Gulf News

A mission to Mars in the near future is realistic’’

ASTRONAUTS TRAVELLING TO THE RED PLANET FACE A TRIP THAT WOULD TAKE BETWEEN ONE AND THREE YEARS

- Christiane Heinicke | —AFP&AP Crew member from Germany AFP

The six people who went into isolation for a year in Hawaii to help Nasa plan for a mission to Mars emerged on Sunday, happy to breathe fresh air and meet new people.

The team was based on a barren, northern slope of Mauna Loa, living inside a dome that is 11 metres in diameter and six metres tall.

French astrobiolo­gist Cyprien Verseux said that he was “feeling excited” about being in the open and eating fresh food again.

The most challengin­g aspect of the experiment was the monotony, he said in a Periscope interview by organisers posted on Twitter.

Crew members experience­d no seasons inside the dome, and were able to go outside only dressed in spacesuits.

Neverthele­ss he was upbeat about the experiment results.

“A mission to Mars in the near future is realistic,” he said. “The technical and psychologi­cal problems can be overcome.”

The crew also included a German physicist and four Americans — a pilot, an architect, a doctor/journalist and a soil scientist.

The dome was located in a place with no animals and little vegetation around. The team locked themselves in on August 28, 2015.

The men and women had their own small rooms, with space for a sleeping cot and desk, and spent their days eating food like powdered cheese and canned tuna. They had limited access to the internet.

Nasa’s current technology can send a robotic mission to the Red Planet in eight months, but any astronauts that would travel to Mars face a trip that would take between one and three years.

A typical current stint for an astronaut aboard the orbiting Internatio­nal Space Station is six months.

Christiane Heinicke, a crew member from Germany, said the scientists were able to find their own water in a dry climate.

“Showing that it works, you can actually get water from the ground that is seemingly dry. It would work on Mars and the implicatio­n is that you would be able to get water on Mars from this little greenhouse construct,” she said.

Tristan Bassingthw­aighte, a doctor of architectu­re candidate at University of Hawaii, served as the crew’s architect.

You can actually get water from the ground that is seemingly dry. It would work on Mars and the implicatio­n is that you would be able to get water on Mars from this little greenhouse construct.”

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 ??  ?? Above: The HI-SEAS habitat on the northern slope of Mauna Loa in Hawaii. A six-member crew lived in isolation here as part of the University of Hawaii’s fourth Hawaii Space Exploratio­n Analog and Simulation, or Hi-Seas, project.
Left: Crew members...
Above: The HI-SEAS habitat on the northern slope of Mauna Loa in Hawaii. A six-member crew lived in isolation here as part of the University of Hawaii’s fourth Hawaii Space Exploratio­n Analog and Simulation, or Hi-Seas, project. Left: Crew members...

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