Russian Scientists Plan Simulated Mission to Mars
EzRag writes "According to this article in New Scientist, Russian scientists are preparing for a simulated mission to Mars, with six cosmonauts crammed into approx. 400 sq. meters for the length of the (simulated) journey. They'll bring with them all the food they'd need, and will recycle air and water. They will not, however, be exposed to simulated solar radition."
to delay the communications by the amount of time that the distance between the ship and earth would be simulated to be.
I know it would be frustrating as hell to the people on the outside to do that (when they know they don't have to.) But it could have significant effects psychologically to have the astronauts able to communicate with earth, but only incredibly slowly. If they had a mechanical problem that they needed to msg home for help on how to fix for example, they'd have to wait many minutes before they got the info.
As well, learning more about how to handle the delay will lead to more efficient, better written requests and reports since the "astronauts" wouldn't be able to chat in realtime with earth. It would be almost like a return to the days of communicating with the pony express.
~ kjrose
Didn't I read a short story about this? Or was it the Chinese who were doing it?
I sure hope this experiement goes better than that one did.
Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
No word yet if they'll have a simulated Duma suddenly cut the simulated exploration budget half way through the simulated mission.
Crammed into a windowless room with no contact with humans other than by a video screen and other communications devices.
Where have I heard about this before.
Oh yeah, my job.
I ran this same simulation many times, as a kid. I had to call over the neighbor kids to have them play the parts of the Martians.
No solar radiation.
No absense of gravity.
No micrometeorite punctures.
Let's see, what else won't be an accurate simulation?
This sounds to me like it might be good for psychological research, and possible some life support systems work, but as for really simulating a trip....
I'd rather see somebody, anybody, start working on a real, permanently manned lunar base. You can at least BEGIN to simulate a trip then, while still being only a few days away from home if things go wrong.
But the Moon is no longer considered "sexy" by The Powers That Be.
www.eFax.com are spammers
Experts say that once they have found a crack team of 2 dimensional cosmonauts able to live in the 400 square meters provided, they will have solved one of the major problems of space travel, namely the cumbersome insistence of previous space travellers on 3 the provision of dimensional living spaces.
A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
If you don't think this is a problem, check out the recent findings of bone density loss, especially in women, in peer-reviewed journals.
It's neat to see any country doing the research that has little practical appliation and doesn't get them any "Firstness! (or on the moon, or in orbit) notoriety." It leaves me with hope that the days when the space program was a thinly veiled military weapons development program (in many countries), are behind us, and that the research that continues, is work toward the more noble goal of exploring a little more of the universe than an 8000 mile across ball of mud has to offer.
Pray, could I enlist characters out of my wife's copy of The Sims?
This sig no verb.
a friend of mine in finland said, from her first hand experience, that a lot of the certified doctors in modern day russia are still payed in potatos and vodka.
this is the case, and their govt is spending money on mars flight simulations?
Angry Russian citizens have planned simulated protests over the need to spend more money on domestic issues.
Will this be like the American simulated moon landing?
This may be overly semantic but isn't one of the benefirs of space travel that you can talk in volume instead of area. With the zero gravity environment you can effectivle get almost two rooms out of one since the roof can be used as another floor, as well as the walls since you can not really orient yourself up or down. Wouldn't this make quite a bit of difference in the mock situation? I mean it would give more room for both people and supplies. Perhaps they have found a way to get past this, but I do not see it.
Bet they never thought of that, they probably had some boring idea of testing what they could, one step at a time. Say, why don't we extend your brilliant observation, it would be much better to test everything at once, no reason to add just weightlessness to the test, why not let's test the whole kit and kaboodle all at once, radiation, electronics, rocket engines, guidance, political stability at home .... say, sounds just like the real thing, why don't we just run the whole damned mission without any partial testing, partial testing is for wimps and stupid people.
Infuriate left and right
comunication delays of 30 minutes? the sun is what? a couple light minutes away? was it 8 or am i confusing it with light seconds from the moon? anyway... imagine the lag... 30 minutes one way, 30 the other... thats something like 3600000 ms, good enough for a decent game of quake? definitely
I am very sucseptible to "let's have another drink"