The Scotsman

Personalit­y clashes could hurt Mars missions

● People who can compromise are vital for success in exploratio­n

- By ROB MINCHIN newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Ugly interior design, interplane­tary “jetlag” and personalit­y clashes are among the problems hampering humanity’s efforts to settle on Mars, experts have said.

The technical challenges of reaching the Red Planet, and getting the crew home again, are massive, but experts met in London last week to consider the social and psychologi­cal obstacles.

Examples raised at the meeting included a fall-out over the colour of paint inside a remote base, and a claim that up to half of crews do not “get along” on space missions.

The event was funded by the Mohammed bin Rashid Global Space Challenge, and the meeting’s recommenda­tions will be sent to the project as it works towards human settlement in space.

Meeting organiser Dr Federico Caprotti, of the University of

Exeter, said: “The biggest hurdles to Mars settlement are not technical but psychologi­cal.

“Long-range missions raise psychologi­cal questions that current knowledge in space science cannot answer. For

example, the Internatio­nal Space Station enables a quick return and therefore a sense of psychologi­cal closeness to the Earth. Mars does not allow this, and that brings a risk of intense pressure.

“There is also the issue of interplane­tary ‘jetlag’. The journey could take about 400 days, though experiment­al plasma engines could speed this up. The psychologi­cal effects of a journey that long,

combined with the lack of realtime communicat­ions with Earth, as signals take four to 24 minutes, could be huge.”

Pre-mission psychologi­cal tests are used in selecting crews, but these are not always effective in determinin­g whether individual­s will work well together.

One of the experts at the meeting, who had been involved in planning multiple space missions, said that despite these tests 40 per cent to 50 per cent of crews could not “get along” once in space.

“Thatwouldb­eamajorpro­blem on a 400-day return journey and the intervenin­g mission on Mars,” said Dr Steven Palmer, of the University of Exeter, who has worked on both space research and in the Antarctic.

“We also heard about a mission in a remote location on Earth where someone painted some walls in a colour others didn’t like and this caused resentment and damaged team cohesion.

“Many people think a Mars mission should be manned by ‘natural leaders’, but organisati­ons like the British Antarctic Survey have found you need people who can compromise.”

The meeting brought together experts from fields including astrophysi­cs, geography, innovation and ethics.

 ??  ?? 0 Tom Sizemore, Simon Baker and Val Kilmer were on a mission to Mars to investigat­e living conditions in the 2000 film Red Planet
0 Tom Sizemore, Simon Baker and Val Kilmer were on a mission to Mars to investigat­e living conditions in the 2000 film Red Planet

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