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The Russian experiment in preparation for a manned voyage to planet Mars has come to a successful ending as Russian cosmonauts emerged out of isolation after one and a half years.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15574646
Six men locked away in steel tubes for a year-and-a-half to simulate a mission to Mars have emerged from isolation.
The Mars500 project, undertaken at a Moscow institute, was intended to find out how the human mind and body would cope on a long-duration spaceflight.
It is a venture that has fascinated all who have followed it around the globe.
The study even saw three of the men carry out a pretend landing on Mars, donning real spacesuits and walking across an enclosed sandy yard.
Continue reading the main story
MARS SIMULATION PROJECT
Aim was to gather knowledge and experience to help prepare for real Mars mission
This meant probing the psychological and physiological effects of extended isolation
Project simulated outward cruise, landing operations and return journey to Earth
About 100 experiments were planned; crew partook in a series of medical studies
Resources restricted at departure; crew had to manage food consumption
Text communications only were possible with the ground; max 25min delay in round signal time
"It's really great to see you all again - rather overwhelming," said European Space Agency (Esa) participant Diego Urbina after stepping through the opened hatch of the Mars500 "spaceship".
"On the Mars500 mission, we have achieved on Earth the longest space voyage ever so that humankind can one day greet a new dawn on the surface of a distant, but reachable, planet."
The rest of the crew - Russians Alexey Sitev, Alexandr Smoleevskiy and Sukhrob Kamolov; European Romain Charles; and Chinese national Wang Yue - smiled and waved to family members who had come to greet them at the Institute of Biomedical Problems (IMBP).
The crew has now been taken away into quarantine for medical checks.
For much of the Mars500 project, the six had only limited contact with the outside world. Their spaceship had no windows, and the protocols demanded their communications endured a similar time lag to that encountered by real messages as they travelled the vast distance between Earth and Mars.
At its maximum, the round travel time for a question to be sent and for an answer to be received was about 25 minutes.
This meant having to resort to text media, such as email and Twitter, and video blogs.
Asked before he came out what he was most looking forward to, Italian-Colombian Diego Urbina had told BBC News via Twitter: "Meeting my family, calling my friends, bumping into strangers, going to the beach."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15574646