Astronauts Wanted: Experiment in Hawaii to Test Mars Menus

Wanted: Astronauts ... sort of. Six volunteers and two backups needed for simulated stay on Mars. Must be willing to endure four months of bad food.

Researchers from Cornell and the University of Hawaii have not posted a want ad precisely like that, but they are looking for able-bodied volunteers willing to be cooped up for 120 days and nights in a make-believe Mars base early in 2013. The experiment is called HI-SEAS -- short for Hawaii Space Exploration Analogue & Simulation -- and would have the would-be astronauts live in a habitat amid the volcanic rubble on Hawaii's Big Island. (If they want to visit the beach, the volunteers can go on their own time once their simulated Mars stay is finished.)

The objective? The researchers are seriously interested in studying the volunteers to find out out what real astronauts might eat, and whether they would cook and consume enough to sustain themselves on a long mission when pulling over at the nearest convenience store would not be an option.

"Anyone eating a restricted diet will soon get tired of it," said Jean Hunter, a professor of biological and environmental engineering at Cornell University and an organizer of the experiment. "Astronauts on long missions generally don't eat enough. That's good for a diet on Earth, but bad in space, because all the problems of microgravity, like bone and muscle loss, are exacerbated if you don't get enough calories."

The researchers would make the experiment fairly realistic -- the crew members would have limited communications with mission control, and wear makeshift spacesuits whenever they went outside. Inside, they would be limited to the food supplies that had been packed in their habitat -- long-lasting staples such as flour, sugar, beans, rice, olive oil, dehydrated meat and cheese.

Could you stomach it? Or would the lack of variety drive you crazy? Would your sense of taste or smell be diminished? NASA would like to know, which is why, even though it has no specific plans for a Mars expedition on the books, it is funding preliminary research now.

Historically, astronauts on short flights -- space shuttle missions or the Apollo flights to the moon -- said they were willing to put up with almost anything for the chance to fly. In 2009, ABC News followed a shuttle crew for a year leading up to a mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope, and while they joked about pizza and peanut butter, they willingly took what NASA gave them.

"The first thing to know about space food," said astronaut John Grunsfeld, smiling, "is that it's the ambience, it's the environment, it is not the food."

But Grunsfeld and his team were on a two-week flight. A Mars mission might take two or three years. Early space station missions showed that space fliers sometimes showed signs of depression, and little things, such as the lack of fresh fruit, became major psychological issues.

"If you're shut up for a long mission, food literally becomes the spice of life," said Hunter. "It becomes a lot more important than it does on Earth."

Applications for HI-SEAS will be accepted until Feb. 29. Candidates must be nonsmokers in good health, between the ages of 21 and 65, with bachelor's degrees in engineering, math or appropriate sciences. Special consideration will be given to those who could use the four months for related experiments in geology or long-duration spaceflight.

"This could make a difference for Mars missions, or it could be helpful to future astronauts at lunar outposts, who might spend most of their careers there," said Hunter.

She laughed a little. "You could cite the old joke about the first restaurant on the moon: Great food, no atmosphere."

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28 comments

  • Tekiba  •  Tucker, Georgia  •  2 months ago
    Try eating "MRE" (Meals Ready To Eat) for 45 days in the field, Or better yet the old "C" Rations the Army & Marines ate in Vietnam.
    • Ed 2 months ago
      mmm old c rations. chickletts and 6 smokes
    • ER 2 months ago
      Chili is my favorite... stay away from the jambalaya... 4 months ungodly gas.
    • SS 2 months ago
      The pnut butter and cookie in the C's were good, and the lima beans were OK
  • Bobby Dimond  •  Owings Mills, Maryland  •  2 months ago
    so what would the pay be?
    • Ricky 2 months ago
      They said "voulunteers" so there might be no pay! The first thing I learned in the Air Force was"Never voulunteer for ANYTHING! You know what happened last time you did that!"
  • alanp  •  2 months ago
    I don't have a degree but I would like to do it because I could use the diet restrictions this experiment would have to lose about 60 pounds.
  • Ed  •  2 months ago
    hmmm who can afford not trying to get a paycheck for that long? If they pay me $1000(after taxes) a month and pay for the air fare ill play Guinea pig for this.
  • oceanboy  •  San Diego, California  •  2 months ago
    Convicts would be perfect for extended missions in space! How do you say ,"Aargh", in Martian?
  • Timothy  •  Weilheim in Oberbayern, Germany  •  2 months ago
    Doing contract work in Afghanistan, I've endured over 3 years of bad food.
    • Ed 2 months ago
      and a good pay check at least.
  • JOHN VOTER  •  Pleasanton, California  •  2 months ago
    Sounds like eating out at mc'donalds!! 24 hour fries!! Super size!!
    • cybertooth 2 months ago
      Rather that routinely eating Mickie D's burgers, I'd take to suspended animation.
  • M.S.  •  2 months ago
    Macaroni salad with too much mayonnaise, octopus, and some fried spam. That's Mars food, Hawaiian style.
    • Carin 2 months ago
      as long as there's poke and some kalua pig, I'm in!
    • M.S. 2 months ago
      And some opihi!
  • Shairk.  •  2 months ago
    DON'T DO IT. The "food" will probably alter your DNA.
  • old 1  •  2 months ago
    give MREs takes little space.and sometimes their ok
  • nostrad  •  Friendswood, Texas  •  2 months ago
    Did anybody mentioned pay?
  • O.G. - Oscar the Grouch  •  2 months ago
    can i just live off the freeze dried ice cream?
  • O.G. - Oscar the Grouch  •  2 months ago
    where can i apply?
  • Hanford  •  2 months ago
    I'll do it, NASA! Able-bodied 29 year old male right here.
  • Erik F  •  2 months ago
    Sign me up. Mind over matter.
  • showmeyourtd's  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  2 months ago
    we are planning our exit from the planet to find a new one!
  • Space Tycoon  •  2 months ago
    We just have to bide our time until SpaceX begins rolling out the SuperDraco:

    โ€œSuperDraco engines represent the best of cutting edge technology,โ€ said Elon Musk, SpaceX CEO and Chief Technology Officer. โ€œThese engines will power a revolutionary launch escape system that will make Dragon the safest spacecraft in history and enable it to land propulsively on Earth or another planet with pinpoint accuracy.โ€

    The SuperDraco is an advanced version of the Draco engines currently used by SpaceXโ€™s Dragon spacecraft to maneuver on orbit and during reentry. As part of SpaceXโ€™s state-of-the-art launch escape system, eight SuperDraco engines built into the side walls of the Dragon spacecraft will produce up to 120,000 pounds of axial thrust to carry astronauts to safety should an emergency occur during launch.
  • Space Tycoon  •  2 months ago
    I've already staked out my property which will showcase the first restaurant on Mars.

    Black Hole Creampuffs
    Saturnian Scampi
    Plutonian Pate
    Scintillating Clams
    Blue Andromedas (aperitif)

    Bon Appetit!
  • oceanboy  •  San Diego, California  •  2 months ago
    I'll volunteer for then actual mission to Mars!
  • Sebastian  •  Irvine, California  •  2 months ago
    Only 4 months for a simulation? You'd think that for a proper simulation of a Mars mission (total time, about 2 years or so) they'd train a bit longer than four months. But if it's just for EVA activity testing? That'd work...

    It'd be nice to live long enough to see the real thing someday... ;-)