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  • 00:02

    Vsauce!

  • 00:03

    Kevin here!

  • 00:04

    On planet sMars.

  • 00:06

    Simulated Mars -- an eerie and otherworldly corner of the world located on the barren

  • 00:10

    slopes of the Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii.

  • 00:14

    National Geographic's upcoming show "Mars" details the realities of colonizing the Red

  • 00:18

    Planet, and I partnered with them to talk about the future of living in a place like

  • 00:24

    this.

  • 00:26

    After 12-months of seclusion, six scientists, not quite astronauts but lavanauts, have emerged

  • 00:32

    from studying what life on an inhabited Mars might be like.

  • 00:36

    How do we keep our bodies functioning in a place not meant for us?

  • 00:40

    More importantly, 140 million miles from Earth’s oxygen, gravity and family -- how do we keep

  • 00:47

    our minds functioning?

  • 00:51

    The Hawai’i Space Exploration and Analog Simulation, or HI-SEAS, is a geodesic dome

  • 00:56

    with around 1,300 sq feet of livable space designed for six scientists.

  • 01:01

    A two-way software-imposed 20 minute time delay on communication mimics the speed of

  • 01:06

    light message restriction between Mars and Earth.

  • 01:10

    Amenities includes a dining area, a kitchen, a bathroom, an exercise area and six bedrooms.

  • 01:16

    Leaving the habitat, or hab for short, requires a Hazmat suit which simulates the encumbering

  • 01:21

    spacesuit needed for performing geology-related tasks on Mars.

  • 01:26

    On actual Mars, astronauts will need spacesuits for warmth and oxygen, as well as pressure.

  • 01:32

    The thin atmosphere on Mars would cause Earthling eyeballs, lungs and skin to dry out.

  • 01:39

    Like a lot.

  • 01:40

    Since it costs $10,000 per pound to blast things into space, survival items are kept

  • 01:47

    to a bare minimum.

  • 01:48

    Everything needs to be recycled.

  • 01:50

    Filtered urine waters plants, and lights of optimal wavelength help them grow.

  • 01:55

    A day’s worth of sun charges batteries for a day and a half of power.

  • 02:00

    There's composting toilet, a pedicycle charges small devices like iPads, and the clean water

  • 02:06

    used for their 30-second showers becomes grey water used to mop the floor.

  • 02:11

    Primary funding for HI-SEAS IV came from the NASA Behavioral Health and Performance Element

  • 02:16

    -- they want to find out how crews adapt to each other under such stressful, confined

  • 02:21

    and isolated environments.

  • 02:24

    Board games help bonding and mental stimulation.

  • 02:27

    Musical instruments like Andrezj’s guitar and Shey’s didgeridoo help the lavanauts

  • 02:31

    stay connected to culture.

  • 02:33

    Plush animals like Raspberry and Trouble can substitute for real pets and bring moments

  • 02:38

    of levity to a serious situation.

  • 02:40

    They act as a social bridge, a comfort-object-conduit for bringing people together.

  • 02:41

    Every little way to boost morale is vital because once humans leave the planet, even

  • 02:45

    things that bring joy can also bring sadness.

  • 02:49

    Astronauts frequently cite being able to see the Earth as one of their most rewarding,

  • 02:54

    beautiful experiences, but seeing Earth as a tiny, insignificant dot can increase sensations

  • 03:00

    of distance and loneliness… and this ‘Overview Effect’ can also inspire crews to focus

  • 03:06

    on the importance of protecting their planet.

  • 03:09

     Exploring is complicated -- we don’t know what’s beyond the horizon, but like that

  • 03:13

    one kid in kindergarten --  someone’s always willing to taste the crayon.

  • 03:17

    The word Pioneer comes from the Old French ‘paonier,’ meaning “foot soldier”

  • 03:22

    -- the first people to face danger.

  • 03:24

    From pre-historic times to Paradise, Nevada - humans have constantly pushed their boundaries.

  • 03:30

    But while over 90% of the ocean remains unexplored, we are enchanted by life among the stars.

  • 03:37

    In 1865, Jules Verne’s “From the Earth to the Moon” suggested we fire men out of

  • 03:42

    a huge cannon to launch them into space.

  • 03:45

    We developed rocket propulsion instead -- and the challenge now is to figure out how to

  • 03:50

    live beyond Earth’s atmosphere.

  • 03:52

    That starts with finding the right people.

  • 03:54

    The kind of person that on the day of being the first human launched into space was calming

  • 04:00

    everyone else down.

  • 04:02

    On the day of the launch, the head of the Soviet space program said of space pioneer

  • 04:06

    Yuri Gagarin, “During the days of preparation of the launch, when everyone had more than

  • 04:11

    his share of concerns, apprehensions, and anxieties, he alone seemed to keep calm.

  • 04:18

    More than that: he was full of good spirits and beamed like the sun.”

  • 04:23

    Yuri was in space for an hour and forty eight minutes.

  • 04:26

    An unbelievable accomplishment at a time when scientists weren’t sure whether eyeballs

  • 04:30

    would warp in zero gravity and make astronauts blind -- but it’s not even enough time to

  • 04:36

    watch Star Wars.

  • 04:38

    And 1969’s Space Race-winning manned moon-landing mission Apollo 11 took just over eight days

  • 04:44

    total or 96 viewings of Star Wars Episode IV A New Hope...the point is...

  • 04:51

    The current record for longest consecutive time spent in space is held by Valeri Polyakov

  • 04:56

    aboard the space station Mir - clocking in at 437.7 days.

  • 05:01

    Mars could be a three year trip.

  • 05:04

    It’s roughly nine months each way if we launch when Earth and Mars are closest in

  • 05:09

    their respective orbits.

  • 05:10

    Add in time spent on the surface and it’s about three years living in the most unnatural

  • 05:15

    and isolated environment ever attempted by humans.

  • 05:19

     And we’re no stranger to making ourselves...strangers.

  • 05:24

    Searching for new lands requires a fearless portion of the species to venture out into

  • 05:28

    unknown territory -- to be curious and to take action.

  • 05:33

    Clara Ma, a 12 year old girl in Kansas, gave the Mars rover “Curiosity” its name, saying

  • 05:38

    that, “curiosity is the passion that drives us through our everyday lives."

  • 05:43

     And those of us who stay behind revel in hearing the stories of the curious.

  • 05:49

    Tales of great adventure date back to one of humanity’s oldest stories - Homer’s

  • 05:54

    Odyssey, an 8th century BC epic poem documenting Odysseus’s ten year journey home after the

  • 06:00

    Trojan War, which includes having a Cyclops toss half a mountain at him, contending with

  • 06:05

    the lure of the Sirens, and fighting off the six-headed monster Scylla.

  • 06:10

    Despite all that - he made it home.

  • 06:13

    And with Greek monsters behind us we look forward to conquering a planet named for a

  • 06:18

    Roman God.

  • 06:19

    Baby steps from leaving the atmosphere to walking on the moon to entering Mars - informed

  • 06:24

    by what we've learned from the solitude of pioneers and prisoners.

  • 06:30

    The 1862 Homestead Act granted settlers 160 acres of land -- about twice the size of Disneyland

  • 06:37

    -- separated people from each other and long, harsh winters seemed to erase all plant and

  • 06:43

    animal life.

  • 06:44

    “Prairie madness”, caused depression, increased violence, and even total mental

  • 06:49

    breakdown.

  • 06:51

    Things got really lonely in the little house on the prairie.

  • 06:55

    On sea, things get even lonelier.

  • 06:57

    Calenture was a feverish delirium afflicting sailors in the Tropics that could manifest

  • 07:02

    in picturing the water as a grassy meadows and diving overboard.

  • 07:07

    Traveling to Earth’s most remote reaches of Antarctica reveals solitude that hurts.

  • 07:12

    Australian Meteorologist Morton Moyes, who spent 10 weeks alone in Queen Mary Land wrote

  • 07:17

    in 1912, “The silence is so painful now that I have a continual singing in my left

  • 07:23

    ear, much like a Barrel Organ, only it's the same tune.”

  • 07:33

    If the sound of silence is painful -- what happens when you’re cut off from your own

  • 07:38

    senses?

  • 07:39

    A 1951 study at McGill University, that would never be approved today, looked at the effects

  • 07:45

    of solitary confinement - a method of punishing prisoners.

  • 07:49

    It was scheduled to last six weeks; it was abandoned after one.

  • 07:53

    In a room with only a bed, subjects wore goggles and earphones to limit their senses.

  • 07:59

    They reported being unable,  “to think clearly about anything for any length of time.”

  • 08:05

    Those who could think became mentally trapped, hallucinating about things like eyeglasses

  • 08:10

    and dogs.

  • 08:11

    In a tiny room, in controlled conditions, monitored by researchers - they were lost.

  • 08:20

    In themselves.

  • 08:21

    Seemingly simple tasks can go haywire in isolation.

  • 08:25

    When French geologist Michel Siffre resurfaced after 8 weeks under a glacier in the French

  • 08:30

    alps, it took him five minutes to count 120 seconds.

  • 08:36

    And sociologist Maurizio Montalbini spent a full year inside a cavern designed by NASA

  • 08:41

    to study isolation.

  • 08:43

    He thought it was only 219 days.

  • 08:46

    Somehow in that cave, 146 days were lost.

  • 08:53

    Without social and environmental cues, time begins to stretch and warp.

  • 08:58

    So for space travel we’re working on ways to preserve the mind.

  • 09:02

    A dinner table was requested by Astronauts on the International Space Station so they

  • 09:06

    could build camaraderie and be comforted by eating together.

  • 09:10

    Music is so important to combat cultural isolation that since Apollo 15 in 1971, NASA has beamed

  • 09:17

    songs into space as wake-up calls.

  • 09:19

    We need to share jokes, songs, and struggles with others to keep a connection to Earth

  • 09:26

    and to ourselves.

  • 09:27

    Otherwise we could become like Mr. Bedford in H.G. Wells’ 1901 book “The First Men

  • 09:31

    In The Moon” whose journey into infinite space included experiencing,

  • 09:35

    “... a sort of idea that really I was something quite outside not only the world, but all

  • 09:41

    worlds, and out of space and time, and that this poor Bedford was just a peephole through

  • 09:47

    which I looked at life”

  • 09:49

    The basic survival elements on Earth -- air, food, shelter -- can be recreated in Space.

  • 09:57

    We can science our way to life on Mars, but only if our humanity arrives intact.

  • 10:04

    The Break-off Effect, first documented in a 1957 study of high-altitude pilots, is defined

  • 10:10

    by a profound dissociation from reality that can occur high above Earth.

  • 10:15

    18 of the 137 pilots freaked out with intense feelings of fear and anxiety.

  • 10:21

    But the majority reacted with a previously unknown sense of euphoria -- a newfound understanding

  • 10:28

    of the oneness of the planet, humanity and all creation.

  • 10:35

    When Alexei Leonov returned to Earth after being the first human to float freely in space

  • 10:40

    during a 12 minute and 9 second spacewalk in 1965, he responded to concerns for his

  • 10:46

    mental health by saying, “As for the so-called psychological barrier that was supposed to

  • 10:51

    be insurmountable by man preparing to confront the cosmic abyss alone, I not only did not

  • 10:58

    sense any barrier, but even forgot that there could be one.”

  • 11:06

    Conquering our mental space is crucial for surviving in outer space.

  • 11:12

    The journey to Mars starts with the planet behind your eyes.

  • 11:18

    And as always - thanks for watching.

  • 11:33

    Special thanks to National Geographic for sponsoring this episode and supporting Vsauce.

  • 11:38

    Be sure to check out their global event series - Mars.

All

The example sentences of ODYSSEY in videos (15 in total of 100)

odyssey proper noun, singular , an determiner 8th adjective century noun, singular or mass bc proper noun, singular epic adjective poem noun, singular or mass documenting verb, gerund or present participle odysseus proper noun, singular s proper noun, singular ten cardinal number year noun, singular or mass journey noun, singular or mass home noun, singular or mass after preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner
the determiner former adjective odyssey proper noun, singular restaurant noun, singular or mass has verb, 3rd person singular present been verb, past participle transformed verb, past participle into preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner epcot proper noun, singular experience proper noun, singular which wh-determiner gives verb, 3rd person singular present us personal pronoun an determiner
known verb, past participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction north adverb america proper noun, singular as preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner magnavox proper noun, singular odyssey proper noun, singular 2 cardinal number , or coordinating conjunction magnavox proper noun, singular odyssey proper noun, singular squared proper noun, singular , this determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present really adverb
the determiner martian proper noun, singular atmosphere noun, singular or mass , based verb, past participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction observations noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction nasa proper noun, singular s proper noun, singular mars proper noun, singular reconnaissance verb, non-3rd person singular present orbiter proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction mars proper noun, singular odyssey verb, non-3rd person singular present spacecraft noun, singular or mass .
the determiner first adjective cruise noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction odyssey proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner seas proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present scheduled verb, past participle to to begin verb, base form on preposition or subordinating conjunction july adverb 31st adjective . . .
ulysses proper noun, singular is verb, 3rd person singular present based verb, past participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction that determiner flagship noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction high adjective school noun, singular or mass literature noun, singular or mass , the determiner odyssey proper noun, singular , homer proper noun, singular s proper noun, singular ancient adjective greek proper noun, singular
mostly adverb absent noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction both determiner the determiner iliad proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction the determiner odyssey proper noun, singular , as preposition or subordinating conjunction opposed verb, past participle to to zeus proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction poseidon proper noun, singular ,
what wh-pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present going verb, gerund or present participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction here adverb you're proper noun, singular building noun, singular or mass out preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner van proper noun, singular all determiner right noun, singular or mass a determiner little adjective honda proper noun, singular odyssey noun, singular or mass
lift verb, base form back adverb to to i personal pronoun had verb, past tense the determiner odyssey noun, singular or mass 7 cardinal number q proper noun, singular here adverb and coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun was verb, past tense recording verb, gerund or present participle continuous adjective high adjective
etrian proper noun, singular odyssey proper noun, singular has verb, 3rd person singular present long adverb been verb, past participle the determiner hardcore noun, singular or mass rpg proper noun, singular fan noun, singular or mass 's possessive ending bastion noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction viciousness noun, singular or mass on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner ds proper noun, singular
that wh-determiner was verb, past tense ever adverb launched verb, past participle and coordinating conjunction it personal pronoun is verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner samsung proper noun, singular odyssey proper noun, singular g proper noun, singular 7 cardinal number - best adjective, superlative for preposition or subordinating conjunction looks noun, plural
and coordinating conjunction there existential there are verb, non-3rd person singular present some determiner really adverb exciting adjective ships noun, plural such adjective as preposition or subordinating conjunction royal proper noun, singular caribbean proper noun, singular 's possessive ending odyssey proper noun, singular of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner seas proper noun, singular .
in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner odyssey proper noun, singular , the determiner hazards noun, plural can modal be verb, base form on preposition or subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction the determiner brake noun, singular or mass lights noun, plural work verb, non-3rd person singular present completely adverb normally adverb .
assassin proper noun, singular s proper noun, singular creed verb, past tense odyssey proper noun, singular was verb, past tense also adverb tested verb, past participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner built verb, past participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction benchmark noun, singular or mass , i personal pronoun tested verb, past tense this determiner before preposition or subordinating conjunction
the determiner subject noun, singular or mass changes noun, plural like preposition or subordinating conjunction in preposition or subordinating conjunction 2001 cardinal number the determiner space noun, singular or mass odyssey verb, base form we personal pronoun see verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner advancement noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction technology noun, singular or mass

Use "odyssey" in a sentence | "odyssey" example sentences

How to use "odyssey" in a sentence?

  • My odyssey to become an astronaut kind of started in grad school, and I was working, up at MIT, in space robotics-related work; human and robot working together.
    -Michael J. Massimino-
  • In the future, search engines should be as useful as HAL in the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey-but hopefully they won't kill people.
    -Sergey Brin-
  • I think songwriters are more related to fiction writers. The Odyssey was a story in song. To me, that's so beautiful, all those painted characters, all those travels and adventures.
    -Regina Spektor-
  • One can easily classify all works of fiction either as descendants of the Iliad or of the Odyssey.
    -Raymond Queneau-
  • The Odyssey is the story of motion both purposeful and purposeless, successful and futile. What else is the history of law?
    -Bernhard Schlink-
  • Lily white’s petals are at my feet anticipating the moment in which adventure and odyssey meet.
    -Delano Johnson-
  • I touch your book and dream of our odyssey in the supermarket and feel absurd.
    -Allen Ginsberg-
  • It's been an incredible odyssey to make the journey from a vibrantly healthy person to someone with a chronic illness.
    -Karen Duffy-

Definition and meaning of ODYSSEY

What does "odyssey mean?"

/ˈädəsē/

noun
Long journey or a set of life-long experiences.

What are synonyms of "odyssey"?
Some common synonyms of "odyssey" are:
  • journey,
  • voyage,
  • trek,
  • travels,
  • quest,
  • crusade,
  • pilgrimage,
  • wandering,
  • journeying,
  • peregrination,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.