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ESA Video: More than 105 days for Mars 500.​


---------- Post added at 04:02 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:50 PM ----------

ESA: "Thanks to Oliver and Cyrille"!

The recent letter from the Mars500 facility was written on 13 September, when the mission logged 105 days. This marks the duration of the precursor experiment in 2009, and therefore a good moment for Diego and Romain to take stock and think about the months to come.

If I think about '105 days', the first thing that comes to mind is two names: Oliver Knickel and Cyrille Fournier. They made our mission possible by successfully completing theirs: Mars 105, which ran from March to July 2009.

When I first met them in April this year we spent the whole of our first night talking about their mission, our mission and a hundred other things. One sentence from Oliver particularly struck me and made me realise what kind of challenge we were jumping into. He said: “If our mission had been 520 days long, we would still be inside the modules right now”. At that time these words were kind of scary for me.

If I look back at this first period, I would divide it into three parts:

Our first days were spent getting used to our environment for all our basic needs such as food, cleaning and so on. Our adaptability was our most important skill. The end of June and the month of July were focused on our 100 experiments. We were often in contact with the scientists to make sure that the data we would gather for more than a year and a half was okay. Over the last six weeks we have settled into a smooth routine, which allows us to spend more time on our personal projects.

Today we have reached the symbolic number of 105 days and Oliver’s sentence doesn’t feel frightening anymore. We take our isolation in succession of one day, plus one day, plus …

We don’t focus too much on the days left before we 'come back to Earth'. Instead, we spend all our energy trying to make everyday a good day. If anyone has a problem with an experiment, the other five of us are always ready to help. This state of mind hasn't changed for 105 days, and I’m sure that it will be the same for the next 415 days. Thanks to this amazing team spirit, I still enjoy being with the other crewmembers.

-Romain.


Even though, as Romain says, we are not fans of counting the elapsed and remaining days, I have a thing for considering – the 'chunks' of days. When we were at 50, I’d say to myself –“Ok, the whole mission is 10 times this much, and then we are done. Wait, 10 times this much? That will take forever!”

For some reason I feel like 100 days is a number I like way more. Even though objectively there is more than a year left, thinking that we will need only four more chunks of about 100 days to finish sounds great! Only now it feels like time does pass sort of fast.

I think it is a great opportunity for us to thank all the crew that stood here for 105 days so that our 520-day mission could run smoother. So, I'd like to send them a big hello. We are very grateful that Oliver and Cyrille have stayed in touch!

Being here during these 105 days has taught me different things. From the day to day life and relationship with the crew and mission control, to the science in the experiments, to the school courses that I follow via mp3s and books, to absolutely random stuff. For instance, thanks to Wang Yue, I learned that for dinner guests of honor in some parts of China are typically served camel that has a lamb inside that has a chicken inside that has an egg inside.

The day has, in general, slowed down a bit, so I try to change the routine whenever I can. This can be by doing different things, or by doing the same things in a different sequence if possible. In our remaining free time, we enjoy watching movies together and playing games. We enjoy our time together very much. In spite of our discipline and rigorousness doing the scientific work, we have an amazingly easygoing crew, which is usually a balance hard to get.

Of course you have to deal the fact that you don’t see other people or can’t talk 'live' with anyone else besides the crew. In that sense I’ve been experimenting with Twitter and it has been a really nice way to 'probe' the outside world and share what we do. I can’t update it live or very often, but it has worked fine. Writing the blog updates for the ESA website has been fun as well.

All in all, I‘ve enjoyed it so far, and hope that being here will continue to give us those little satisfactions and hope that we will keep being a team as cohesive and steady through the good and less good times! I think we’ve got what it takes.

-Diego.
 
ESA: "Diego and Romain answer your questions".

The Mars500 crew is answering your questions by email and the first answers are now here.

Questions are welcome from the members of the media and also from anyone else who his interested. As on a real trip to Mars this is not in real-time, questions will be relayed to them through 'mission control'.

Please think carefully about your question and keep it short - the best questions will be selected and sent to the crew to answer! They will answer as many as they can but also have a busy work schedule.

The address is: [email protected].

q/to mars500:
Hi,
have you brought any sci-fi books/movies involving space travelling (like Alien etc)? If so, what is it like to read/watch them while being part of this eksperiment?
Jarle, Norway

a/from romain:
Hello Jarle,
We have brought with us a lot of Sci-fi books and movies. Each time that we watch one of them, we always comment it. We are much more sensible to each detail of the film or of the book.
For example, we saw “2001: A Space Odyssee” a couple of weeks ago and I could really feel the loneliness and the monotony that the 2 main characters had to endure. I didn’t experience these feelings the first time that I saw this movie.
Romain

q/to mars500:
Dear Mars 500 Crew:
Thinking about you guys a lot. Wonder how you are doing?
May I be frank? I would find it very hard to be away from my wife for so long...May I ask: how are you coping with missing your loved ones, partners or wives?
I believe that this will deepen your personal relationships with them "back on earth"; what is important is the willingness to love, to continue to see it through, not merely the "loving", right?
In Great Admiration,
chaz mean
Miami, FL
USA


a/ from romain:
Hello Chaz,
Each of us has a different way to cope with the distance between us and our loved ones. I tend to write them a lot of messages. I tell them what is happening here and they tell me how life is going on outside.
During my studies I already spent several months away from my family so 107 days of isolation is still bearable. In one year, I’m not sure if I would have the same answer for you.
Romain

a/from diego:
I see what you mean, I think if I had wife and/or kids it would be much more difficult for me than it is already. However, there are guys in the crew who do have this kind of family and it looks like they are handling it extremely well.

It is not easy to leave out there all the people you love. Your observation is very insightful, because In my experience until now, yes, it does tighten your relationships with the people you can share this extremely particular experience with, and who are waiting for you to get out on the last day. The communication is difficult, but at the same time, I don’t usually write emails as long as I do now!
Diego

q/to mars500:
Good morning sir
Have you any kind of method to change the personal feeling of time??? Regards
Nick Saltabidas

a/from romain:
Hello Nick,
My method is very simple: I keep busy. On top of our daily work I planned other activities (review my physics lessons, continue to study the Russian language and play the guitar). I never have enough time to do everything!
Another important point is that, with the crew, we rarely talk about the days left. We just focus on the week to come.
Romain

a/ from diego:
Hello! If I understand well and you mean a way of seeing time pass faster, I do! I think time passes fast when I read or am very busy working on an experiment, or when I am working on a graphic design project in my free time. When I do this, I fell like time goes much faster.
If on the other hand, for some odd reason, I wanted to slow down time, I would spend more time in the thread mill! (one of our hardest exercise machines) It never seems to end when I am on it!
Thanks!
Diego

q/to mars500:
Hello Romain,
Just a note to wish you well from an old friend at Aston Martin. I was told what you are doing and I was very suprised.
I thought Sotira was a challenge but this is nearly out of this world !!!
I am going to the Red sea at the end of September on a live a board to do some diving. Can you receive pictures?
If you can, I will send some under water pics if you would like to see them .
Hope all is well
Best of luck
Nigel Turner, Aston Martin - Paint Engineer

a/from romain:
Hello Nigel,
It was a real pleasure to discover your message. Please send my best regards to all the people who remember me at Aston Martin.
I would be glad to receive your under water pictures. With them, you will make two persons happy because our commander (Alexey Sitev) is a professional diver and he already hanged several of his pictures on the walls.
Enjoy your holidays!
Romain

q/to mars500:
hola diego..un saludo desde cádiz de inma,juan y nuestra gatita aruca maría..que tal la comida que llevais?..cuidaros.

a/from diego
Hi, the food is great! Though there is some difficulty in repeating the same dishes often, and eating exactly what you need to, sometimes more than you would like! However we are coping with the situation rather well! Of course, it would be much better if we had Tortillas de Camarones from Cadiz!
Thanks

Hola! La comida es muy buena, aunque a veces es difícil repetir los mismos platos en intervalos de poco tiempo, y comer exactamente lo que te piden, que a veces es más de lo que quisieras. De cualquier manera hemos logrado adaptarnos bien! Por supuesto, sería mejor si pudiéramos comer Tortillas de Camarones !
Diego
 
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The barber shop on the way to Mars - Mars500 video diary 8.​
 
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Cool pictures from inside "Mars-bound spaceship" taken on the last Halloween. The participants will have to spend the next Halloween still inside their standing tin can.

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The simulated current position data:

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(today's picture is available here: http://193.233.61.44/meksh.html)
 
Mars-500 crew are nearing the summit of their mission, arrival at Mars! :)

Schedule of the events of the month-long crew separation: one half stays in the transfer 'vessel', another one simulates Mars landing (from Mars-500 blog):

Dates of the basic stages of works on Mars:
01.02.11 – Putting on Martian orbit and hatch opening in module EU-50
12.02.11 – Crew separation, hatch closing in module EU-50, undocking and landing on Mars
14.02.11 – The first appearance on the Martian surface. Participants - Alexander Smoleevsky and Diego Urbina.
18.02.11 – The second appearance on the Martian surface. Participants - Alexander Smoleevsky and Van Jue
22.02.11 – The third appearance on the Martian surface. Participants - Alexander Smoleevsky and Diego Urbina.
23.02.11 – Launch from the surface of Mars.
24.02.11 – Docking with the basic complex, the quarantine beginning
27.02.11 – The quarantine termination, hatch opening in module EU-150, Join of crews
01.03.11 – Hatch closing in module EU-50
 
One curious anomaly with the distances I noticed (I recorded them from the IMBP site every week) is that on 26/11 they are 54 527 000 km out from Mars, then a week later they are 5 163 000 km out, but the Earth distance didn't change much. Did they skip the simulation ahead to get to Mars quicker? :huh:

Earth to Mars travel distances (in km)
Misson day/date From Earth To Mars
14 (17/6/2010) 71 000 316 540 000
22 (25/6/2010) 138 500 306 846 000
29 (2/7/2010) 300 000 297 670 000
44 (16/7/2010) 1 457 000 279 657 000
58 (30/7/2010) 3 904 000 261 140 000
65 (6/8/2010) 5 467 000 250 386 000
75 (17/8/2010) 8 089 000 234 374 000
79 (20/8/2010) 9 471 000 227 019 000
93 (3/9/2010) 15 721 000 200 022 000
100 (10/9/2010) 19 266 000 87 267 000
107 (17/9/2010) 23 932 000 172 428 000
114 (27/9/2010) 28 475 000 159 870 000
125 (4/10/2010) 33 143 000 142 787 000
128 (8/10/2010) 36 852 000 130 852 000
135 (15/10/2010) 40 818 000 117 495 000
142 (22/10/2010) 44 380 000 104 461 000
149 (29/10/2010) 47 167 000 92 962 000
159 (8/11/2010) 50 160 000 78 268 000
162 (12/11/2010) 50 707 000 74 017 000
170 (19/11/2010) 51 991 000 62 896 000 177 (26/11/2010) 52 507 000 54 527 000 184 (3/12/2010) 52 659 000 5 163 000
191 (10/12/2010) 55 289 000 3 255 000
198 (17/12/2010) 58 309 000 1 907 000
205 (24/12/2010) 61 865 000 886 000
212 (31/12/2010) 65 897 000 265 000
226 (14/1/2011) 74 587 000 16 100
 
BBC News: Mars500 crew 'arrives at Red Planet' on simulated mission:
The crew of the Mars500 simulated mission to the Red Planet have reached a key milestone.

The six men, sealed since June inside steel containers representing a spacecraft, have "gone into orbit" at their destination.

Three of the group will now "descend" to the planet, don real spacesuits and walk on the "surface" of Mars.

{...}

 
The Telegraph:
ESA Portal: Mars500 ‘arrives’ in orbit around Mars:
2 February 2011

The first full-duration simulation of a manned voyage to Mars has reached a major milestone: the ‘spacecraft’ yesterday ‘arrived’ at Mars after 244 days of virtual interplanetary flight. Three crewmembers will ‘land’ on Mars on 12 February and make three sorties onto simulated martian terrain.

{...}

[table="head;width=400"]
Click on images for larger versions​



Diego Urbina with a computer simulation in the Mars500 facility.
Credits: ESA​
 ​



The Mars500 facility has no windows, but a laptop running Celestia, a freeware space simulation software, acts as a virtual window as the crew approached the Red Planet.
Credits: ESA​
 ​



Mars500 crewmembers testing the Russian Orlan suits before their mission started in early June 2010.
Credits: IBMP/ Oleg Voloshin​
 ​



The Mars terrain simulator of the Mars500 facility. The crew will drive a rover and place sensors during their sorties.
Credits: IBMP/ Oleg Voloshin​
 ​
[/table]​
 
The Mars terrain simulator of the Mars500 facility. The crew will drive a rover and place sensors during their sorties.

Uh Houston we've landed in what seems to be... a sandbox. :huh:
 
Todays ''EVA'' was one of the main headlines on BBC's Six O'Clock news tonight. Its good to see interest in spaceflight in the media!

---------- Post added at 06:17 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:16 PM ----------

 
Its a fake! They staged the Mars landing in a studio!
 
Its a fake Mars mission, but is it a fake fake Mars mission? There will be some people out there who would say the latter is true :P
 
And here's the full length video of the "EVA":


Although I like the reddish tint of their "Mars" suits, I wonder, how practical that might be? Wouldn't it be better to paint suits for Mars walking in acid blue or green, to make them better stand out in the environment? Or just keep them white for the same purpose?

This reddish colour makes me think if we are looking at just the opposite thing: field testing of camouflage coats for Mars!? :idea:
 
Its to spy on the Russians that have been there since the 50's obviously :p
 
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