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A year in isolation: 366-day mock moon mission wraps up in Russia

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Posted on 2 hours ago by inuno.ai

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On Nov. 14, 2024, the Institute of Biomedical Problems (IBMP) of the Russian Academy of Sciences marked the successful completion of SIRIUS-23, a year-long biomedical isolation experiment simulating the conditions of deep-space travel and lunar surface operations.

For 366 days, a crew of six analog astronauts lived and worked in a sealed environment, a meticulously controlled Earth-based stand-in for interplanetary missions of the future.

The SIRIUS (Scientific International Research in Unique terrestrial Station) project, launched in collaboration with NASA’s Human Research Program and the IBMP in 2017, had previously conducted shorter experiments lasting 17, 120 and 240 days. These missions, featuring international crews from Russia, the United States and the United Arab Emirates, aimed to replicate the isolation and psychological strain of long-term spaceflight.

overhead view of several brown habitat buildings inside a warehouse-like structure

Elevated view of the IBMP facility where the SIRIUS-23 366-day analog mission took place. (Image credit: Institute of Biomedical Problems.)

However, after 2022, IBMP decided to proceed with the ambitious SIRIUS-23 experiment independently. The latest crew hailed from Russia and Belarus: Commander Yuriy Chebotarev, Flight Engineer Angelica Parfenova, Medical Officer Ksenia Orlova, and Researchers Olga Mastickaya, Ksenia Shishenina, and Rustam Zaripov — a mixed-gender team of two men and four women.

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