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Mission Support serves the function of what has historically been called Mission Control for previous human space exploration endeavors. Mission Support's role is to be the "Earth-bound" group of experts that supports the work of the MDRS crew. "Support" is a better word than "Control" in the case of a mission to Mars, in which the large physical distance necessitates a great deal of independent operation on the part of a Martian crew.
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Artemis Westenberg |
Mission Director - Artemis has served on 6 MDRS crews. She has been a board member of the Mars Society Netherlands from the very first (2000) and serves as its president since 2004. Artemis has organised many Mars Society conferences in the Netherlands and Europe.
Since 2005 Artemis is an active member of the Steering Committee of the Mars Society and in 2008 was appointed as Director International Relations of the Mars Society Inc.
After serving as CapCom for MDRS and FMARS, and as logistics manager, for the 4 month FMARS crew in 2007, Artemis took on the responsibilities of Mission Director, managing the MDRS since August 2008.
She has filled a Wiki with her experiences at the MDRS and the things she learned as CapCom from countless crews: http://www.hablife.org This as part of her job as one of the Euro-MARS project managers. She was involved from the start with the design of this European Mars Analogue Research Station and scouted the site at Krafla in Iceland in 2002.
M.A. in History, Classical Studies, International Relations, Islam, at Leyden University, The Netherlands. General Management, Dutch Entrepreneurial Society.
Trained as manager in many fields (e.g. financial, project, logistics, PR), her work experience is diverse: working for various multinational corporations as PR manager and Business Administration manager; president of the Rotterdam Women's Council, the largest pressure group organisation of the Netherlands; lobbyist for many very diverse projects.
Works at present as Business Manager of a Welfare Foundation, Rotterdam; Ambassador Dutch Space Industries & Dutch National Space Association; Lecturer.
Artemis has travelled this planet from her birth with her father, a shipmaster of seagoing vessels, which instilled wanderlust in her blood. She feels at home anywhere in this world and has lived for a short time in many of its capitals. She is an avid reader of magazines (Science, Nature, New Scientist), and _ if she can find the time_ SF, mysteries and historical novels. She collects children books and books on subjects like Egyptology, Archaeology, Mars, Judaism and has managed to completely cover her walls with book cases. Artemis likes to built things with her own hands after a thorough design process as is witnessed by her own home. She likes to cook and knows how to adapt any recipe to make it kosher. In her youth she was a dedicated sportswoman in gymnastics and later water polo and swimming.
She lives her life in a suburb of Rotterdam, for which seaport she is the proverbial example of an foreigner with a little homesickness in her heart.
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John W. Barainca |
Certified Flight Instructor - John has taught biology, physics, astronomy, aeronautics and astronautics at the high school level. He created a space flight simulation as part of his science classes and has been "flying" students for the past 29 years. He currently operates a mobile unit in which students fly to Mars each day. He also teaches astronomy at the Salt Lake Community College.
In addition to space flight simulations, John has worked with students to fly an experiment in a GAS canister in the payload bay of the Space Shuttle, designed and flown an experiment on a satellite (WEBERSAT), and has flown experiments on Air Force high altitude balloons.
He is extremely interested in exobiology and will be focusing on activites related to the methodology of collecting and classifying extremophiles in addition to other operational aspects of the MDRS simulation. He plans to share his experiences and the MDRS project with the educational community. John's hobbies include skiing, mountaineering and horseback riding. |
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Dr. William Clancey |
Chief Scientist, Human Centered Computing - NASA/Ames. His contribution for MDRS: Helping conceptualize and formalize analog investigations; methods include participant observation and simulating hab activities ("a day in the life"); special interests:
- How life support systems maintenance constrains science activities;
- role of mission support in bridging communication with systems & science specialists on Earth.
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Julie Edwards |
Mission Support Director. Julie was our CapCom Coordinator for many years and probably knows more about supporting MDRS Operations then a lot of folks. This made her the logical choice in the fall of 2007 for promotion to this extremely important role when Dr. Tony Muscatello accepted the ultimate promotion, an invitation to go to work at NASA. (All CapCom Bios) |
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Gary Fisher |
GreenHab group Manager - I try to coordinate the group activities with the overall MDRS effort. My own particular task has been building the greenhouse. |
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Alex Kirk |
MDRS and FMARS Webmaster. Alex joined Mission Support in the spring of 2007 and immediately undertook the daunting task of getting the FMARS web site ready for reports and data from the FXI Long Duration Mission Crew. Over the summer of 2007 he worked on updating the MDRS website's code and was instrumental in getting the MDRS site prepared for the 2007-2008 field season.
By day Alex is a professional computer analyst and programmer, who lives in the Washington, DC metropolitan area with his wife and three cats.
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Jean Lagarde |
Information Management Coordinator.
Jean is a key player on The Mars Society web team. coordinating the efforts of the various web team members, to ensure that our web sites are up todate and easy for our members and the general public to use.
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Heather Rose |
MDRS Mission Support Operations.
Heather Rose works at Pioneer Astronautics. She assists Dr Zubrin with crew selection process and sees to it that the crews are briefed for their MDRS rotation in a timely manner. Heather is also the contact person to who crews must make their "in transit" reports to as they transfer from their arrival airport to Hanksville and back at the start and end of their analogue research mission. This is a safety requirement, so Mission Support we can track the crews as they travel to and from MDRS, to ensure their safe arrival at each end.
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