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New arrivals at remotest base on Earth - will you be next
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Nov 25, 2016


After four months with seeing the Sun rise above the horizon the crew of Concordia research station welcome its return from the rooftop. During the Antarctic summer some 60 scientists live and work on the base conducting research on the icy plateau 3200 m above sea level. When winter comes, the skeleton crew of up to 15 keep the base running and fend for themselves for nine months - no help can be flown in as temperatures drop to -80+ C. Preparing for exploration of our Solar System, ESA runs life-science experiments on the crew as they adapt to life in these harsh conditions. Read more in the Concordia blog. Image courtesy ESA/IPEV/PNRA-F. van den Berg. For a larger version of this image please go here.

The next medical doctor to spend a year at the Concordia research base in Antarctica arrived this week by aircraft. Carole Dangoisse from Belgium will live and work at the station conducting space research on and with the rest of the Italian-French crew as they spend the winter in isolation.

With temperatures as low as -80C, no sunlight for four months and no access at all during the winter, Concordia is one of the most remote and isolated human outposts. Its unique location and extreme conditions offer ESA the chance to research how humans adapt to living far away from home - similar to an outpost in space or on another planet.

Carole will work on experiments looking at bone health, how the immune systems adapts to the extremes and how to assess mood in team dynamics, among others.

Knowing how someone feels is important for mission controllers. However, ask someone how they feel and they will never reply objectively. The Capa experiment will assess mood by analysing speech patterns such as tone of voice, intonation, use of grammar and speed of speech. Crewmembers will regularly record a video diary of their lives in Concordia as well as narrate a paragraph from a fairy tale.

By looking at changes in the way they talk into the camera and comparing these with results from standard questionnaires, researchers hope to develop software that can analyse speech automatically.

Carole is replacing Floris van den Berg, who has spent the last year in Antarctica. Floris is handing over the experiments to Carole and explaining the protocol as he prepares to leave next month.

ESA's Jennifer Ngo-Anh explains: "The research doctor in Concordia is like an astronaut on the International Space Station for ESA - she or he conducts experiments for the researchers in Europe and collects the results for analysis."

Call for next year's volunteers
ESA is looking for the next research doctor to run experiments in this unique setting. Do you have a medical degree and a sense of adventure? Sign up through the link here, an ESA member state nationality is required.


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