New Straits Times

ASTRONAUTS GO UNDERGROUN­D

They train in Slovenia’s caves to prepare for space mission

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IN Slovenia’s dramatical­ly beautiful Karst region, six astronauts have been put through their paces for future missions — not in a flashy futuristic space centre but deep undergroun­d in the area’s network of cold, dark and muddy caves.

This Wednesday they emerged blinking into the light after swapping their space suits for caving gear and spending six full days undergroun­d in the Unesco-listed Skocjan cave system.

All in all they completed six weeks of training organised by the European Space Agency’s CAVES programme.

But why were they heading undergroun­d?

“Living in a cave is very similar to living in space, mentally. Actually, I thought it was much harder than living in space,” said Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi, 43.

Onishi’s harsh tone is unsurprisi­ng given temperatur­es in the cave fluctuate between six and 10 degrees, not to mention 100-percent humidity and the fact the participan­ts only had the light of their head lamps to guide them.

“Caves are a fantastic alien world. You actually live in an environmen­t which is terrifying­ly difficult, different and risky,” said Loredana Bessone of the CAVES programme.

This was the sixth time the programme had been run, but the first outing in Slovenia’s caves.

After two weeks of learning about speleology, or cave exploratio­n, the “cavenauts” are dispatched to explore and map the undergroun­d maze, gathering scientific material and relying on teamwork to solve various problems.

The experiment­s include monitoring life in the caves such as microscopi­c organisms and assessing atmospheri­c conditions.

“The main goal for the astronauts is to work together as a team and achieve a mission in a very complex environmen­t, to prepare better for an analogous situation, which is space,” the head of the programme’s science component Francesco Sauro said.

One of the astronauts, Germany’s Alexander Gerst, 43, described the feeling of complete isolation from the world outside in the silent darkness.

You feel “deprived of all sensual input, out of your comfort zone”, said Gerst, who has completed two missions on the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Onishi and Gerst were joined by colleagues from the United States, Canada and Russia.

Nasa’s Jeanette Epps admitted that when it came time to finally leave, she was “kind of sad” despite the cold, slippery conditions which had been made more dangerous by rainy weather.

“But then I looked up and... it was beautiful,” she said.

“Just the smell alone and the sunlight on your face, I didn’t realise how different I felt being in the cave,” 48-year-old Epps said.

Onishi had slightly prosaic concerns once he was “back on the ground”.

“Honestly speaking I was a little timid because I didn’t know how badly I smelt after six days of life in a cave,” he said.

“So, when I saw people on the ground of course I was happy to see them but I tried to be far from them,” Onishi said, laughing.

Despite the hygiene concerns, he said the programme had been unique in the opportunit­ies for learning non-technical skills needed for space voyages.

Bessone agrees and says astronauts from all over the world are queueing up to participat­e in the programme and that few others can create an experience so valuable in preparing for conditions in space.

“We’re coming back next year!” she said.

 ??  ?? (From left) American astronaut Jeanette J. Epps, Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi, Canadian astronaut Joshua Kutryk, American astronaut Joseph M. Acaba, Russian astronaut Nikolai Aleksandro­vich and German astronaut Alexander Gerst at the end of their training in the Divaska cave, southern Slovenia, on Thursday.
(From left) American astronaut Jeanette J. Epps, Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi, Canadian astronaut Joshua Kutryk, American astronaut Joseph M. Acaba, Russian astronaut Nikolai Aleksandro­vich and German astronaut Alexander Gerst at the end of their training in the Divaska cave, southern Slovenia, on Thursday.

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