ºÚÁÏÍø

News

Ice researcher will live one year in a Mars-simulation

Christiane Heinicke and five other researchers are to spend one year in a research station that mimics the conditions on the planet Mars.
www_cheinicke_en.jpg

The experiment is part of a one-year Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation (HI-SEAS) -mission, which begins on August 28.

Heinicke and the rest of the crew will live in a remote habitat located half-way up the Mauna Loa volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii.

- At this point, I am super excited. It was a relatively spontaneous decision to take part in this mission, as I only sent my application in as late as in mid-May. But having been a finalist for another similar experiment I have had time to get used to the idea of spending one year in isolation, she tells.

At Aalto University Heinicke has worked as a postdoctoral researcher under Professor Jukka Tuhkuri in the Mechanics of Materials group at the Department of Applied Mechanics.

- In terms of research, my work at HI-SEAS will be very different from my research at Aalto. Here, I have worked on sea ice; in Hawaii there may be a slight chance we find some permafrost soil or ice at higher altitudes. Still, after this year is over, returning ºÚÁÏÍø and continuing my work here is definitely an option for me. I really enjoyed my time here and Professor Tuhkuri has been very supportive, she says.

Twelve months as a guinea pig

The study in Hawaii aims at identifying the social, interpersonal and cognitive factors that affects team performance during long-duration space travel, such as missions to Mars. Conditions resemble a Martian research base. The domed habitat has a single window that overlooks vast fields of volcanic rock. Every crew member is required to wear a spacesuit when venturing outside. Communications are delayed by 20 minutes each direction to simulate transmission over interplanetary distances.

During their twelve months the crew will be continuously monitored by surveillance cameras, body movement trackers, electronic surveys and other methods. Besides being the guinea pigs, the crew will also conduct their own research. Christiane Heinicke's projects involve the extraction of water from the ground and sleep.

- We are a team of highly motivated and collaborative people, each competent in their own field. We will have plenty of time and opportunities to learn from each other, she concludes.

The mission is NASA-funded and run by the University of Hawaii.

Christiane Heinicke’s blog about her experience inside the dome is at (in German)

Further information:

Contact: Christiane Heinicke, mail@cheinicke.de

  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

EIT RawMaterials call for Skills for Tomorrow Training 2025
Cooperation Published:

Apply to EIT RawMaterials Skills for Tomorrow Training Call (Last Cut-Off Day 29 AUG 2025)

This initiative seeks to support the creation of innovative, revenue-generating training programmes that address digital transformation, technological innovation, and strategic workforce needs across the raw materials value chain.
AI-on-Demand
Research & Art Published:

AI-on-Demand platform expands to accelerate European AI innovation across research and industry

Aalto University’s Center for Knowledge and Innovation Research (CKIR) is proud to contribute
Person wearing a patterned knit sweater and grey turtleneck in a science laboratory with metal equipment in the background.
Awards and Recognition, Research & Art Published:

Postdoctoral researcher Bayan Karimi wins 2025 Young Scientist Prize

The prize is the 2025 IUPAP Young Scientist Prize for the Commission on Low Temperature Physics (C5).
Environmental Engineering new flow channel in Otaniemi, with students and teaching staff
Research & Art Published:

Significant funding from Maa- ja vesitekniikan tuki for Olli Varis's research group

The InnoWAT project strengthens education in the water sector