A group of volunteers will step out for a “space walk” on Mars on Monday, as an unprecedented one-and-a-half year experiment to study the effects of a mission to the Red Planet reaches its climax.
Two volunteers from Italy and Russia will step onto a sandy mock-up of the Martian surface, at about 1pm after a gruelling eight-month journey — all without ever leaving a Moscow research centre.
The space walk comes around halfway through the experiment in which the participants spend 520 days in isolation to test how humans would respond to the pressures of the long voyage to Mars.
The men’s first steps will be relayed to the Russian control centre that monitors real space missions, as part of an experiment organised by the European Space Agency and Moscow’s institute of biomedical problems.
A team of six men from Europe, Russia and China has been locked since June in a mock-up spaceship at the institute to test the psychological effects of an 18-month round trip in the experiment, called Mars-500.
The volunteers aged from mid-20s to late 30s, among them engineers, doctors and a physicist, are crammed into the spaceship, where living quarters measure just 20m long and less than 4m across.
All eyes on volunteers
Russian Alexander Smoleyevsky and Italian Diego Urbina will be the first to step out, after transferring on Saturday to a smaller landing module and “touching down” on Mars, along with Chinese volunteer Wang Yue.
Three other volunteers, Romain Charles from France and Sukhrob Kamolov and Alexei Sitev from Russia, will remain “in orbit” in the main module.
With the world’s media watching, Smoleyevsky and Urbina will don modified Russian Orlan spacesuits and exit the lander’s airlock for the first of three space walks onto a simulated Martian surface next to their capsule.
Researchers will look at how well volunteers cope in the spacesuits, each of which weigh 32kg, after the long period of reduced physical activity and isolation.
The equipment shown in photographs on the project’s website even includes specially designed chairs for the spacemen to take a break.
In experiments, the volunteers will control a wheeled robot to explore the mock-up of the surface of Mars, which is covered with sand and a scattering of rocks.
Russia plans to send a real flight to Mars in 20-30 years, possibly in a joint effort with Nasa. — Sapa-AFP