Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 128 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 134 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 141 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 169 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 199 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 205 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 233 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 248 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 254 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 267 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_main.inc.php on line 595 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/files/model/_file.funcs.php on line 559 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_connect_db.inc.php on line 29 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_core/_param.funcs.php on line 1692 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/generic/model/_genericelement.class.php on line 109 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_core/model/dataobjects/_dataobject.class.php on line 428 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_core/model/dataobjects/_dataobject.class.php on line 437 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/files/model/_file.class.php on line 1782 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/_blog_main.inc.php on line 450 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/items/model/_itemlist.class.php on line 483 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/items/model/_itemlistlight.class.php on line 119 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/items/model/_itemlistlight.class.php on line 838 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/items/model/_item.class.php on line 1426 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/items/model/_item.class.php on line 1429 Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/inc/items/model/_item.class.php on line 3027 Archives for: April 2006 - The Moon Society Blog

Archives for: April 2006

New! - Powerpoint Slide Show of Artemis Mission

by kokhmmm Email

Link: http://www.moonsociety.org/moonbasesim/moonbasesimone_multimedia.html

During our recent Moonbase Simulation exercises at the Mars Desert Research Station in Utah, it was Gerry Williams of Mars Society San Diego who was the voice of CapCom for about half of the two-week mission.

Now Gerry has taken a pick of the photos taken during the mission and put together a Powerpoint Slide show.

You can download this slide show at:
http://www.moonsociety.org/moonbasesim/moonbasesimone_multimedia/

Click on the file:
Artemis_Sim-1.ppt

Enjoy, and use it to Spread the Word!

And thanks again, Gerry!

Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/skins/_item_feedback.inc.php on line 156

Help us redesign the Moon Society Website

by kokhmmm Email

Three years ago, member John Schrock led an effort to redesign the Moon Society front page at

http://www.moonsociety.org

It was a welcome improvement.

In the past year and a half, we have added more menu options and features. But whether it is a matter of layout, color, or content, "what's new" doesn't jump out at the casual visitor. We have had a problem changing the "changing picture" regularly and that has not helped.

We would very much appreciate your feedback. What do you like or not like about the front page? What improvements would you like to see?

To stimulate your thoughts on all this, take a look at the front pages of these four space organizations.

Two that haven't changed in a while in layout or template:

The Space Frontier Foundation
http://www.space-frontier.org

The Mars Society
http://www.marssociety.org

Two that have recently been totally redesigned.

The National Space Society
http://www.nss.org

The Planetary Society
http://planetary.org

Tell us what you like, don't like about each. Be specific.

Your input will be a big help to us in considering how to present a better face to visitors and members alike.

We have become a more dynamic society.
We've got to let that show!

please email me personally with your inputs
president@moonsociety.org
or
kokhmmm@aol.com

Thanks,

Peter Kokh

NOTE: If you've checked our website lately, you will see that, keeping all the your great inputs in mind, we have opted for an evolutionary approach. We hope you find the website easier to use, what you want easier to find, and that it is more interesting. The real test of how well we're doing is if you find yourself visiting it more often! - PK

Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/skins/_item_feedback.inc.php on line 156

The View from 3 Weeks after Mission’s End

by kokhmmm Email

The View from 3 Weeks after Mission’s End
By Mission Commander, Peter Kokh
Filed April 5, 2006

Artemis Moonbase Sim 1 (MDRS Crew 45)
February 26-March 11, 2006

First, deep apologies from all of us on the Artemis Moonbase Sim 1 Crew. We got this blog up and running with every intention of submitting personalized reports all throughout the mission. And that didn’t happen.

The reason is simple. We had undertaken a hefty list of projects and they occupied a lot of our time. Then we had the obligatory reports to file with our Mars Society hosts every day. That took more time. More importantly, because we had such a slow satellite uplink from the middle of Nowhere, Utah, sending our reports took hours. We had to fight frequent service interruptions.
We were left with low energy levels at the end of the day. Even when we did technically have some time left, we spent that on relaxation.

So that was a big lesson for us. Don’t plan too much. Don’t promise too much.
We hope that most of you followed along anyway. But for some of you that might not have been easy. Our own crew website at moonsociety.org/moonbasesim/ was moved to a new location on the Nursing Society Server (our webmaster, William Fung-Schwarz, takes care of that site also) in the wake of two multi-day server crashes of the Moon Society website. But the move was not completed by the time the mission began, leaving visitors in the dark. The /moonbasesim/ site has since been restored at its original location.

Some of you will have been able to follow anyway, on the official Mars Desert Research Station website:
http://www.marssociety.org/MDRS/fs05/
Where our reports and pictures are permanently stored under the Crew 45 section.
I have encouraged the individual crew members to post their reflections on their experiences.
You will find my Mission Summary Report at:
http://www.marssociety.org/MDRS/fs05/0311/sum.asp

We left MDRS feeling a great sense of accomplishment, despite the fact that a combination of over-planning and sickness on the part of some crew members had kept us from achieving all our goals.

Now, three weeks after arriving home, unwinding, letting it all sink in, and further digesting our experiences, I’d like to share with you some reflections.

First, our major goals were these:

#1. Stir up enthusiasm amongst the membership, encouraging more members to renew, and motivating more visitors to join.

#2. Attract major publicity and name recognition for the Moon Society. That would help attract new members as well as new funding.

#3. Gain experience from our exercise that would leave us better prepared to situate, design, outfit, manage, and maintain our own Lunar Analog Station someday.

#4. Fully fund this mission (rent and equipment expenditures) with enough money left over for a down payment on a sequel.

Of these four goals, the third was the only one where I believe we did well.

On goal #1: There has been no discernible growth in the Moon Society membership to date, but that may come later.

On goal #2: All our efforts to attract major publicity failed. While M.D.R.S. as a standing facility, continues to attract Media attention worldwide, individual crew exercises do not. Two expected media visits did not occur for whatever reasons. However, our exercise was followed on the Ad Astra Online section of Space.com and will be featured in an upcoming issue of the National Space Society's quarterly, Ad Astra. We did get a bit part in the new BBC documentary “The Moon,” but not anything that we can expect to draw in new members.

On goal #3: This first mission is stalled at about 78% funding. In two months, we must make up the difference, reaching into our own pockets if need be. If that is the case, it seems unlikely that we would undertake a sequel with even more ambitious projects. We need to make up a $1,500 shortfall and then some towards next year, in order to change that assessment. Meanwhile, we wish to thank all of you who did contribute! For your individual contributions we are deeply grateful. You should know that all of the crew members contributed their own transportation costs to and from Utah, and some of us paid for other items out of pocket. It is not to late to make a contribution. Go to www.moonsociety.org and look for the Make a Donation button in the left hand menu column. This calls up a secure PayPal page in which you can make a credit card donation. You must accompany your donation by an email to treasurer@moonsociety.org specifying that your donation is for the Moonbase Simulation exercise. Failing that, your donation will go into the general funds.

While this seems like a grim report, the fact remains that our projects were overall very successful and we have a lot to be proud about.

The Mars Desert Station area is indeed very Marslike. We had little choice but to concentrate on exercises that would be relevant for moon bases and Mars outposts alike. That had the happy result of providing our host, the Mars Society, with results that benefited their own goals as well. Such a result was intended, of course -- we wanted to be welcome to come back!

William Fung-Schwarz’s MarsSkin space suit experiments contributed to the ongoing evolution of analog spacesuits at MDRS. See his final report at: http://www.marssociety.org/MDRS/fs05/0311/mcp.asp

Laurel Ladd’s modeling of an Early Space Frontier Diet, based on dry and dehydrated foodstuffs supplemented with fresh produce and veggies (on occasion) from our let’s pretend Greenhouse (in operation for three months or so) was a great success. Fiber- and protein-enriched, the meals were well received and no crew member reported any gastrointestinal unwanted side effects. An Online Cookbook, startup edition, is planned, and it will be something Moon and Mars crews to come can add to, should they decide to pick up where we left off.

Our own (commander’s) project of constructing a “simulated” pressurized tunnel between the MarsHab and the GreenHab was also successful. The idea was to create a visually separate “tunnel” through the outdoors, so that crew members could transit inside in ordinary clothing, while their comrades out on the “lunar” or “Martian” surface just outside the “tunnel” would need to wear the EVA suits. The simulation program at M.D.R.S. depends on the admitted illusion, created by wearing the appropriate apparel, of being on Mars itself (or the Moon itself) in order to get the best results from testing equipment and procedures to be used in real situations on Mars or the Moon. Previously, crew members going to the GreenHab had to make an unconvincing mental not that if they followed a certain path they would not be exposed to vacuum (the Moon) or to the unbreathable atmosphere of Mars. The “tunnel” had to provide nor real resistance to the sometimes fierce local winds. The result improved our own level of simulation, and that of all future Mars crews to come.
http://w3.marsstuff.com/media/mdrs/fs05/images/crew45/c45d13str01.jpg

Our Dust Control Study may prove helpful to the Mars Society in upgrading the Hab to allow experiments and exercises not now feasible, as well as help us in better designing our own analog lunar station someday:
http://www.marssociety.org/MDRS/fs05/0310/dcs.asp

But back to a “Three Weeks After Review”

It was a learning experience! On the one hand, it does not seem possible that we could have done it differently or better, given the circumstances. But if we do get the chance to do something like this again, either in Utah or elsewhere, we’ve learned enough to make some major changes.
We need to have a Mission building Team where the following roles are filled by different individuals.
* Fundraising & Sponsor Solicitation
* Budget Manager with the power to veto spending requests
* Engineering Team to design experiment apparatus
* Media/Publicity Team to pin down coverage
* Crew Selection & project proposals

In plain fact, some mistakes and bad calls were made because one person was taking on all these roles. That happened largely because we had only three and a half months to put the mission together. And while we had a lot of cheerleaders, and some very helpful support on details, there were no volunteers for the above major roles. Most members have day jobs that already provide all the load that they can handle. That is, everyone is already busy. The bottom line, however, is that before we try this again, we very much need to grow the society membership base substantially.

In my next report, I will talk about what more we could do at MDRS, and what we would have to gain by going elsewhere, and how much that might cost.
And I want to talk about a membership drive.

Deprecated: Assigning the return value of new by reference is deprecated in /virtual/moonsociety/htdocs/blog/skins/_item_feedback.inc.php on line 156