The plan for today was to split up into teams morning and afternoon.
In the morning, Diego and Bianca would perform the first experimental
(suited) trials of the ergonomics study while Paul, Laksen, and I
did a preliminary survey of the radiotelescope from the pressurized
tunnel (i.e. path to the greenhouse). Then after lunch, Steve and
Bianca would go off looking for microfossils while Paul, Laksen,
and I began actual work on the radiotelescope.
What actually happened was that after Paul, Laksen, and I filled
up the ATVs' tanks and checked their oil and tires, we went to pump
water from the trailer in which it is delivered into the hab's
external tank and the pump wouldn't run. It had been fine yesterday....
I tried unkinking the hose and poking at it in various ways, up to
and including a complete disassembly, but still it would only hum
when plugged in. At one point when we had it disassembled it began
to spin, and we cheered and put it back together. Naturally once
it was back together it wouldn't work any more. Fortunately we
have enough water in the tank for several days so this isn't an
immediate crisis, and right after lunch the water pump began working
again, apparently all by itself. We went out and filled the tank
right away, as long as it was working. (I still don't trust it
long-term).
While I was working on the pump, Laksen looked for the source of
water we'd seen leaking out from under the hab. It turned out that
the U-bend under the sink in the science lab had come loose --
someone in some previous crew had put a bucket under it, but we'd
been using it unawares and it had filled up and spilled over. There
was ice at the back of the cabinet and water on the floor as well.
Laksen started to look for PVC pipe cement to reattach it but I
thought I remembered that gluing a U-bend in place would be bad --
you need to be able to get it off to clean out the trap -- and that
it should be possible to just finger-tighten the joint. Turned out
the gasket in the joint was in backwards, and once reversed and
finger-tightened it no longer leaked (well, maybe seeped a little).
We did manage to get about a half-hour in on the radiotelescope,
reading over the documentation and surveying the current state of
construction.
While lunch was cooking, I also ran up to the Musk Observatory to
see if I could fix the #1 webcam there, which was completely washed
out even when the sun wasn't shining directly into its eye. Poking
around at the computer there, I stumbled into a deeply-buried
settings screen where all the contrast, brightness, and gamma
controls were seriously messed up. A simple press on the Restore
Defaults button brought the camera back to life. Go me! There
were three working webcams when we arrived and now we have five.
I'll tackle the sixth when I get a chance.
For lunch we had split-pea soup from a mix, with dehydrated peas
and corn and some yummy yummy TVP added. It was actually pretty
tasty. We Marsnauts are research subjects in a food study, where
we alternate cooking and non-cooking days and fill out a survey
each day about how we liked them and what our current mood and
energy level is, and today is a non-cooking day. On non-cooking
days we eat only rehydrated foods (the sort of thing you would find
at a camping or survivalist store); tonight's dinner is Texas BBQ
Chicken with Beans. Some of these dehydrated meals are really good.
(They're also expensive.) On cooking days we can cook whatever we
like from what is available -- which is, more often than not,
something else pre-prepared. One night I got ambitious and made a
stir-fry of tofu, rehydrated broccoli, and rehydrated onions, served
over real rice. It was pretty good, in my opinion, but I don't
think it was good enough to justify the time it took.
Our time is fully occupied here. The days are filled with EVAs and
various maintenance and repair tasks, and the evenings are largely
taken up with the daily reports we have to file with the Mars
Society, planning the next day's activities, and blogging. Blogging
is a serious activity here -- it's public outreach. Diego and I
had blogs before being selected for this mission. Laksen started
blogging after he was selected, and Paul and Bianca both started
blogging after they arrived here. Only Steve is blog-resistant.
After lunch we suited up for our radiotelescope EVA. The radiotelescope
we have here is a very simple one based on designs provided by
NASA's Radio Jove project (http://radiojove.gsfc.nasa.gov/). It
just consists of a pair of dipole antennas -- basically two parallel
wires -- which can receive a signal from a powerful radio source
such as Jupiter or the Sun. The height of the two wires above the
ground determines the angle in the sky where the antenna is focused,
and right now that height is fixed to the position of Jupiter when
the telescope was first constructed (it's since moved). We're
replacing the poles that hold up the wires with telescoping assemblies
so the telescope can be "pointed" at different parts of the sky.
Two of the poles were replaced by the previous crew and we're going
to try to finish the job. Today we managed to get the two fixed-height
poles taken down and all the necessary parts moved into the lab;
the next step is to build the telescoping poles.
Almost immediately after that EVA Paul and Laksen decided to go out
on one more EVA to check out some repairs we'd made to the suits.
I was tired, but when Paul invited me along I said "I'm never going
to have this opportunity again" and I suited up with them. We're
getting pretty good at the suiting process and it went quickly; we
then took ATVs a short way away and climbed up a mesa. It was cool
to be walking across the stripes you can see from the hab, and the
whole thing felt exceptionally Marsy. The view was spectacular,
but I pooped out before reaching the summit, alas. I rested on a
rock while Laksen and Paul climbed to the top and got some great
pictures.
After everyone got back from their various EVAs we sat down at our
computers to prepare our daily reports and began boiling water for
dinner. So ends another day on Mars.