Assume the mission will include primarily US crew. But international resources contribution and crew members participation is not excluded.
The major topics to be addressed, are:
1. The crewed mission will be launched from a Lunar base which will serve as a place for crewmembers [ 10 individuals] joint training and quarantine for a month, to minimize the likelihood of infections during the Mars transit time. Plan for a diverse group with different skills.
2. The journey will be planned during the closest approaches of the Earth-Mars-Earth, cutting the travel to 6 months and a stay on the planetary surface for at least a year and half. Specifically, your paper must address any health and logistics issues that the crew might experience after landing on Mars and in 1/3 Earth gravity.
1 Colonists, also called settlers, are historically linked to slave labor practices. The slave trade and labor were practiced by the ancient Greek colonists. It is less controversial to use the term settlers and settlements for future space explorations.
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3. Remoteness and isolation are further complicated by the communication delays to ask for assistance in case of unforeseen in health and life support emergencies [self-sufficiency will be an important element since mission abort will be impossible].
4. Assume that an interplanetary laser-based internet with Mars relay satellites will be in place.
5. Give consideration on how to control back contamination of Earth by any potential life forms.
6. Assume that robotic technology will be mature enough to construct a base on Mars.
7. At least 2 cyclers will be used for crew resupply, in addition to the deployment of robotic
missions to preposition food and water supplies. The crew will have to be self-reliant and grow their food and produce water, using in situ resources. Also, consider the type of shelters required to protect against radiation and Mars global dust storms. The storms move electrostatically charged fine, dust particles, at high speed in a rarefied atmosphere, lasting from few days to weeks. Particles can stick to space suits and other equipment, and contaminate space crafts and habitats and present a health risk [ pulmonary pneumoconiosis or interstitial lung disease].
8. Dwell on the benefit of an optimum size, composition [skills and sex], and organizational structure of the crew.
9. Health impacts on the human body caused by long-duration missions in the space environment and how those impacts may affect mission execution and mission success.
10. Issues that remain to be answered and potential countermeasures to mitigate the impacts of long- duration spaceflight, including the limited benefit of current measures used on the International Space Station [Would you recommend the use of artificial gravity during the transit times?]
11. The role of the Lunar infrastructure might be a consideration.
12. Discuss the need of an informed consent by the Mars crew and ethical acceptance of the risks.
13. Limitations and bias section will identify the unknown and potential health risks. Should also
identify critical knowledge areas to researched.