Nasa administrator Charles Bolden speaks during the Humans to Mars Summit yesterday at George Washington University.

AFP/Washington


Setting foot on Mars by the 2030s is human destiny and a US priority, and every dollar available must be spent on bridging gaps in knowledge on how to get there, Nasa’s chief said yesterday.
Addressing a conference of space experts at George Washington University, Nasa administrator Charles Bolden said that despite hard economic times the US is committed to breaking new boundaries in space exploration.
“A human mission to Mars is today the ultimate destination in our solar system for humanity, and it is a priority for Nasa. Our entire exploration programme is aligned to support this goal,” Bolden said.
President Barack Obama has proposed a $17.7bn budget for Nasa in 2014, and he supports a “vibrant and co-ordinated strategy for Mars exploration,” Bolden said.
Among the first steps to sending astronauts to Mars are Nasa’s plans to capture and relocate an asteroid by 2025, a process that should inform future efforts to send humans into deep space, the former astronaut said.
Also, US astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko have volunteered to spend one year at the International Space Station beginning in 2015 to allow doctors to assess how long-duration zero gravity exposure affects bone density, muscle mass and vision.
Currently, a rotating cast of global astronauts each spend a maximum of six months aboard the orbiting outpost.
But despite increasing interest in landing on Mars, and a newly diverse space race that involves many more countries than old Cold War foes the US and Russia, there is plenty that experts do not know about how to reach Mars.
For instance, there is no existing space vehicle to carry people on the seven-month or longer journey there, not to mention no plan for returning people to Earth.
Medical experts are unsure what the physical ramifications would be for people who attempt to travel in high-radiation environments for such extended periods.
And just how people would survive, breathe, eat and drink on the dry, red planet are significant obstacles that have yet to be overcome.
“The US has demonstrated that we know how to get to the Moon,” Bolden said.
“What we have not demonstrated and what I think everyone in this room - well most people in this room will concede, is that there are technological gaps to sending humans to an asteroid and to Mars,” he added.
“And so every single moment of our time and every single dollar of our assets must be dedicated to developing those technologies that allow us to go beyond low Earth orbit, beyond the Moon.”
The US is the only nation that has successfully sent robotic explorers to land on Mars, the most recent being Curiosity, which touched down in August 2012.
The first-of-its-kind landing demonstrated that humans have figured out how to send a one-tonne package of machinery to Mars.
But many experts believe that the size of the package needed to maintain a human habitat on Mars would weigh more like 40 tonnes. There also needs to be a suitable flight vehicle, and a type of fuel potent enough to get it there quickly.
Perhaps a precursor to a human landing on Mars would be another rover that would land at an established site, drill down and hopefully find fresh water, said John Grunsfeld, Nasa associate administrator for the science mission directorate.
“That would also be the beacon that allows subsequent missions to navigate to a very precise landing,” said Grunsfeld.
The three-day conference aims to offer a forum for experts to discuss the latest technologies. It will feature discussions on astronaut health concerns today and an address by retired celebrity astronaut Buzz Aldrin tomorrow.
“We can’t wait until the technology is available before we go and explore,” Bolden said.
“We now stand on the precipice of a second opportunity to press forward to what I think is man’s destiny, and that is to go to another planet.”



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