6 men begin 520-day simulated Mars mission

Six men from Europe, Russia and China will on Thursday be voluntarily locked away in a module for almost one and a half years to simulate the effects of a mission to Mars.
An Italian, a Frenchman, three Russians and a Chinese man will spend the next 520 days in the 550 cubic metre isolation facility at a Moscow research institute when its hatch slams shut at 3.30 pm.
Like in a real Mars mission, the crew will have to survive on limited food rations like those used by real astronauts and their only communication with the outside world will be by email, with a delay of up to 40 minutes.
The hatch will only re-open when the experiment is over or if one of the all-male participants is forced to pull out. Controversially, no women have been selected for the experiment, called Mars 500. The volunteers, aged between 27 and 38, include a member of a real-life space programme and a civil engineer, though the scientists bristle at the idea that the experiment is an elaborate version of television’s Big Brother.
“It is not like Big Brother. We do not have surveillance, video cameras everywhere. We hope there will be no fights or scandals,” said Jennifer Ngo-Anh, Mars 500 programme manager.
The volunteers will have their days in the module at the Russian Institute for Biomedical Problems (IBMP) divided into eight hours of sleep, eight hours of work and eight hours of leisure. A team of three will spend one month aboard a special module meant to represent the Mars landing craft, while two will also spend time exploring a reconstruction of Mars itself. Chinese member Wang Yue, 27, a candidate astronaut of China’s space programme, said: “It is just a simulation. It is not a matter of life and death, but I think it is very much more than that as it aims at the future of humanity.” The idea is to exactly mimic the timescale of a Mars mission — 250 days for the trip to Mars, 30 days on the surface and 240 days for the return journey, totalling 520 days.
“You cannot simulate everything. That is obvious,” said Christer Fuglesang, head of science at the directorate for human spaceflight for the European Space Agency, a co-organiser of the project with the IBMP.
“The scare factor cannot be simulated. It’s true we don’t have this aspect they may not come back.” But the message, at least, will still be clear if one of the participants decides to pull out. “The way it will be simulated is ‘bad luck, one of the crew members died’,” Mr Fuglesang said. The crew also conspicuously lacks women, meaning the experiment will not examine the possible sexual tensions that could arise on a trip to Mars for a mixed-gender crew.

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