Journalist Report – December 31st

Journalist Report
Ben Durkee, Crew 218 Journalist

Sol 09

Today began like any other day on Mars: awoken dim and early by the blasting of a select song from the Futurama soundtrack. We stirred ourselves some hot chocolate – the only dehydrated food we seem to have an abundance of – and gathered around the window to watch the sunrise. Once the sun peeked out from its azimuthal hiding spot, it seemed we were already in a rush to eat breakfast and prepare for our first EVA of the day.

With this being our 6th EVA, we were already pros at the process. Myself, Shefali, and Cesare were suited up, depressurized, and revving up the rovers in 15 minutes flat. Our goal for this EVA was to head south of the Hab. Not for warmer pastures, but for a signal analysis experiment. My research involves measuring ambient radio signals around the Hab, so we were testing whether or not the ridge between the Hab and our destination would have a dampening effect on such signals.

The ridge in question is called Kissing Camel Ridge, supposedly named because the rock formations look like two titular camels face to face. However, I adamantly believe that anyone who claims to see two camels there is either a fraud or suffering from terminal "Emperor’s New Clothes" Syndrome.

We accomplished our own personal research goals in the area and spent our remaining time capturing pictures of the grandiose landscape. Admittedly also a few (hundred) pictures of each other in fabulous poses. We loaded back up the rovers with our cumbersome equipment and slogged back to base. The roads today are swampy concoctions of mud and slushy ice under the facade of neatly laid snow. We returned home cold, muddy, and accomplished.

As soon as we escaped our life-saving mobile prisons (that we are very grateful for), we tagged in the next EVA crew. Pat, seismologist extraordinaire, and LuzMa, dehydrated mango connoisseur performed an engineering maintenance EVA while they waited for the rovers to recharge. Once T and Custy had drunk their fill of our precious electricity, they valiantly carried the two Marstronauts to their goal. That goal being: south. Just slightly farther south than we had ventured. Always one-upping us, those two.

After performing a long series of geophonic tests that we Hab-dwellers could intermittently hear over the radios, they too braved the earthy sludge on their homeward bound. They got back to breathable air just in time to join the sequel to yesterday’s fire brigade! We had waited a majority of the day to ferry water in the hopes that the pipes would thaw, but no dice. On the bright side, since we had used some of yesterday’s water to wash the dishes, we had a multitude of clean pots and other water receptacles for our thirst-fueled operation.

1000 rotations of dumping pots and slamming my head into the low ceiling later, our water was at a more than acceptable level. We filled it up a bit extra so that people had the opportunity to shower before our New Year’s festivities if desired. A few people seized the hygienic opportunity, and then we spontaneously dove into a viewing of Shrek. As a neutral journalistic observer, I must report that tensions are beginning to rise. There may be a formation of factions between those who want to watch Mulan next and those who would prefer Hot Fuzz. The first Martian Civil War breweth.

The other thing beginning to rise is our rosemary bread for the great New Year’s feast! Very soon we will put aside our differences and eat the vast majority of our remaining food supply. It’s strange to celebrate the anniversary of the Earth’s revolution around the sun from its planetary next-door neighbor. There’s no way I’d rather spend it than breaking Hab-made bread with my fellow crewmates.

What a fantastic way to usher in the new decade. Happy New Year, everyone!

Science Report – December 31st

Crew 218 Science Report 31-DEC-19
Crew Science Officer: Dr. Jonathan R. Buzan

1. Decision Making in support of autonomy for crew EVAs:

Hypothetical scenario involving a broken leg during EVA. EVA crew went through the emergency procedures.

2. Mars surface weather:

Measurements were collected during today’s EVA.

3. Subsurface structure on Mars:

Data from yesterday was sent to Purdue University for analysis. Seismic reflection mapping instrument was deployed in today’s EVA.

4. Detecting radio signal strength:

Field measurements were collected during today’s EVA. Yesterday’s data is undergoing analysis.

5. EVA workload analysis:

Survey data was collected for today’s EVAs.

6. EMU (Extravehicular Mobility Unit) ergonomic assessment:

Survey data was collected for today’s EVAs.

7. Environmental Stresses over MDRS habitat and Crew Members and projection over Martian Terrain:

Measurements were expanded from stateroom to habitat floor.

8. Messier and other space objects for outreach:

Cloudy: nothing to report.

9. Reliability and maintenance:

No EVA: nothing to report.

10. Medical readings in preparation for the future crew-wide project:

The Zephyr bio-monitor was worn all day yesterday.

11. Collection of clay, shale, and hematite samples:

6 rock samples were collected.

12. Media and outreach:

Nothing to report.

Glassware check out: None

A reminder to all crewmembers: There’s a $300 fine for using any glassware material without MDRS Mission support permission.

EVA Report – December 31st

EVA #: 6

Author: Cesare Guariniello

Purpose of EVA: weather observation project; EVA and EMU evaluation project

Start time: 9:57
End time: 12:01

Narrative: Cesare, Ben, and Shefali drove to the north side of Kissing Camel range, where Ben took radio measurements and Cesare proposed potential scenarios for crew decision-making.

After collecting a few rock samples, the crew drove the rovers to the south of the range, which is exposed and clear of snow.

More radio measurements were taken, and the crew could climb the south side of the West Kissing Camel range. On the way back, Ben took more radio measurements along the first ridge south of the habitat.

Destination: Kissing Camel

Coordinates (use UTM NAD27 CONUS): 12S 518300, 4249000

EVA Participants: Cesare Guariniello, CMD; Ben Durkee, JOU Shefali Rana, HSO

Road(s) and routes per MDRS Map: Cow Dung Road to the south of Kissing Camel Range

Mode of travel: Driving, then work in the field and walking

Vehicles Used: Curiosity and Spirit

EVA #: 7

Author: Pat Pesa

Purpose of EVA: crew decision-making evaluation and radio measurements (during transfers); seismic measurements to evaluate subsurface layers (once at destination); EVA and EMU evaluation (once back in habitat)

Start time: 12:49

End time: 14:57

Narrative: Luz Ma and Pat took the Curiosity and Spirit rovers to just south of Kissing Camel range to the Hippo formation. Pat set up his Seismic equipment with the help of Luz Ma (lots of untangling wires) and started recording data.
It is a quite fun experiment because, after the tedious setup, you get to "smack" the ground with a sledgehammer to generate waves for the geophones to pick up! After these tests, Luz Ma continued her Climate and Weather readings, and we embarked on a short journey near the area.

Besides the overabundance of slushy snow and mud, the EVA was greatly successful and led to some great science and exploration.

Destination: South of Kissing Camel along Cow Dung Rd

Coordinates (use UTM NAD27 CONUS): 12S 51900, 4248600

EVA Participants: Pat Pesa, GEO; Luz Ma Agudelo, ENG

Road(s) and routes per MDRS Map: Cow Dung Road to the northwest of Zubrin’s head

Mode of travel: Driving and walking

Vehicles Used: Curiosity and Spirit

Greenhab Report – December 31st

Crew 218 GreenHab Report 31-DEC-19

Crew GreenHab Officer: Dr. Jonathan R. Buzan and HSO Shefali Rana

Environmental control: Heating.

Shade cloth (40% and 30%) on.

Average temperature: 23.4°C; 18%

10:00M

Floor Unit: 15°C
Electronic: 21.8°C
humidity 19%

3:00PM

Floor Unit: 21°C
Electronic: 28.5°C
humidity 16%

7:00PM

Floor Unit: 15°C
Electronic: 19.6°C
humidity 20%

Max: 29.5; 22%
Min: 19.6°C; 20%

Hours of supplemental light: Light system 6:00 PM-11:00 AM.

Daily water usage for crops: 4.9Gal.

Daily water usage for research and/or other purposes: N/A

Water in Blue Tank – ~88 Gal.

Time(s) of watering for crops:

10:00 AM. 1Gal. Watered snow peas and radishes.
7:00 PM. 3.7Gal.

SEASONAL PLANTING HISTORY:

Change to crops: None.

OTHER NOTES:

1st sprouts: N/A

—Mystery plant has a spinach vegetal taste.
—Hanging snow peas and icicle radishes are wilted. Used 1Gal. of water at 10 AM.

Harvest:

Basil: 6g
Rosemary: 4g

Commander Report – December 31st

Crew 218 Commander Report – 31-12-2019

Sol 9 – End of Earth year 2019

While we are preparing our feast to celebrate the last day of Earth year 2019, we are reviewing what was a good last day.

Finally, the Sun has been shining all day long and even if the snow did not completely melt, at least the EVAs in sub-freezing temperatures were much more pleasant than the past ones. In the afternoon, we started popping a few New Year wishes from Central Europe.

Due to pipes still being frozen, we had another chain of water upstairs, so as to be able to take some nice showers!

Now waiting for some guests from the nearby habitat to celebrate together.

Goodnight and Happy New Year!!

Cesare Guariniello, Commander Crew 218

Sol Summary – December 31st

Sol: 09

Summary Title: New Years New Mars

Author’s name: Pat Pesa

Mission Status: Crew is feeling festive!

Sol Activity Summary: Another beautiful Martian winter day that led to two very productive but muddy EVAs.

Look Ahead Plan: More EVAs! We only have a few days left and the weather looks great so we want to make the most of it.

Anomalies in work: None

Weather: Sunny, around 29 degrees

Crew physical status: Healthy

EVA: EVA #6 this morning went slightly north of kissing camel ridge for Radio Signal measurements. EVA #7 this afternoon went slightly south of kissing camel ridge to the formation formerly known as "Hippo" for the Seismic Survey for the Ground Structure Project and taking Climate data.

Reports to be filed: sol summary, commander report, operations report, GreenHab report, journalist report, EVA report, EVA request, science report

Support Requested: none

Pat Pesa
Geologist, MDRS 218

Astronomy Report – December 30th

Name: Cesare Guariniello

Crew: 218

Date: 30-12-2019

ROBOTIC OBSERVATORY – MDRS-14

Submitted an observation of M42 (Orion Nebula, 10 exposures of 1 second each in B, V, R) and M31 (Andromeda Galaxy, 10 exposures of 20 seconds each in B, V, R)

Images submitted with this report: M42 29122019 and M31 29122019

Problems encountered: working on finding the best exposure time. Red flat correction not applicable, makes the image worse.

GreenHab Report – December 30th

Crew 218 GreenHab Report 30-DEC-19

Crew GreenHab Officer: Dr. Jonathan R. Buzan

Environmental control: Heating.

Shade cloth (40% and 30%) on.

Average temperature: 23.9°C; 20%

9:30AM

Floor Unit: 15°C

Electronic: 18.7°C

humidity 21%

2:20PM

Floor Unit: 16°C

Electronic: 20.9°C

humidity 20%

6:00PM

Floor Unit: 15°C

Electronic: 22.2°C

humidity 19%

Max: 25.5; 21%

Min: 22.3°C; 19%

Hours of supplemental light: Light system 6:00PM-11:00AM.

Daily water usage for crops: 6.5Gal.

Daily water usage for research and/or other purposes: N/A

Water in Blue Tank – ~93 Gal.

Time(s) of watering for crops:

2:20PM watered hanging plants by heater with miracle grow (2.2Gal.).

6:00PM watered with miracle grow (4.3Gal.).

SEASONAL PLANTING HISTORY:

Change to crops: None.

OTHER NOTES:

1st sprouts: N/A

—2:20PM Cucumber was dry and wilting. The plant has flowered. Does flowering consume more water? Watered the cucumber and hanging plants by heater with MiracleGrow.

—One Mystery Plant has flowered.

—Acorn Pumpkin needs to be transplanted to larger pot.

Harvest:

Cilantro: 3.95g

Basil: 2.00g

Carrot Tops: 3.25g

Crew 218 Journalist Report 30Dec2019

Journalist Report
Ben Durkee, Crew 218 Journalist

Sol 08

The snowy hill east of the Habitat delayed the sunrise just long enough for us to awaken to a sky of vibrant pink and orange. Nothing clears the morning haze from your eyes quite like gawking at the natural beauty of a Martian sunrise. We were fortunate to have such a gentle wake-up call, because the rest of the day was on a tight itinerary.

After an efficient breakfast of astronaut nutrition paste (dehydrated fruit smoothie) we promptly began preparing Shefali and LuzMa for their morning EVA. After an egress that went infinitely smoother than yesterday’s, they set off into the icy brink. The two ladies had the honor of taking our rovers "T" and "Custy" (formerly "Spirit" and "Curiosity," but some of the letters rubbed off) on their first voyage in a week.

The rovers persevered through the quagmire of snow, ice, and mud to deliver the duo to their destination unscathed. The two performed some meteorological surveys that are far beyond my pay-grade and returned to the Hab far ahead of schedule. In an effort to kill two birds with one Martian stone, LuzMa also performed her extravehicular engineer duties before they both entered the airlock for re-compression. Everything went off without a hitch, and they were inside and free of their cumbersome oxygen-backpacks with time to spare.

More time to dedicate to the most important task of the day. See, the past few sols have been consistently below freezing, and our water pipe has been an ice pipe for long enough that we are in full survival mode. The first thing to go when the water gets tight is dish duty, and by today we had a tower rivaling the wonders of the world constructed solely of dirty dishes. Our water reserve was so sparse this afternoon that we had to resort to creating a fire brigade. We spent the period between EVAs today assembly-lining water from the static tank all the way up to the accessible loft tank with our few clean kitchen pots. Our efficiency would have made Henry Ford proud – probably because we had pretty compelling motivation.

Once our liquid life reached an acceptable quantity, there was just enough time for a quick lunch before Cesare, Pat, and I had to prepare for our EVA. We raced to see who could be properly suited up first, and as expected our commander with multiple notches in his Mars belt pulled a clean victory. This time I abundantly confirmed that I was wearing the right footwear. I’m sure I’ll make many more mistakes this mission, but I will definitely not be making that one again.

While we were acting as a human aqueduct, our rovers were replenishing their batteries back to full. For good reason – we intended to use it all. We depressurized and embarked on our longest EVA yet. Our destination: as far north as we could go.

There is a clear division drawn in mud on my flight suit. A contrast between my left side: cozy within the roll cage of trusty ol’ "Custy," and my right side: exposed to the elements as I held out the antenna for some data collection on our northward exodus. We adventured far into the Martian horizon on a journey that felt like an eternity for the muscles in my right arm. We exited the zone of radio contact with the Hab, and then we pushed on even farther. Eventually Cesare’s rover read 60% battery remaining, our threshold for having to cease our migration. We pulled over right there, and the spot proved to be ideal.

It had a flat region – perfect for Pat’s seismic equipment – and a phenomenal view of the nearby mountain – a playground for me and my camera. We spent equal time setting up the equipment as we did gathering data. With our remaining time, we explored the surrounding terrain and then gave our rovers a good 20-point turn to head back home.

Naturally the journey somehow managed to be uphill both ways, but the rovers took it like champs and we were back in no time. By the time we got ourselves and our equipment back in the airlock, it was 4:00 PM sharp. A perfect three hour EVA. We raced out of our suits again, but this time it was fueled by the necessity to empty our bladders. We all parsed our data from the field and then put on some SpongeBob to turn our brains off and recover from the day. Much needed.

Through the yellow rectangle man’s uncanny ability to evaporate time, it was suddenly time for dinner and reports. As Pat slaves away in the kitchen, I’m hunched over my keyboard relaying the day’s events to the best of my ability. It took a week, but I think we’re getting the hang of this whole "Martian Living" thing. Now we wrap up today so we can do it again tomorrow, but even better.

Another sol, another dollar.

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