The Space Station As a Simulated Mars Mission? 48
astroengine writes "NASA is looking at using the International Space Station as a testbed for a human mission to Mars, beginning with a planned week-long simulation to be staged next summer. Preliminary tests would involve working on systems that give astronauts more autonomy, perhaps culminating in a full mission analog, sealing a crew inside a separate module of the station with minimal interaction with the rest of the station and mission control. 'We want to use the space station as a way to get smarter about what a mission to Mars or a mission to an asteroid might look like,' space station flight controller Pete Hasbrook told Discovery News."
Hasn't this been done already (Score:1)
Apart from that Ms. Lincoln... how was the show? (Score:3)
That's not a quickly overlooked triffle. Low gravity causes loss of bone and muscle density and allows organs to shift about in ways that could make it extremely difficult to do the work an mars explorer would be required to accomplish in the first few weeks. Think about it, not only do they have to survive land-fall (sudden jarring impact after months losing bone and muscle mass -- remember, there's no water or runways on Mars to take the edge off that landing) but they th
Re: (Score:2)
Because people like to see people go and achieve things..
The trip to mars will have robots. Lots of them probably, but also people.
People can do things robots can't.
The issues you describe are engineering issues, and not insurmountable to solve, just costly.
While we work on that, we should be sending more robots, and once we have a mission at the point where we are building a ship, we should seen tons of supplies to mars.
Re: (Score:2)
"apart from the gravity aspect"
That's not a quickly overlooked triffle.
I would agree, however, the point of the experiment in the aforementioned article was to see if humans could feasibly be confined for a duration of a trip to Mars. The reason gravity is not an issue here is that we already have data from past experience in this domain. Take for example Expedition 14 to the ISS ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expedition_14 [wikipedia.org]). This expedition lasted for 215 days, in which two crew members were weightless that entire time. In comparison, this article is talking about spending
Re: (Score:2)
We already have people having lived close together in very cramped conditions for long periods of time, like say submarines.
We already have plenty people that have been on very isolated research outputs with little to no chance of evacuation.
We already have people having stayed in space as long or longer than the proposed Mars trips.
I think the human aspect is highly exaggerated and a smokescreen for what we don't have. Launch, transfer and landing vehicle, mars habitat and likewise for the return trip. I t
Re: (Score:2)
Gravity is a huge thing.
Although, a better idea would be to build a station for the task. One that you could apply rockets to, for propulsion to Mars.
That way, it's not just a feasibility thing, but a dry run as well - and you could use it for the mission to Mars.
Re: (Score:2)
Shorter ISS mission then earth simulation (Score:2)
Adjust the ISS stay so that the astronauts bodies weakened condition (from lack of gravity) vs earth's gravity matches what they would be like on Mars. Since Mar's gravity is less than Earth's a shorter stay in orbit would be required, perhaps 2-3 months instead of 6.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't agree with AC's comment about waste, but I would think Venus would be a better planet to visit, there is more similarity with Earth, while still needing many things solved before being possible. A settlement up in the clouds is doable and would be near the same temperature/pressure range we are used to, it is just a matter of doing it.
Re: (Score:2)
except humans can't land on venus and survive.
the atmospheic pressure is too great and the temperature is hot enough to soften steel, and melt anything not metal.
Re: (Score:2)
A settlement up in the clouds is doable and would be near the same temperature/pressure range we are used to, it is just a matter of doing it.
Did you read my post, or just reply out of hand?
Re: (Score:2)
And how do you enter the atmosphere and stop half way down?
build a glider that can lift you back up to the altitudes needed?
deploy a parachute and a ballon?
not being making fun of you but answer the real questions first. while in concept it might work, the fact is it is a whole lot harder to deal with the thicker atmosphere of venus, where heating will be higher on orbital entry, then try to stop in the middle of the air.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Antarctica (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
well, one of the things they need to test, is how something functions on the trip to mars, which means near weightlessness.
You can't test a floating robot at the antarctic. .. well maybe the antigravityartic
and depending on the time of the year, the ISS can be easier to et to the the Antarctic.
Promotional tie-in to the new Total Recall movie (Score:1)
Artificial Gravity (Score:1)
Where did this idiot learn English? (Score:1)
"as a way to get smarter about"
Huh?
AS A WAY TO GET SMARTER ABOUT?
Does he mean "to learn more about"? Or is that too 'normal speak' for him, so he thought he'd make up some 'management speak'. (You know, idiocies like "speak TO the paper". You can't speak TO a paper, you can only speak ABOUT it. Or like "in order to LEVERAGE so and so". Leverage is a NOUN, not a verb.)
Re: (Score:2)
I wonder when that particular usage made it into the dictionary. I recall it coming about during the dotcom era of the late 90s by marketing people instead of the word "use".
prepare for no resupply vessels or disqualify sim (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah..no. It's to test specific things, not a complete Mars test. and no you don't let them die.
What are you, an animal?
Re: (Score:1)
No but as soon as you have to replace key equipment to prevent death, then the Mars simulation is disqualified. Specific test that needs to be done is a full duration test (i.e. testing an emergency 24-hr generator has to be tested 24 hours, not 10 minutes).
Re: (Score:2)
When they were talking about using the Orion as a Mars vehicle, they meant that it was the part that the crew rode up to the Mars transit vehicle, and then rode back down to Earth when they came home.
Re: (Score:1)
I wonder how serious they were on this vehicle, that "Apollo on steriods" never impressed me that much except it would be the last manned (HSF) spacecraft this country would produce. oh wait, Elon may come up with something...
Err... (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know. Maybe the MOON would make a good testbed!
Doesn't it seem like all we do anymore is prognosticate about what we are going to do, but when the time actually comes to get going we just pull the funding?
Open source (Score:1)
Maybe someone should write a package about life in a mars colony. They could allow you a first person pount of view, with some limited interaction with the enviornment. We could call it something like "Doing Our Own Mission". Maybe just abbreviate it for simplicity.
Funny they don't mention Mars 500 (Score:2)
Mars 500 timeline [esa.int]
Only half a year more and then they'll be let out of their Moscow container!
Bummer (Score:3)
So, I guess this means they've given up on a using a rotating space ship for the trip to Mars? That's disappointing, it would make growing food easier and keep the people healthier.
Landing people on Mars as a first priority seems silly. We should build a rotating Mars space station here in an appropriate orbit, have Space X push it to Mars, then, once we have a space station in orbit of Mars, start attempting landings. Maybe the first crews never go down to the planet, they just do science from LMO. Then, send landers/ascenders to Mars as needed to keep the traffic going up and down. Preferably mostly down, so they can build a rocket facility on Mars before the end of the century.
And, before we send one of those rotating space stations to Mars, we should have one here, for practice. Maybe with real commercial lift about to become a reality it'll turn out that Branson gets one built before NASA.
Crawl, walk, run, in that order. I'm not all that eager to send a bunch of sickened guys in a tin can so they can plant a flag on Mars.
Re: (Score:2)
Or they need the data from this mission to show that they absolutely need a rotating vehicle for a Mars trip. There is so much research and study that needs to happen before any time of Mars mission that it's really too early to tell how they're going to do it.
Re: (Score:3)
I'm pretty sure they have reams of proof that your statement is false, and you have none that it's true.
Re: (Score:2)
Huh. Someone alert the ISS crews that it's now a one-way trip.
How About Someplace Closer? (Score:2)
Travellers to Mars are dead-meat (Score:1)