Greenhab Report – January 17th
Crew 219 GreenHab Report 17-JAN-20
Crew GreenHab Officer: Cynthia Montanez
Environmental control: Heating.
Shade cloth (40% and 30%) on.
Average temperature: 24.3 °C
10:18 A.M.
Floor Unit: 21 °C
2:32 P.M.
Floor Unit: 20 °C
5:15 P.M.
Floor Unit: 20°C
Hours of supplemental light: Light system 7:00PM-12:00AM.
Daily water usage for crops: 9.18 Gal.
Daily water usage for research and/or other purposes: N/A
Water in Blue Tank – 152.03 Gal.
Time(s) of watering for crops:
10:18 A.M.
SEASONAL PLANTING HISTORY:
Change to crops: Almost all of the crops look exceptionally bigger, brighter, and healthier
OTHER NOTES:
1st sprouts: The white onions that were planted a couple of days ago started to sprout, as is the green apple plant.
Harvest: At 2:32 P.M., 100 grams of swiss chard and 2 grams of chives were harvested.
Other: Since there is now only one thermometer that I am able to use within the GreenHab, I am only able to take floor temperature readings. I needed to constantly check on the temperature within the GreenHab to make sure that it was not too hot for the plants.
Sol Summary – January 17th
Crew 219 Sol Summary Report 17-01-2020
Sol: 12
Summary Title: Mission Complete.
Author’s name: Dave Masaitis
Mission Status: Nominal
Sol Activity Summary: Sol 12 started with gourmet coffee and a hearty breakfast of bacon and eggs. After breakfast D. Masaitis performed a walk-around inspection of the campus with Handbook in hand, to annotate any deficiencies that needed to be fixed before check-out, and passed the list to the crew. As the crew began touching up the modules and Hab, D. Masaitis sat down to truncate the rough draft of the crew’s Mission Summary from almost 7,000 words of eloquent academic prose. The crew had completed their cleaning tasks by lunchtime, and spent much of the afternoon working on the 2000 piece Mars puzzle. N. Hadland and H. Blackburn joined D. Masaitis in The Great Revision, and the Mission Summary was complete by 1630 hours.
Crew 219 ended Simulation at 1700 hours, and stepped out into the waning daylight to clean exterior areas, completing the work by sundown. We are proud of the work that we have accomplished here, and look forward to meeting Crew 220 tomorrow!
Look Ahead Plan: Meeting and Training Crew 220!
Anomalies in work: None
Weather: Chilly and sunny all day
Crew Physical Status: OUTSTANDING
EVA: NONE
Reports to be filed:
Sol Summary
Operations Report
GreenHab Report
Mission Summary (In lieu of Research Report)
Food Inventory
Journalist’s Report
Photos (Including Photo of the Day)
Support Requested:
None
Crew Photos – January 16th
Photo of the day – 01162020 Whirlpool Color Image(photo of the day).png
Astronomy Report – January 16th
Astronomy Report
Name: Robinson Raphael
Crew: 219
Date: Jan 16th, 2020
MDRS ROBOTIC OBSERVATORY: (MDRS-14)
Submitted an observation for the Owl Nebula (aiming for longer exposure time)
Images submitted with the report: (See attached below)
Whirlpool Galaxy (Generic and Johnson-Cousins Filters Used)
M40 (Generic and Johnson-Cousins Filters Used)
NGC 4258 (Generic and Johnson-Cousins Filters Used)
Problems encountered: Using the generic filters tend to leave the final image towards one more dominant color.
Science Report – January 16th
Crew 219 Science Report 16-JAN-20
Crew Science Officer: Hannah Blackburn
1. Biometrics and Neurobehavioral Research
All sleep logs and post-EVA surveys sent to HSO.
2. UAV
Disassembled drone for transport and discovered that multiple wires were not connected to motors 3 and 4.
3. Dust Mitigation for Optical Mirrors
Mirrors packed for transport.
4. Astrophotography of Celestial Bodies
Made color images of NGC4258, M40, and the whirlpool galaxy.
5. Remediation of Mars Regolith
Nothing to report.
6. Chemical and Mineralogical Composition of the MDRS Site
Samples prepared for transport.
7. Protocols for the Discovery of Life on Mars
Samples photographed and prepared for transport.
Glassware check out:
10 glass beakers (sizes between 200 and 500 ml) were cleaned, dried, and put away.
Greenhab Report – January16th
Crew 219 GreenHab Report 16-JAN-20
Crew GreenHab Officer: Nathan Hadland
Environmental control: Heating.
Shade cloth (40% and 30%) on.
Average temperature: 23.7 °C
8:09 A.M.
Floor Unit: 18 °C
Mid-height unit: 23 °C
10:31 A.M.
Floor Unit: 19 °C
Mid-height unit: 23 °C
12:24 P.M.
Floor Unit: 20 °C
Mid-height unit: 30 °C
2:41 P.M.
Floor Unit: 12 °C
Mid-height unit: 21 °C
5:08 P.M.
Floor Unit: 16 °C
Mid-height unit: 21 °C
Hours of supplemental light: Light system 7:00 PM-12:00 AM.
Daily water usage for crops: 3 Gal.
Daily water usage for research and/or other purposes: N/A
Water in Blue Tank – 149.03 Gal.
Time(s) of watering for crops:
10:31 A.M.
SEASONAL PLANTING HISTORY:
Change to crops: N/A
OTHER NOTES:
Harvest: At 10:31 A.M., 2 g of basil, 2 g of oregano, 1 g of thyme, and 1 g of marjoram were harvested
Other: N/A
Journalist Report – January 16th
CREW 219 JOURNALIST REPORT 16JAN2020
AUTHOR: Keith Crisman
SOL 11
ALL THE FEELS FROM MARS: ALPHA AND OMEGA AND ALPHA AGAIN
The beginning of the end… and rebirth. Last night, with little
the ceremony, roles among the crew shifted. As Crew 219’s mission begins
nearing its termination point they will begin to prepare the Hab for
the arrival of their replacement crew and transport back to Earth.
Further, training for ARES’ next season MDRS crew’s CO (C. Montanez,
current GHO) and XO (K. Crisman, current HSO) begins with a transfer
of titles from the current CO (D. Masaitis) and XO (N. Hadland). Our
new (acting) CO and XO are taking the reins with planning and
execution of duties and responsibilities of the roles they will
proudly inhabit next season. As such, in a combination of the end and
a new beginning; today marked the last day our crew held EVAs, the
very last of which was commanded by our (acting) CO and XO.
These EVAs were a slower pace, returning superfluous samples, giving the
crew time to slow down and reflect on the environment, landscape, and
the natural beauty of our Martian desert home. For some, they are ready
to go home, full of stories and experiences ready to share with their
family, friends, and peers. For others such as myself, despite the
short two-weeks stay, and badly missing my wife, daughter, and home
(not to mention a good steak, hot shower, and soft bed), I can’t help
but look out over the sheer beauty of this landscape. It may have
been a short stay, but this crew has become family, this desert has
become home, and although I am ready to leave, part of me will forever
stay here.
To my crew mates and those that follow our stories; Per Scientiam ad Martis, Semper Exploro! To Mars through Science, Always Exploring!
Operations Report – January 16th
Crew 219 Operations Report 16-JAN-2020
Sol: 11
Name of person filing report: Alejandro Perez
Non-nominal systems: N/A
Generator: Run
Hours run: 14
From what time last night: 17:30
To what time this morning: 07:30
List of any additional daytime hours when the generator was run: N/A
Solar- SOC% (Before the generator is run at night): 80%
09:10 = 100%; 10:00 = 99%;
11:00 = 97%;
13:00 = 88%;
14:00 = 85%;
15:00 = 82%;
16:30 = 80%;
18:00 = 100%
Diesel Reading – 55%
Station Propane Reading- 32%
Ethanol Free Gasoline- N/A
Water (loft tank) (gal) – 50
Water Meter (units)- 0147767,3
Water (static tank) (gal) – 286
Static to loft Pump used –Yes
Water in Green Hab (gal): 149.03
Water in Science Dome (gal): 0
Toilet Tank Emptied –Yes
Deimos rover used: Still in the Workshop
Hours:
Beginning Charge:
End Charge:
Currently Charging:
Sojourner rover used: Assigned to Director
Hours:
Beginning Charge:
End Charge:
Currently Charging:
Spirit Rover used- Yes
Starting Hours: 126.1, 126.2
Beginning Charge: 100%, 100%
Ending Hours: 126.2, 126.4
Ending Charge: 51%, 76%
Opportunity Rover used: Still in the workshop
Hours:
Beginning Charge:
Ending Charge:
Currently Charging:
Curiosity Rover used: Yes
Starting Hours: 132.0, 132.1
Beginning Charge: 100%, 100%
Ending Hours: 132.1, 132.4
Ending Charge: 51%, 78%
Notes on Rovers: Opportunity and Deimos off-site for maintenance.
ATV’s Used: (Honda, 300, 350.1, 350.2, 350.3): No
Reason for use:
Oil Added? No
# hours the ATV’s were used today:
Notes on ATVs:
Habcar used and why, where?
CrewCar used and why, where? In the shop.
General Notes and Comments:
Summary of the internet: Nominal
Summary of Suit and Radios: Suit #7 began a rapid power drop halfway through EVA 17.
Summary of Hab: Nominal
Summary of Science Dome operations: Average daytime temperature is 7°C. The average night time temperature is 2°C.
Summary of Ram operations: Nominal
Summary of any observatory issues: Nominal
Summary of Health and safety issues: Nominal
Questions, concerns, and requests to Mission Support:
EVA Report – January 16th
Crew 219 EVA Report 16-01-2020
EVA #17
Author: Dave Masaitis
Purpose of EVA: Sample return
Start time: 0908 hrs
End time: 1013 hrs
Narrative: EVA #17 completed a five-minute decompression by 0908 hours, mounted Spirit and Curiosity, and departed the Hab campus after reporting hours and SOC. The rovers proceeded northbound on Cow Dung Road until achieving a positive ID of Streambed Connector. The EVA team parked rovers and dismounted, proceeding east on foot along Streambed Connector. The streambed was full of patchy snow and ice, so the team moved cautiously along their directed route.
The route added approximately thirty minutes to planned transit time, so the team had to move swiftly to deposit samples once at their destination. Once complete, they discussed their route back and opted to try and retrace their incoming route as closely as possible. Only one team member fell through the ice, but no injuries were sustained, so they continued their movement to the rovers. The team proceeded southbound on Cow Dung Road to the Hab, re-entering the airlock at 1013 hours.
Destination: West of Candor Chasma
Coordinates: 0520000/4251500
Participants: D. Masaitis (HSO), N. Hadland (GHO), A. Elnajdi (GEO)
Roads and routes per MDRS Map: North on Cow Dung Road to Streambed Connector, East through Streambed Connector
Mode of travel: Rovers (Spirit and Curiosity) and Walking
EVA #18
Author: Cynthia Montanez
Purpose of EVA: Sample Return
Start Time: 1407 hrs
End Time: 1539 hrs
Narrative: EVA #18 is the last EVA crew 219 was able to do before completing their Mars analog mission. At 1407 hours, Cynthia (acting as CO) and Keith (acting as XO) lead their team 1 km south of Kissing Camel on Curiosity as Dave and Alejandro followed on Spirit.
When reaching their destination, Dave directed his crew to the specific locations each sample was taken from so that they could return their samples. Once completed, the EVA crew made their way back to the rovers and proceeded safely back to the Hab at 1539 hours.
Destination: 1 km S of Kissing Camel
Coordinates: 0518500/4248300
Participants: Cynthia Montanez (CO), Keith Crisman (XO), Dave Masaitis (HSO), Alejandro Perez (ENG)
Roads and Routes per MDRS Map: South on Cow Dung Road (0110), approximately 1 km south of Kissing Camel to return samples.
Mode of travel: Rovers (Spirit and Curiosity) and walking.





















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