NASA/Karl Shreeves
Aquanauts away. On 21 July, a crew of six astronauts splashed down in scuba gear into the Aquarius Reef Base, an underwater research station 19 metres below the waves off the coast of Florida. The team鈥檚 16 day mission, NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO), will test gadgets and skills for a future trip to Mars.
It鈥檚 the 21st mission of its kind since NEEMO began in 2001. This time, communications between the crew and ground control between Mars and Earth 鈥 about 15 minutes in each direction. The aquanauts wear an experimental headset called that streams video back to base and lets them talk hands-free. The close quarters of the Aquarius station mimic the conditions of a space station or spacecraft.
High winds the splashdown for three days. The crew started on experiments straight away 鈥 on their first full day under, they tried out a miniature DNA sequencing device, which NASA hopes to . Other involve technology that could regenerate chromosome telomeres 鈥 a symptom of aging 鈥 and telemedicine for astronauts far from home.
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The aquanauts will also swim out of the Aquarius base to simulate spacewalks and pilot underwater vehicles. Their first challenge: to practice their low-gravity construction skills.
While the main goal is to get ready for Mars, NEEMO 21 could help with other extraterrestrial trips, too. 鈥淲hat we learn here is also fully applicable to a manned moon mission,鈥 said crew member Herv茅 Stevenin of the European Space Agency in a .
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