The following is part two of a series of five emails I sent to a local middle school during my visit to the Mars Desert Research Station as the crew geologist.<\/i><\/p>\n
Hello again,<\/b><\/p>\n What an amazing two days! If anything can go wrong, it definitely will. Engineers are incredibly important to have around on space trips. Our team has electrical engineers (for wires and electricity) and mechanical engineers (for everything else), and between them they’re able to fix just about anything, Plumbing problems, generators, changing the oil in {en:ATV}s, fixing spacesuits, getting the hot water tank running, pump fresh water for us to drink, and everything in between. Without them we wouldn’t have heat, electricity, or water. In fact, engineers are really important in the {en:NASA} space program too. On the {en:International Space Station} they have to fix things just like we do, without any extra tools or equipment apart from what they take with them.<\/p>\n Only the heating hasn’t died yet on our mission, but we’ve certainly had our share of problems. Last night we lost power four times, and tonight three times. It’s incredibly dark in the {en:desert}, so when the power goes out it’s reeeeeeeally dark. It’s a good idea to always carry a flashlight, I think. Can you imagine what it would be like without heat, water or power? Or all three at once?<\/p>\n Tonight the power generator is down so we’re operating on battery backup right now. Hopefully the power will stay up long enough for me to send this email to you. We don’t need a lot of electricity though, and our engineers will fix it tomorrow.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
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