On this day: Mars mission hopefuls include Durham University student
On this day in 2015, a Durham University student was among five Britons shortlisted for a one-way trip to Mars, aiming to become the first humans to set foot on the Red Planet.
Four women and a man from the UK were selected as part of the final 100 candidates for the Mars One Project, which planned to establish a permanent human settlement on Mars by 2024.
More than 200,000 individuals applied for the controversial privately-funded mission, which was estimated to cost six billion dollars and was set to be filmed for a reality television series.
Among the British hopefuls was Hannah Earnshaw, 23, a PhD student in astronomy at Durham University.
Mars
She said: "Human space exploration has always interested me so the opportunity to be one of the people involved was really appealing.
"The future of humanity is in space."
She added: "My family is pretty thrilled. They're really happy for me. Obviously it's going to be challenging, leaving Earth and not coming back. I've had support from my friends and family and we can still communicate via the internet."
As part of the selection process, Ms Earnshaw was to be tested in groups on her response to stressful situations before learning at the end of the year if she would be among the 24 chosen for the mission.
She said there would be eight or nine unmanned trips to Mars before the first group of four astronauts would be launched into space in 2024.
Addressing the scepticism surrounding the project, Ms Earnshaw remarked, "It's a very ambitious mission and requires lots of things going right for humans to leave the planet.
"But this project is encouraging other people to talk about the wider implications."
She added, "It's definitely feasible.
"Space travel is risky but at the same time, there is a time scale in place."
The other British candidates included Dr Maggie Lieu, 24, a PhD in Astrophysics at the University of Birmingham; Ryan MacDonald, 21, an Oxford University student from Derby; Alison Rigby, 35, a science laboratory technician from Beckenham, Kent; and Clare Weedon, 27, a systems integration manager for Virgin Media from Addlestone, Surrey.
The Red Planet
In total, 50 men and 50 women were shortlisted from around the world, including 39 from the Americas, 31 from Europe, 16 from Asia, seven from Africa, and seven from Oceania.
They were selected from a pool of 660 candidates after participating in online interviews with the mission's chief medical officer, Norbert Kraft, where they were assessed on their understanding of the risks involved, team spirit, and motivation to be part of the expedition.
Dutch entrepreneur Bas Lansdorp, co-founder of Mars One, stated, "The large cut in candidates is an important step towards finding out who has the right stuff to go to Mars.
"These aspiring martians provide the world with a glimpse into who the modern day explorers will be."
(From the The Northern Echo of February 16, 2025.)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Watch: 'World's smallest violin' can't be seen without a microscope
June 6 (UPI) -- A team of physicists from a British university used nanotechnology to create what they dubbed "the world's smallest violin," an instrument that can't be seen without a microscope. The Loughborough University team said the platinum violin measures 35 microns -- a measurement unit equal to one millionth of a meter -- long, and 13 microns wide. The violin is smaller than the diameter of a human hair, which ranges from 17 to 180 microns. Tardigrades, eight-legged micro animals, measure between 50 to 1,200 microns long. The researchers created the minute musical instrument to demonstrate the abilities of their new nanolithography system, technology that allows scientists to build and study nanoscale objects and structures. The instrument was chosen as a play on the phrase, "Can you hear the world's smallest violin playing just for you?" The phrase is an expression of mock pity in response to exaggerated complaints or overly dramatic reactions. "Though creating the world's smallest violin may seem like fun and games, a lot of what we've learned in the process has actually laid the groundwork for the research we're now undertaking," Professor Kelly Morrison, head of Loughborough University's Physics Department, said in a news release.


UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
Watch: 'World's smallest violin' can't be seen without a microscope
June 6 (UPI) -- A team of physicists from a British university used nanotechnology to create what they dubbed "the world's smallest violin," an instrument that can't be seen without a microscope. The Loughborough University team said the platinum violin measures 35 microns -- a measurement unit equal to one millionth of a meter -- long, and 13 microns wide. The violin is smaller than the diameter of a human hair, which ranges from 17 to 180 microns. Tardigrades, eight-legged micro animals, measure between 50 to 1,200 microns long. The researchers created the minute musical instrument to demonstrate the abilities of their new nanolithography system, technology that allows scientists to build and study nanoscale objects and structures. The instrument was chosen as a play on the phrase, "Can you hear the world's smallest violin playing just for you?" The phrase is an expression of mock pity in response to exaggerated complaints or overly dramatic reactions. "Though creating the world's smallest violin may seem like fun and games, a lot of what we've learned in the process has actually laid the groundwork for the research we're now undertaking," Professor Kelly Morrison, head of Loughborough University's Physics Department, said in a news release.

Engadget
a day ago
- Engadget
It turns out you can train AI models without copyrighted material
AI companies claim their tools couldn't exist without training on copyrighted material. It turns out, they could — it's just really hard. To prove it, AI researchers trained a new model that's less powerful but much more ethical. That's because the LLM's dataset uses only public domain and openly licensed material. The paper (via The Washington Post ) was a collaboration between 14 different institutions. The authors represent universities like MIT, Carnegie Mellon and the University of Toronto. Nonprofits like Vector Institute and the Allen Institute for AI also contributed. The group built an 8 TB ethically-sourced dataset. Among the data was a set of 130,000 books in the Library of Congress. After inputting the material, they trained a seven-billion-parameter large language model (LLM) on that data. The result? It performed about as well as Meta's similarly sized Llama 2-7B from 2023. The team didn't publish benchmarks comparing its results to today's top models. Performance comparable to a two-year-old model wasn't the only downside. The process of putting it all together was also a grind. Much of the data couldn't be read by machines, so humans had to sift through it. "We use automated tools, but all of our stuff was manually annotated at the end of the day and checked by people," co-author Stella Biderman told WaPo . "And that's just really hard." Figuring out the legal details also made the process hard. The team had to determine which license applied to each website they scanned. So, what do you do with a less powerful LLM that's much harder to train? If nothing else, it can serve as a counterpoint. In 2024, OpenAI told a British parliamentary committee that such a model essentially couldn't exist. The company claimed it would be "impossible to train today's leading AI models without using copyrighted materials." Last year, an Anthropic expert witness added, "LLMs would likely not exist if AI firms were required to license the works in their training datasets." Of course, this study won't change the trajectory of AI companies. After all, more work to create less powerful tools doesn't jive with their interests. But at least it punctures one of the industry's common arguments. Don't be surprised if you hear about this study again in legal cases and regulation arguments.