Russian cosmonaut Boris Morukov died suddenly on New Year’s Day
Boris Morukov, a Russian cosmonaut and physician who conducted simulation experiments for a human mission to Mars, died unexpectedly on Thursday, January 1, 2015 at the age of 64, announced the Institute of Biomedical problems (IBMP) in Moscow.
“We announce with deep sorrow that Boris Morukov died suddenly on the New Year’s Day”, the Moscow Institute wrote on its website. Boris Moroukov “will always remain in our hearts as a talented scholar, a brilliant organizer and a friendly and helpful man,” said IBMP in a statement.
Morukov, a former cosmonaut for Russian Federal Space Agency, coordinated the project Mars-500, a psychosocial isolation experiment held from 2007 to 2011 and during which an international team of six people spent 520 days in isolation to simulate a trip to Mars.
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This experiment, conducted by Russia in collaboration with the European Space Agency and China, allowed the simulation of a round trip to the red planet and the study of the isolation effects on humans from absence of daylight to that of fresh air.
During the tests, the astronauts were subjected also to restrictions to make contacts with other humans, a situation which is crucial for a long trip to Mars even if such a space mission is scheduled to take place over 20 or 30 years from now.
Boris Vladimirovich Morukov was a Russian physician at the State Research Center RF-Institute for Biomedical Problems (IBMP). He trained with the Russian Federal Space Agency as a research-cosmonaut and flew aboard NASA Space Shuttle mission STS-106 as a mission specialist.