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378 Days Later: Navy Scientist Reflects on Testing NASA's Mars-Like Habitat

In order to know how human life can adapt to a foreign environment like Mars, we first have to replicate those conditions on Earth.

Three people wave to others as they walk into a building. A fourth person near them applauds.
NASA Crew
NASA's Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog mission 1 crew heads into the Mars Alpha Dune habitat to begin its 378-day mission, June 25, 2023.
Credit: NASA
VIRIN: 230625-O-D0439-072

On June 25, 2023, four NASA volunteers entered a habitat at Johnson Space Center in Houston to simulate life on the red planet.

For more than a year, they stayed inside that isolated environment, conducting research and simulating experiments to inform future expeditions to Mars.

NASA's Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog mission — CHAPEA in short — was the first of three planned Mars simulations. Mission 1 lasted 378 days inside the Mars Dune Alpha habitat, a sealed-off, 1,700-square-foot, 3D-printed building that had private crew's quarters, two bathrooms and a kitchen, as well as areas for medical, recreation and fitness activities, and growing crops. There was also a technical area where the crew worked in conditions closely replicating those found on Mars.

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Navy Lt. Anca Selariu, a microbiologist with Naval Medical Research Unit San Antonio, was one of the volunteers who completed the mission in July. A native of Romania, she moved to the U.S. decades ago and has been in the Navy for about five years.

"It still seems like a dream that I got to be one of the first crew members to complete a full mission," she said via email shortly before exiting the Mars Dune Alpha habitat.

A woman with her arms crossed over her chest poses for a photo.
Anca Selariu
Navy Lt. Anca Selariu, a microbiologist with Naval Medical Research Unit San Antonio, was one of four volunteers to complete a year-long stay in the Mars Dune Alpha habitat.
Credit: NASA
VIRIN: 230623-N-N1542-1001U

Selariu brought expert knowledge on vaccines, prion transmission, gene therapy and infectious diseases to the mission. While she couldn't go into much detail about the crew's experiments and data findings, she said they had many technical hurdles to address, with the human elements being one of the most challenging.

"Mars is not a place we can send a rapid response team to if anything goes wrong, so we cannot afford to leave [Earth] unprepared," Selariu said. "We're helping NASA in formulating various countermeasures to address the combination of physical and psychological stressors caused by isolation, resource limitations, communication delays and living in close quarters with only three other people, which can all impact team dynamics and cognitive performance."

Four people sit at a table with vegetables on it.
Group Photo
Crew members of NASA's Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog, or CHAPEA, Mission 1 sit at a table with vegetables they grew within Mars Dune Alpha, a 3-D printed, 1,700-square-foot structure at Johnson Space Center in Houston. The crew spent 378 days inside the habitat to simulate expeditions to the surface of Mars and collect critical data to inform future human expeditions to space.
Credit: NASA
VIRIN: 240701-N-ND850-1004B

Her fellow crew members were Kelly Haston, mission commander; Nathan Jones, a medical officer; and Ross Brockwell, a flight engineer. One thing they were able to simulate was walking on Mars.

"We had to traverse from the habitat through a series of hatches and into an airlock, don our simulated space suits, depressurize before opening the hatch to the Mars surface, and step into a large sandbox filled with Mars simulated regolith," Selariu said of the loose, dusty rock covering Mars' surface. "[That's] where we performed various activities while being guided by a … crew member from inside the habitat."

Selariu explained how the Navy prepared her for the year of isolation.

"Military experience in general prepares humans to be resilient, resourceful and disciplined," she said. "We often get to live in isolated, even hostile environments, and we understand how to cooperate and communicate with our team members, ... [operating] autonomously as a unit in difficult situations with scant resources and even no communication capabilities. Mars will demand all these as a basic skill set."

A woman sits in a chair while a man cuts her hair.
Hair Cut
NASA CHAPEA Mission 1 Medical Officer Nathan Jones cuts the hair of Navy Lt. Anca Selariu, a microbiologist assigned to Naval Medical Research Unit San Antonio. Selariu and three other crew members spent 378 days inside Mars Dune Alpha, a 3-D printed, 1,700-square-foot habitat at Johnson Space Center in Houston. The mission’s goal was to simulate expeditions to the surface of Mars and collect critical data to inform future human expeditions to space.
Credit: NASA
VIRIN: 240701-N-ND850-1005M
A woman pedals a stationary bicycle.
Exercise
Navy Lt. Anca Selariu, a microbiologist assigned to Naval Medical Research Unit San Antonio, exercises during NASA’s Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog, orCHAPEA, Mission 1. Selariu and three other crew members spent 378 days inside Mars Dune Alpha, a 3-D printed, 1,700-square-foot habitat at Johnson Space Center in Houston. The mission’s goal was to simulate expeditions to the surface of Mars and collect critical data to inform future human expeditions to space.
Credit: NASA
VIRIN: 240701-N-ND850-1003M

Despite having only three other people around the whole year, Selariu said they weren't short on entertainment in Mars Dune Alpha.

"We had plenty of digital books, prerecorded movies, TV shows, video games, board games and puzzles, but just talking to each other was, many times, entertainment in itself," she said.

Selariu said her year sequestered away from the world made her realize that Earth is truly "home."

"I missed most what I took for granted about Earth: how amazing it is that we can actually walk about and breathe its atmosphere — how cozy it is for so many life-forms to coexist. How amazing that it feeds us and keeps us safe and warm in a universe that is anything but friendly," she said.

Four people stand beside a screen with a countdown clock.
Group Photo
The CHAPEA Mission 1 crew celebrates one year inside the Mars Dune Alpha habitat. From left: Nathan Jones, medical officer; Anca Selariu, science officer; Kelly Haston, mission commander; and Ross Brockwell, flight engineer.
Credit: NASA
VIRIN: 240624-O-D0439-065

On her last day in the Mars Dune Alpha, Selariu said she was excited to talk with friends and family in person, as well as partake in some other creature comforts.

"I look forward to green landscapes, freshly baked bread with butter, and a fully equipped gym," she said. "There are so many things I look forward to!"

Now that she's "returned" to Earth, Selariu said she'll move on to whatever mission the Navy gives her.

"I look forward to putting my boots back on and beginning the next journey," she said. "We can only guess where the future takes us." 

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