Mars
Mars
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An artist's depiction of the Earth Reliant, Proving Ground and Earth Independent thresholds,
showing key capabilities that will be developed along the way.
The space station is the only microgravity platform for the long-term testing of new life support
and crew health systems, advanced habitat modules, and other technologies needed to
decrease reliance on Earth. NASA astronauts Kjell Lindgren, left, and Scott Kelly are pictured
here, just before the halfway point of Kelly's one-year mission on station.
Credits: NASA
This table shows high-level, near-, and far-term decisions that must be made to continue on
the journey to Mars.
NASA is leading our nation and the world on a journey to Mars, and
Thursday the agency released a detailed outline of that plan in its report,
NASAs Journey to Mars: Pioneering Next Steps in Space Exploration.
http://go.nasa.gov/1VHDXxg
With the Space Launch System, Orion crewed spacecraft, and revitalized
space launch complex, we are developing core transportation capabilities
for the journey to Mars and ensuring continued access for our commercial
crew and cargo partners to maintain operations and stimulate new
economic activity in low-Earth orbit. This secured U.S. commercial access
to low-Earth orbit allows NASA to continue leveraging the station as a
microgravity test bed while preparing for missions in the proving ground of
deep space and beyond.
These challenges are solvable, and NASA and its partners are working on
the solutions every day so we can answer some of humanitys
fundamental questions about life beyond Earth: Was Mars home to
microbial life? Is it today? Could it be a safe home for humans one day?
What can it teach us about life elsewhere in the cosmos or how life began
on Earth? What can it teach us about Earths past, present and future?