Six ‘astronauts’ on month-long mission in Israeli desert to prepare for Mars

MITZPE RAMON (AFP) — Inside a huge crater in Israel’s sun-baked Negev desert, a team wearing space suits ventures forth on a mission to simulate conditions on Mars.

The Austrian Space Forum has set up a pretend Martian base with the Israeli space agency at Makhtesh Ramon, a 500-meter (1,600-foot) deep, 40 kilometers (25 miles) wide crater.

The six so-called “analog astronauts” will live in isolation in the virtual station until the end of the month.

“It’s a dream come true,” Israeli Alon Tenzer, 36, told AFP. “It’s something we’ve been working on for years.”

The participants — from Austria, Germany, Israel, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain — all had to pass grueling physical and psychological tests.

During their mission, they will conduct tests including on a drone prototype that functions without GPS, and on automated wind- and solar-powered mapping vehicles.

Israeli astronaut Alon Tenzer prepares his spacesuit before starting a training mission for planet Mars at a site that simulates an off-site station at the Ramon Crater in Mitzpe Ramon in Israel’s southern Negev desert on October 10, 2021. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP)

The mission will also aim to study human behavior and the effect of isolation on the astronauts.

“The group’s cohesion and their ability to work together are crucial for surviving on Mars,” said Gernot Groemer, the Austrian mission supervisor.

“It’s like a marriage, except in a marriage you can leave but on Mars you can’t.”

Largest voyage ever

The Austrian Space Forum, a private organization made up of aerospace specialists, has already organized 12 missions, the most recent in Oman in 2018.

This picture taken on October 10, 2021 shows an aerial view of a habitat where astronauts from a team from Europe and Israel will participate in a training mission for planet Mars at a site that simulates an off-site station at the Ramon Crater in Mitzpe Ramon in Israel’s southern Negev desert. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP)

The Israel project is part of mission Amadee-20, which was expected to kick off last year but was delayed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The forum has partnered with Israeli research center D-MARS to construct the solar-powered base.

German astronaut Anika Mehlis, the only woman on the team, told AFP how happy she was to be part of the project.

“My father took me to the space museum when I was little,” she said. “When I saw that the forum was looking for analog astronauts, I told myself I had to apply.”

Mehlis, a trained microbiologist, will study a scenario where bacteria from Earth infect potential life forms that may be found on Mars, saying this “would be a huge problem”.

Technicians assist an astronaut from a team from Europe and Israel to suit up in a spacesuit before starting a training mission for planet Mars at a site that simulates an off-site station at the Ramon Crater in Mitzpe Ramon in Israel’s southern Negev desert on October 10, 2021. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP)

Visually, the surrounding desert resembles the Red Planet with its stony wilderness and orange hues, though thankfully not in terms of atmospheric conditions.

“Over here, we have temperatures of about 25-30 degrees Celsius, but on Mars the temperature is minus 60 degrees Celsius and the atmosphere is not fit for breathing,” said Groemer.

A robotic rover that is part of a team from Europe and Israel moves during a training mission for planet Mars at a site that simulates an off-site station at the Ramon Crater in Mitzpe Ramon in Israel’s southern Negev desert on October 10, 2021.(Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP)

The interior of the base is austere, with a small kitchen and bunk beds. Most of the space is reserved for scientific experiments.

NASA envisions the first human mission to Mars will launch in 2030.

An astronaut from a team from Europe and Israel and dressed in a spacesuit holds a quadcopter drone during a training mission for planet Mars at a site that simulates an off-site station at the Ramon Crater in Mitzpe Ramon in Israel’s southern Negev desert on October 10, 2021. (Photo by JACK GUEZ / AFP)

“What we are doing here is preparing a large mission, the largest voyage our society has ever taken, as Mars and Earth are 380 million kilometers apart at their extreme point,” said Groemer.

“I believe the very first human to walk on Mars is already born and we are the ship-builders to enable this journey.”

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