Utah's Mars clone serves as training site
In fact, it is a southern Utah desert near Hanksville, Wayne County, a landscape that looks as much like Mars photos radioed by robotic spacecraft as anywhere on Earth.
NASA and the Mars Society a nonprofit, privately funded group established the Mars Desert Research Station in 2002. Staffed by volunteers rotating in and out, the station follows strict rules to make the situation seem as if it were on the red planet. Crews live in confined spaces, conduct scientific research, use robots and wear imitation spacesuits when they venture outside, according to NASA.
The project is expected to pay dividends in designing real stations on the moon and Mars, as well as in learning about the way people interact under such unusual conditions.
The level of realism is so high that on Sunday a Deseret Morning News interview with Jennifer L. Heldmann, commander of the present crew, took longer to complete than one might expect. Communication was by e-mail, and Heldmann waited five minutes after the arrival of each query before opening it, the better to mimic the time that a question would take to make the journey from Earth to Mars.
"We have been in the Habitat since Dec. 9, so this is our ninth day 'on Mars' here in Utah," Heldmann wrote in an e-mail. "We will be leaving the Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS) on Dec. 22. ... The goal of this program is to bring students and teachers into the field to train and inspire the next generation of space explorers."
Asked to describe the Habitat (the proper name for the living quarters), she said it is shaped like a cylinder and has two floors. Downstairs are the laboratory, bathroom and extravehicular activity preparation room, where the spacesuits are kept.
Everybody has a private room, and the Habitat is heated with propane. Power comes from a diesel generator and batteries.
The Hanksville vicinity bears a striking resemblance to the martian landscape, she added. "Looking out the porthole of our Habitat here in Utah shows a scene that looks like several of the landing sites on Mars where we have sent robotic spacecraft.
"The red Utah rocks contain iron just as the rocks on Mars do. There are other geologic features such as water-carved channels, mineral deposits, layered rocks, etc., that are similar to features we are discovering on Mars with robots."




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