supply whatsoever. It will be like a real mission."

The "spaceship" is based at Moscow's Institute of Biomedical Problems and

comprises a series of interconnected steel canisters. The total interior volume

is about 550 cubic metres.

Four of the tubes provide the living and working environment on the "journey"

to and from Mars. Their interior has been decorated with wood panelling to give

the cylinders a more homely feel.

A fifth module is a mock-up of the Red Planet itself, an enclosed room with a

floor covered in rocks and sand.

THE LAYOUT OF THE MARS500 'SPACESHIP'

Mars 500 facility (BBC/Esa)

MEDICAL MODULE: The 12m-long cylinder acts as the laboratory. Should a

crewmember become ill, he can be isolated and treated here

HABITABLE MODULE: The main living quarters. The 20m-long module has beds, a

galley, a social area. It also acts as the main control room

LANDING MODULE: This will only be used during the 30-day landing operation.

There is room only for the three crewmembers who will visit the 'surface'

STORAGE MODULE: The 24m-long module is divided into four compartments, to store

food and other supplies, to house a greenhouse, a gym a refrigeration unit

SURFACE MODULE: To walk across the soil and rocks of Mars, crewmembers must put

on Orlan spacesuits and pass through an airlock

About half-way through the mission, three of the crew will have to "land" on

this "surface" and walk about on it while dressed in heavy space suits.

The "cosmonauts" will be commanded by 38-year-old marine engineer and astronaut

trainer Alexey Sitev, who has only recently been married.

His compatriots - Sukhrob Kamolov (32) and Alexander Smoleevskiy (33) - have

medical backgrounds. The two Europeans in the group - Diego Urbina (27) and

Romain Charles (31) - are engineers by training.

The Chinese citizen, Yue Wang, the youngest member of the crew at 26, has a

"day job" training Chinese astronauts.

105-day experiment (IBMP) Near a hundred experiments will be performed during

the "journey"

Colombian-Italian Diego Urbina said his motivation came from his desire to work

in space research.

"I'm also very interested in being a part of the story of getting humans to

Mars," he told BBC News. "When the very first human steps on Mars, I will be

able to say, 'yeah, I helped do that'. That will make me feel very proud."

Scientific investigations during the experiment will assess the effect that

isolation has on various psychological and physiological aspects such as

stress, hormone levels, sleep quality, mood and the benefits of dietary

supplements.

Dr Berna van Baars, from the Free University Medical Center, Amsterdam,

Holland, is a principal investigator on Mars500.

"We expect Mars500 to have Earth applications, in understanding group dynamics

connected to isolation and loneliness, for example," she said.

"I hope it will also help us understand better some groups, such as those

elderly people who are isolated in their homes. It should tell us about coping

behaviours."

The spaceship itself will come under scrutiny, also, as the crew monitor their

surroundings to see which types of bacteria take hold and thrive in the

enclosed space.

Oraln spacesuits (IBMP) The experiment even simulates surface operations at the

Red Planet

All of the results of these investigations will have to be emailed to "mission

control" as the organisers of the project intend to introduce a 20-minute,

one-way time-delay in communications to mirror the real lag in sending messages

over the vast distance between Mars and Earth.

"Everything will be done in a telemedicine environment, where the crew has to

do the analysis and we receive the data by telemetry," said Dr Zell, who heads

up Europe's space station utilisation programme.

This 520-day mock mission with its 30 days of "surface operations" is the final

phase of the three-part Mars500 project.

There have already been two smaller studies, one lasting 14 days and another

taking 105 days to complete.

Space agencies describe Mars as the "ultimate destination" for human explorers.

However, they do not possess the technology to complete such an endeavour and

are unlikely have it for many years yet.