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Recreating Mars' Hostile Environment In The Lab

Scientists at the University of Leicester's Space Research Center are recreating the hostile environment found on Mars in their laboratory, with a device known as the Martian Environment Simulator (MES).

The machine reproduces the temperature, air pressure and unbreathable atmosphere known to exist on Mars.

The MES is currently being used to test equipment on the Beagle 2 lander, part of the European Space Agency's Mars Express Spacecraft due to arrive on Mars during Christmas 2003.

The chance of Beagle 2 finding life, either current or past, on the red planet has increased recently due to the discovery of ice beneath the planet's surface. The MES will be used to test all future instruments for planetary science being developed at the Space Research Center.

Instruments that work in space need to be thoroughly tested to ensure that they will work in the extreme conditions found there and also to calibrate the readings that will be transmitted back to Earth.

Researchers need to be sure that the gases in the atmosphere of another planet will not cause electrical arcing that damages the instruments. The MES creates an environment where the air is made mostly of carbon dioxide and the temperature can vary between a freezing minus 10 degrees Celsius (Martian daytime temperature) and a deadly minus 80 degrees (Martian night).

[Contact: Derek Pullan, Gill Ormrod]

03-Jun-2002

 

 

 

 

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