The first humans who
will step foot on Mars are walking the Earth today. It
was 45 years ago that Neil Armstrong took the small step onto the surface of
the moon that changed the course of history. The years that followed saw a Space
Age of scientific, technological and human research, on which we have built the
modern era. We stand on a new horizon, poised to take the next giant
leap—deeper into the solar system. The Apollo missions blazed a path for human
exploration to the moon and today we are extending that path to near-Earth
asteroids, Mars and beyond.
Technology
drives exploration and we're building on the Apollo program's accomplishments
to test and fly transformative, cutting-edge technologies today for tomorrow's
missions. As we develop and test the new tools of 21st century spaceflight on
the human Path to Mars, we once again will change the course of history.
The
Path to Mars begins with research on Earth and extends beyond its bounds,
aboard the orbiting laboratory of the International Space Station, with our
international partners. Some 250 miles above our heads, astronauts are
conducting hundreds of experiments not possible on Earth, teaching us how
humans can live, work and thrive for longer periods in space.
To
help this nation send humans to deep space and return them to Earth safely,
engineers across the country are developing a new space transportation
capability, destined to travel far beyond our home planet. The Orion spacecraft
and Space Launch System (SLS) heavy-lift rocket will be the most advanced space
vehicles ever built. Together, they will take us farther into the solar system
than humans have ever traveled. They are our spaceship to Mars and beyond.
As
we build on the lessons of the space station and turn our eyes toward Mars, we
are designing missions to take us to a "proving ground" around the
moon called cis-lunar space, where some of the very building blocks of the
solar system can be explored.
Near-Earth
asteroids provide a unique opportunity to test the new technologies and
capabilities we need for future human missions to Mars. Around 2019, we'll
launch a robotic mission to rendezvous with a near-Earth asteroid. The
spacecraft either will capture an asteroid in its entirety or retrieve a
boulder off of a much larger asteroid, then redirect the asteroid mass to a
stable orbit around the moon.
In
the mid 2020s, astronauts aboard the Orion spacecraft, launched by SLS, will
explore that asteroid and return to Earth with samples.
The
new technologies we test through the Asteroid Redirect Mission, and the new
human spaceflight capabilities we prove by sending astronauts to study the
asteroid, will make important advances to safely send humans to Mars. This
includes tools like Solar Electric Propulsion, a highly efficient way to help
us transport large objects and heavy cargo to support future Mars missions.
NASA
will continue to make significant investments in new technologies vital to
achieving exploration goals. This includes advancements in entry, descent and
landing technologies such as Low Density Supersonic Decelerators.
Sending
humans to deep space around the moon also will help advance techniques for
space operations on and around Mars and its moons. The space around our moon is
different than low-Earth orbit but very similar to what an Orion spacecraft
will experience on the trip to and from Mars. For instance, solar and cosmic
radiation is intense. We also can use cis-lunar space to begin practicing
activities in deep space, like spacewalks, and learn to cope with delays in
communication with Earth because of the distance.
Mars
beckons us to explore. Missions to Mars could answer some of the fundamental
questions of humanity: Does life exist beyond Earth? Could humans live on Mars
in the future?
The
journey to answer these questions has risks, but the rewards for humanity are
worth it. Meeting the remaining challenges ahead of us to send humans to Mars
will take the ingenuity and innovation of the entire nation and our
international partners.
This
next decade of exploration will be an exciting time of rapid technological
development and testing. In December 2014, we'll conduct the first test flight
of Orion. In 2015, the New Horizons mission will fly by Pluto and see the icy
world up close for the first time. 2016 will see launches of two other Mars
missions, InSight and the European Space Agency's ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter, as
well as asteroid sample return mission OSIRIS-REx. By the end of 2017, U.S.
commercial companies will begin launching astronauts from U.S. soil to the
space station. In Fiscal Year 2018, we'll fly SLS and Orion together on a test
mission to a stable orbit around the moon called a "Distant Retrograde
Orbit" (DRO), where astronauts will explore a relocated asteroid in the
2020s. In 2018, Hubble's successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, will extend
our senses farther into space and time, to see light from the universe's first
stars. In about 2019, we'll launch the robotic spacecraft to capture and
redirect an asteroid. In 2020, we'll send a new rover to Mars, to follow in the
footsteps of Curiosity, search for evidence of life, and pave the way for
future human explorers. In 2021, SLS and Orion will launch humans on the first
crewed mission of the combined system. In the mid-2020s, astronauts will
explore an asteroid redirected to DRO around the moon, and return home with
samples that could hold clues to the origins of the solar system and life on
Earth. In doing so, those astronauts will travel farther into the solar system
than anyone has ever been.
Many
more missions will follow on the Path to Mars. In our lifetimes, NASA and the
world will take the next giant leap to explore the Red Planet.
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