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NASA seeking adults for yearlong missions to ‘Mars surface simulations’

You can visit Mars right here on Earth — if NASA thinks you’re good enough!

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration is looking for people to join a yearlong mission in “Mars surface simulations,” the agency announced.

The missions will include four crew members living inside a 1,700-square-foot, 3-D printed “Mars Dune Alpha” module from NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

The plan is to simulate the challenges that astronauts could face on missions to Mars, including equipment failure, communication delays or “other environmental stressors.”

Grace Douglas, a scientist at the Johnson Space Center, said the simulations are crucial for the agency to see what living on Mars is like.

NASA is seeking applicants for participation as a crew member during the first one-year analog mission in a habitat to simulate life on a distant world, set to begin in fall 2022
The plan is to simulate the challenges that astronauts could face on missions to Mars. Icon
NASA is seeking applicants for participation as a crew member during the first one-year analog mission in a habitat to simulate life on a distant world, set to begin in fall 2022
The missions will include four crew members living inside a 1,700-square-foot, 3-D printed “Mars Dune Alpha” module. Icon

But not just anyone can apply: NASA only wants to hear from those with degrees in STEM, medical degrees or those who have completed a test pilot program. Applications are due by Sept. 17.