A simulated Mars mission in the United States’ Utah desert came to an abrupt end after the research station was gutted in fire, media reported Wednesday.
According to a Daily Mail report, the mission involved four “astronauts” living in isolation for two weeks in the hope of recreating the psychological effects of life on Mars.
Instead, they had to deal with a real-life emergency when a devastating fire, with 10 foot-high (3 metres) flames destroyed the Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS).
The crew members attempted to battle the flames on their own for over an hour.
The Mars Society, which ran the mission, said no one was hurt in the accident.
The fire was caused by an unusual power surge in the astronaut’s “habitat”, which lies near the small town of Hanksville in Utah.
During their stay, the astronauts’ home was the habitat module, a two storey silo-shaped building, eight metres in diameter, with laboratory facilities and living spaces.
According to space.com , which Daily Mail cited, crew Commander Nick Orenstein had spotted smoke billowing from the greenhouse and run outside to take a look.
“This is a moment where instinct took over, the instinct of fight or flight, and we had [to] fight,” Orenstein told space.com. “There really wasn’t a question at the moment.”
The middle of the greenhouse, called the GreenHab, was destroyed and an investigation found that an electrical heater placed too close to shelves caused the accident.
Orenstein’s crew stayed in Hanksville and commuted back and forth to the MDRS and coordinated with emergency officials before deciding to end the simulation early December 31.
The gutted GreenHab was the second greenhouse built at the MDRS, after the first one collapsed under heavy winds.
The Mars Society said it would aim to have a replacement structure ready in time for the next batch of “astronauts” to live at the Utah station.
While being part of the mission, contact with the outside world is strictly limited, with a very slow internet connection restricted to allow just a few emails in and out each day.
Most communication was with “mission control”, which asked the crew members for reports on every aspect of their lives during their two-week shifts. That included details on their food intake, exercise, and psychological state.
The experiments being conducted in Utah and a sister station in the Arctic are designed to help scientists learn more about what astronauts would endure on such a trip.
The shortest possible journey to Mars is 140 million miles, or slightly over 225 million km, a trip that is thought to take around seven months.