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NASA Mars United States

Isolated NASA Team Ends Year-Long Mars Simulation In Hawaii (bbc.com) 176

An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes the BBC: A team of six people have completed a Mars simulation in Hawaii, where they lived in near isolation for a year. Since August 29th, 2015, the group lived in close quarters in a dome, without fresh air, fresh food or privacy... Having survived their year in isolation, the crew members said they were confident a mission to Mars could succeed. "I can give you my personal impression which is that a mission to Mars in the close future is realistic," Cyprien Verseux, a crew member from France, told journalists. "I think the technological and psychological obstacles can be overcome."

The team consisted of a French astro-biologist, a German physicist and four Americans -- a pilot, an architect, a journalist and a soil scientist... the six had to live with limited resources, wear a space-suit when outside the dome, and work to avoid personal conflicts. They each had a small sleeping cot and a desk inside their rooms. Provisions included powdered cheese and canned tuna.

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Isolated NASA Team Ends Year-Long Mars Simulation In Hawaii

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  • Provisions included powdered cheese and canned tuna.

    And the knowledge that if anything went wrong the "experiment" could be ended in a matter of minutes.

    • Re:Provisions (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 29, 2016 @08:51AM (#52789133)

      Provisions included powdered cheese and canned tuna.

      And the knowledge that if anything went wrong the "experiment" could be ended in a matter of minutes.

      If you do the test with all the risks of the real mission you might just as well do the real mission.
      The point of a test like this is to make sure that you didn't forget to pack something, not to do the real mission without accomplishing anything.

      • True, but referring strictly to the psychological component, where the crew member said he was confident they could do it, he also had in the back of his head that he wasn't really trapped on a spaceship or planet whose atmosphere -or lack of one- would kill him dead in minutes, so the stress isn't exactly the same. Still, agreed it's a good, necessary step.
    • Provisions included powdered cheese and canned tuna.

      And the knowledge that if anything went wrong the "experiment" could be ended in a matter of minutes.

      This is true of every simulation, of course. When a pilot flies a Boeing 777 simulator, they don't die if the simulator crashes. When the army does wargame exercises, the red team doesn't die when their side gets bombed. That's why they're called "simulations".

    • by tomhath ( 637240 )

      Someone modded me Troll? Seriously, you don't think that knowing the experiment can be ended makes a huge difference in the subjects' stress level?

      As mentioned elsewhere here, sailors in any ocean voyage prior to the early 20th century, or some of the early Arctic or Antarctic explorations are far better examples. Even in recent times a long ocean voyage can drive a person crazy [wikipedia.org]

  • by Ecuador ( 740021 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @06:45AM (#52788615) Homepage

    Was this really necessary? We've had people on ISS go on for almost a year, the Russians made a ground-based test lasting for a year an a half and if you want to go to even harder simulations of solitary missions, we've had many Slashdot members go on for years isolated in front of a screen (let's call it mars spaceship control center) without fresh water or fresh food (only carbonated sodas and reheated pizza)... right there in their mom's basement. And actually many of them were in a ground-braking 2-level simulation, as they were simulating a mission to mars through KSP at the same time!

    • by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @06:59AM (#52788665) Homepage

      You do understand that the point is that those people should come out without debilitating psychological disorders, right?

      • Also, we expect some level of productivity / social value our of our astronauts.

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        ... or you may find out the people best adapted to a Mars mission are people with characteristics which are seen as socially debilitating.

        • Somehow I suspect a half-dozen socially debilitated people forced to live together in a single small habitat for a year or three with no real options for escape or privacy would *not* turn out well...

          • by hey! ( 33014 )

            Depends on the nature of the "disability". We judge disability by how well people function in society as it currently exists. It doesn't mean that they can't function in an artificially engineered society (e.g. one consisting of autistic spectrum people).

            • Depends on the nature of the "disability". We judge disability by how well people function in society as it currently exists. It doesn't mean that they can't function in an artificially engineered society (e.g. one consisting of autistic spectrum people).

              And just think of the great parties they'd throw!

    • by bluefoxlucid ( 723572 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @07:20AM (#52788767) Homepage Journal
      What about Antarctic Research Station 1?
      • I think the support team voted down that idea as not realistic enough. Support team's job being to monitor wave and bikini activities at all the beaches to ensure the safety and isolation of the crew.

    • by idji ( 984038 )
      Plus the 16-19th century was full of many time long term boat trips in confined spaces.
      • by JoeMerchant ( 803320 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @08:47AM (#52789115)

        It's a good analogy, but on a boat you at least have open-air - and even if you don't jump overboard and take a swim for a year, you could if you really wanted to.

        I think a nuclear submarine is a better analogy, though they (and long boat trips) tend to have much larger crews and more living space.

        • I think a nuclear submarine is a better analogy, though they (and long boat trips) tend to have much larger crews and more living space.

          NASA keeps designing Apollo over and over again. They're not even relevant anymore. Missions to Mars will be groups of up to 100 people [wikipedia.org] preceded by approximately 2.5 million pounds of gear and supplies in cargo-only launches. Elon Musk is not planning on boots-and-flags missions. Elon Musk is not planning on a rinky-dink under-provisioned, ill-informed Plymouth Rock-style expedition that can barely do more than sit and starve. Elon Musk is planning on building a fully reusable heavy launch vehicle that

        • by idji ( 984038 )
          Woman, children and slaves generally did NOT have access to open air even in the 1830s, but then they generally were on trips of up to only 5 months from England to Australia or New Zealand. I think jumping ship in the South Atlantic is not any different than stealing a spacesuit and leaving the airlock - you'll die in about the same time.
          • I'm thinking we want to deliver our astronauts to Mars in slightly better physical and mental condition than c1830s slaves and steerage passengers on ocean voyages to the penal colony.

      • Plus the 16-19th century was full of many time long term boat trips in confined spaces.

        Where officers were allowed to flog the crew to maintain order and work performance, even the occasional hanging of the truly unruly. I expect NASA wants a more relaxed environment.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Well, it depends on what your research objectives are. ISS is in some ways a better model, in some ways a worse one. It's better in that it's in space with microgravity, but ISS crew members rotate in and out. Even if individuals spend the equivalent time of a Mars mission on the ISS there will be new faces, a constantly changing research workload, and the ever-changing panorama of the Earth below.

      So it's not a very accurate model of the social dynamics of a Mars mission where people are cooped up in a ca

  • Phase 2 testing (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @07:05AM (#52788687)

    Now they need to try again underwater. Have to deal with pressurization issues of the living areas, a truly hostile environment outside, and of course the conscious realization on the part of the team that if things go wrong they go really wrong. Just adding in the additional stress of knowing there is a good possibility of dying if things go wrong could really change the psychological affects of the isolation and could cause real problems as more time is spent in isolation.

    Of course, it should go without saying to make sure that, should this kind of study be done, make sure the team down there stays away from any perfectly spherical objects they might run across. That tends to lead to bad outcomes in underwater habitats.

    • ... Or perhaps even better: sailors' personal diaries. Mankind has been exploring this planet for millennia. Every sea-faring nation sent out explorer ships at one time or another. Groups of men packed onto a boat with little privacy, not knowing whether they'd ever reach a destination or what they'd find. With the constant danger of disease, water / food / vitamin shortages, going overboard in a storm, fights with fellow sailors, etc etc. And no communication with the outside world for months.

      Plenty of

    • by wbr1 ( 2538558 )
      You should try prison. Social isolation, pressure, things can go REALLY wrong, limited resources and food....
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Bohnanza ( 523456 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @07:30AM (#52788805)
    "They each had a small sleeping cot and a desk inside their rooms. Provisions included powdered cheese and canned tuna."

    So I am fully qualified for a mission to mars?

  • by doug141 ( 863552 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @07:36AM (#52788829)

    One of the participants said his reason for volunteering for the mission was the great opportunity to "act like an astronaut for a year." I think the motivation and psyche profile of dangerous-mission astronauts is likely to be very different.

    • Except that there is also selection bias when it comes to real Astronauts. Indeed, they do NOT want a random sampling. That would be pretty terrible.

      The experiment isn't perfect. Ideally, we'd also have a set of ~10 groups all going at once. But it's close enough to be useful. And a sample size of one still tells us something. And I imagine anything they ran into within the last year and documented will be referenced by psychologists in various papers for decades to come.

  • Missed opportunity (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Overzeetop ( 214511 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @07:55AM (#52788913) Journal

    What they should have done was to inform them on day 355 that their mission was being unexpectedly extended for 26 additional months and gauge their reaction.

    • by tnk1 ( 899206 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @01:10PM (#52790721)

      Let's not be needlessly cruel here. They're only going to Mars, not deploying to Iraq.

    • If they want this to be taken seriously as a simulated Mars mission, it should have been considerably longer - two to three years. With current propulsion technology, travel time alone could exceed a year, before you add in time actually spent on Mars exploring (and waiting for a favourable launch window to return).

      Maybe they just figure that getting funding for an ultra-expensive, inefficient, all-chemical propulsion mission is politically impossible, anyway? (As it should be.)

      Still, even with a high delta

  • Submarines (Score:4, Interesting)

    by flyingfsck ( 986395 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @08:14AM (#52788991)
    Nuclear submariners do this all the time. Why is it necessary for NASA to do these 'experiments?
    • Where's the nuclear sub with a crew of only 6, living space that small, and mission duration of >11 months?

      We're all stuck on this planet together, indefinitely, and that goes wrong often enough - things change with scale.

    • by tnk1 ( 899206 )

      Experience in subs IS useful, but your normal SSN or SSBN is very populated, and significantly better supplied than any Mars-bound ship is going to be.

      And if worst comes to worst, you can at least sometimes surface a sub that is in real trouble.

      More to the point, it is significantly more expensive to run this test in an actual submarine that it would be to have it in a building in Hawaii.

      Folks, when we're closer to the technical hurdles being figured out, we probably will have the Antarctic training and/or

    • Nuclear submariners do this all the time.

      When was the last time a nuclear submarine went on a two-year mission without shore leave or resupply, or even without surfacing?

  • Just to Clarify (Score:5, Informative)

    by drewmoney ( 1133487 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @08:42AM (#52789079)
    From https://snowballschanceonmars.... [wordpress.com]

    "Just to clarify, we don’t have cheese powder. To whoever said that we live on tuna and cheese powder we have freeze dried cheese that rehydrates into delicious real cheese. Not to mention our numerous homemade cheese and yogurt cultures (Haans, Phil, Geno) and sourdough starter (Bob). Yes, we have tuna, but it’s wild caught and comes in virgin olive oil. We also have FD chicken (my favorite!), ham, turkey, and many kinds of beef. There is an abundant supply of dehydrated/FD carrots, onions, tomatoes, peas, corn, celery, potato, berries, peaches (mine, mine, mine, mine), bananas, apples, and cherries. We eat the same foods as people who cook their meals and don’t eat takeout"
  • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @08:43AM (#52789081)

    Whereas people are making valid points about the flaws in this experiment, I don't think anyone at NASA thinks that this is a perfect dress rehearsal. It's about baby steps.

    You can bring in the real-life high paid astronauts, build expensive underwater, or Himalayan bases, give them less sense of security, etc later.

    If you think this is the only experiment that will happen you're mistaken, they're going to run similar tests numerous times. This experiment was about watching just basic psychology- start with a few factors, add some more, see the differences. See what causes the breaking point that would lead to a failed mission and try to alleviate it.

    Many people here are programmers. You don't write an entire program in its entirety and then test it. You build chunks and test them as you go along. This was step one.

  • ...at Hawaii. Really how stupid is this? You chose Hawaii?
    • I gotta admit, I was thinking the same thing. Y'know, Hawaii, Mars, very similar places.

      Don't get me wrong--the people involved in the experiment are indoors. So it didn't really matter where it was.

      That said, "Why Hawaii?" It sounds like some researcher decided he wanted to spend a year in Hawaii. "Yeah, we're testing psychological reactions. Give me money to live in Hawaii for a year."

  • Bet they stink
    • Nah, they had a shower allocation of 8-minutes per week (ref: below video at 2:33.) If you don't take a Hollywood shower, that'll get you reasonably clean every other day.

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tf7IEVTDjng [youtube.com]
      • > If you don't take a Hollywood shower,

        Wet skin. Lather soap. Rinse.

        If you really had to shower daily (which is nice in close quarters but not exactly required to sustain life), you could get by on maybe 30 seconds of water.

        If you have a system to instantly recycle the shower water for the 'wet' part, you could use the entire 30 seconds for the 'rinse'.

  • by I4ko ( 695382 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @09:59AM (#52789463)
    It would be interesting to know if the guys were keto adapted at the end. Fats have more than twice the energy of carbs and carbs for the same volume and weight can be synthesized from protein. So sending proteins and fats only will reduce the volume and weight of food supplies quite a bit. Canned tuna if there was no sugar is actually just that, but powdered protein requires even less storage. I can't find any word on that; does anyone know?
  • I wonder if VR might help with the privacy issue.

    While you wouldn't actually be distanced from everyone else, a VR headset and noise cancelling headphones might be enough to get the feeling of having time to yourself.

  • Did they have powdered toast to put their powdered cheese on?

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Monday August 29, 2016 @01:28PM (#52790855) Journal

    Nothing at all like Mars: check.
    Fails to be in any way convenient for researchers and "support" projects: check
    Justifies a lot of people going to Hawaii paid for by the US taxpayer: check

    Well, I guess that's clear enough.

  • Since August 29th, 2015, the group lived in close quarters in a dome, without fresh air, fresh food or privacy.

    So basically, like being married with kids.

  • I want to lie, Shipwrecked in-comatose
    Drinking fresh mango juice
    Gold fish shoals
    Nibbling at my toes


    Just because, Hawaii.

The opossum is a very sophisticated animal. It doesn't even get up until 5 or 6 PM.

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