A NEW JOURNEY INTO EARTH FOR SPACE EXPLORATION
Six astronauts, five space agencies and a fresh start into underground worlds to help prepare for living on other planets. ESA’s latest training adventure will equip an international crew with skills to explore uncharted terrains on the Moon and Mars, this time with a focus on the search for water.
The CAVES training course takes astronauts to the depths of Earth to improve their communication, problem-solving and teamwork skills.
After a week of preparations above and underground, the ‘cavenauts’ are set to explore a cave in Slovenia where they will live and work for six days.
“It is all part of a simulation, but the experience is the closest you can get on this planet to the environmental, psychological and logistics constraints of a space mission,” explains course designer Loredana Bessone.
"The training involves real science, real operations and real astronauts with the best speleologists in the field,” she adds.
The six cavenauts of this edition of CAVES are ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst, NASA astronauts Joe Acaba and Jeanette Epps, Roscosmos’ cosmonaut Nikolai Chub, Canadian Space Agency astronaut Josh Kutryk and Japan’s Takuya Onishi.
“This new space-caving adventure helps them to learn from each other, from themselves and from the cave, which always humbles you with its enclosing spaces and darkness,” says CAVES technical course director Francesco Sauro.
The training starts today, and the cavenauts will begin their descent into the dark to set up a base camp on 20 September.
Supported by a team of instructors and safety personnel, the six explorers will take their own decisions and work autonomously, isolated from the outside world and coping with communication delays.
Follow the water
Underground exploration means following air and water flows as telltale signals of new paths ahead. The crew will learn how to trace water – the main link with life on Earth and a precious resource in space exploration.
Caves are normally made by running waters. ESA picked a cave for this edition in an area where rivers flow underground. To keep the element of exploration, astronauts themselves do not know the exact location.
This entrance to the underground is called ‘Lepa Jama’ – meaning ‘Beautiful Cave’ in Slovenian. “The cave is a labyrinth of passages mostly unexplored and rich in indigenous species,” says Francesco.
Comments
Post a Comment