Category: space.com

From space.com

  • Personalized Book Will Launch Kid's Name to Space Station in New Contest

    A new contest, ending Wednesday (Sept. 23), promises to send the personalized book “The Incredible Intergalactic Journey Home” to the International Space Station.
    Credit: Lost My Name

    A new personalized children’s book will take a trip to the International Space Station bearing the name of one lucky child on Earth.

    The book comes from Lost My Name, a company that sells “personalized entertainment” books in which a child’s name can be printed as a part of the story. Lost My Name will send a copy of new book “The Incredible Intergalactic Journey Home” (Lost My Name, 2015) to the space station on Dec. 3, aboard the Cygnus Orbital spacecraft.

    Because each copy of the book can be personalized, U.S. and U.K. parents can submit their own children’s names (and other information) into the contest. One lucky child will be picked to have his or her story rocketed into space. The contest is open between Sept. 17 and Sept. 23. [One Year in Space: Epic Space Station Mission in Photos]

    “The Incredible Intergalactic Journey Home follows a child and their robot friend on an amazing adventure from the depths of outer space to their own front door,” a release about the event said. The contest can be accessed here: https://www.lostmy.name/books/thejourneyhome

    “The personalization elements will ensure the experience is different for every child based upon where they actually live — from the country flag on the spaceship and the view of Earth from outer space, to seeing familiar pictures of key country, city and town locations as the adventure gets closer to its conclusion, where the child returns to their actual home address,” the release said.

    Lost My Name is best known for another book called “The Little Boy/Little Girl Who Lost His/Her Name,” (Lost My Name, 2013) which sold more than 700,000 copies worldwide in the past two years.

    The new book is part of a larger collaboration between astronauts and Story Time From Space, a project of the Global Space Education Foundation. The project sends books from children’s authors to the space station for the astronauts to read and broadcast to kids. In April, Story Time ran a crowdfunding campaign (which did not reach its goal) to send basic science equipment to the space station and demonstrate child-focused experiments.

    Follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We’re also on Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Best Space Photos of the Week – Sept. 18, 2015

    4 of 9

    NASA’s Curiosity Rover Finds Petrified Sand Dunes on Mars

    Credit: Mars, curiosity, mount sharp, mars photos, mars surface, stimson, aeolis mons

    A new panorama from NASA’s Curiosity rover shows petrified sand dunes stretching across the landscape of Mount Sharp on Mars. [Read the whole story.]

    6 of 9

    Awesome SpaceX Images Show How Its Dragon Spaceship Will Land on Mars

    Credit: SpaceX (via Flickr as SpaceX Photos)

    A gallery of gorgeous new images shows a cone-shaped space capsule shooting like a meteor through the atmosphere of Mars, and descending quickly toward…Read More » the surface before its thrusters set it down gently in the middle of a rocky, uninhabited landscape. The human crew prepares to set food on the Red Planet. [Read the whole story.]    Less «

  • 'Cosmonauts' Exhibition Offers Rare Look at Soviet Space Artifacts in London

    “Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age,” now open at the Science Museum in London, provides a rare look at more than 150 Soviet-era spacecraft, spacesuits and other artifacts.
    Credit: Science Museum

    The capsule that launched the first woman into space, the most complete Soviet lunar lander still in existence and the 80-year-old original drawings of a Russian rocket pioneer are among the more than 150 rare Soviet-era space relics now on display in London.

    Billed as the greatest exhibition of Soviet spacecraft and artifacts ever to be seen outside of Russia, “Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age” opened to the public Friday (Sept. 18) at the Science Museum in South Kensington. Years in the making, the unprecedented exhibition is the result of a partnership between the museum, the State Museum and Exhibition Center Rosizo in Moscow and Russia’s Federal Space Agency Roscosmos.

    “‘Cosmonauts’ is a once-in-a-lifetime exhibition that has taken years of dedication and skill to make a reality,” said Ian Blatchford, the director of the Science Museum. “The Russian space program is one of the great intellectual, scientific and engineering successes of the 20th century, and I am thrilled that we have been able to bring together such an outstanding collection of Russian space artifacts to celebrate these achievements.” [‪Top 10 Soviet and Russian Space Missions]

    In 1957, the Soviet Union initiated the space age with the launch of the world’s first satellite. Following the success of Sputnik, the country launched the first animal, man and woman into orbit — all within six years.

    “Our work in space is inspired by the bravery of [first man in space] Yuri Gagarin, Valentina Tereshkova and the first cosmonauts,” said Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko in a video sent down from the International Space Station. “We hope you will enjoy discovering how they made space travel a reality.”

    “In this new exhibition, you can see Tereshkova’s Vostok 6 capsule, a moon lander and much more,” Kornienko added.

    Tereshkova became the first woman to travel to space on June 16, 1963. She came to the Science Museum to help launch the new gallery on Thursday (Sept. 17).

    “I believe this exhibit shows how interesting and important for mankind is the work of people both on the ground and in space,” Tereshkova stated. “It creates the possibility to think about future cooperation between our scientists [and] our young people who want to fly into space.”

    For decades, Tereshkova’s Vostok 6 capsule has been on display in the private museum of its builder, Rocket and Space Corporation (RSC) Energia, located near Moscow. The opening of “Cosmonauts” offered the opportunity for Tereshkova to be reunited with the spacecraft that carried her for 48 revolutions around the Earth.

    “I look at [the capsule] with love because it allowed me to work successfully for over three days in orbit,” she said.

    Valentina Tereshkova at Cosmonauts Exhibition

    Valentina Tereshkova, who in 1963 became the first woman to fly in space, stands with her Vostok 6 capsule in the new exhibition, “Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age” at the Science Museum, London.
    Credit: Science Museum

    Another of the exhibition’s featured relics is the 16-foot-tall (5 meters) LK-3 lunar lander. Built in 1969, it was designed to take a single cosmonaut to the surface of the moon. Kept secret for two decades, this lunar lander was declassified especially for “Cosmonauts,” according to the museum.

    “The lunar lander you have here was used as a training model at the cosmonaut training center,” explained Alexei Leonov, who made the world’s first spacewalk in 1965 and had been slated to fly to the moon had the LK program not been cancelled in the wake of rocket failures and the U.S. Apollo astronauts getting there first.

    “Londoners, visitors to the museum, will be able to see it all as it happened in our country [and] see it with their own eyes,” said Leonov during a visit to the Science Museum in May. “These are the objects that with the help of which we conquered space, step by step.”

    “Cosmonauts” covers the full history of the Russian space efforts, from rocket pioneer Konstantin Tsiolkovsky’s 1933 drawings depicting weightlessness and life in orbit almost 30 years before spaceflight would become a reality to an original engineering model of Sputnik, through an ejector seat and suit used to launch the first dogs into space to a space toilet, shower and other space equipment that were designed to help cosmonauts living aboard the Mir space station.

    The exhibition also showcases a rarely seen collection of original Soviet space poster art, which fixed the image of the cosmonaut in the minds of the Russian people.

    “We are borrowing things that that our Russian colleagues really do think of as their crown jewels — and almost none have ever left Russia,” said Blatchford.

    “Cosmonauts” is open now through March 13, 2016 at the Science Museum, London. Tickets run £14 (about $22) for adults; children under 7 get in free.

    For more details about the exhibition, “Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age,” see the Science Museum’s website at: sciencemuseum.org.uk/cosmonauts.

    See more photos from “Cosmonauts: Birth of the Space Age” at the Science Museum, London, at collectSPACE.com.

    Follow collectSPACE.com on Facebook and on Twitter at @collectSPACE. Copyright 2015 collectSPACE.com. All rights reserved.

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    Credit: NASA/JHUAPL/SwRI, Stuart Robbins/mash mix: Space.com

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  • You Have Goat to Be Kidding: Spot Capricornus, the Sea Goat

    An unusual star pattern denoting an exceedingly unusual beast will be visible in the night sky this week — the sea goat.

    Step outside this week between 9 and 11 p.m. and look toward the south and you might get the impression that the sky is rather devoid of stars. This is especially true if you live in an area that has lots of bright lights. Indeed, little can be seen when the sky is hazy or flooded with moonlight, but careful viewing is rewarded.

    Welcome to the “watery” region of the sky where all the star patterns are rather dim. Here, we find a number of constellations with a direct connection to water: A man carrying water and sloshing it all over the place, and below him are the Southern Fish and the Crane — a bird dependent on wetlands. Farther east are the large, dull figures of the Fishes themselves, a killer Whale and a celestial River.   

    Probably because the ancients knew very little about marine life, it’s not surprising that they populated the deep with every manner of monster, including what we now call mermaids.

    An excellent example of this — the watery star pattern that leads the procession of these constellations across the autumn skies — is Capricornus, the Sea Goat, one of those odd land-sea animal hybrids the ancients were wont to create.

    Capricornus Star Lines

    This image shows the star lines that make up Capricornus in the night sky as they relate to other constellations.
    Credit: Starry Night Software

    Origin of ‘panic’

    In the old star atlases, Capricornus is depicted by the figure of a sea goat, combining the forequarters and head of a goat and the tail of a fish. This kind of creature might seem unintelligible to us today if we did not know the ancient myth behind its origin. According to folklore, there were some sea nymphs and goddesses having a wild party in a field one day when the mischievous Pan,god of shepherds and of woods and pastures, saw them and joined in the fun.

    Everything was going swimmingly, so to speak, when a huge, ferocious monster called Typhon suddenly appeared. To escape him, each god changed into an animal and fled. However, in Pan’s alarm he jumped into a nearby river before completing his transformation into a goat. As a result, his lower extremities assumed the form of a fish. From this aspect of Pan’s nature Greek authors derived the word panikon, “sudden fear,” the ultimate source of the English word “panic.”

    Zeus, who just happened to be passing by, saw Pan’s feat and was so amused that he decreed the perpetuation of this rather grotesque figure in our night sky.

    It resembles anything but a sea goat

    Capricornus appears directly due south when Cygnus, the Swan — also known as the Northern Cross — is high overhead. The bright star Altair in Aquila, the Eagle and its two flanking stars point straight down toward Capricornus. The stars of the Sea Goat form a roughly triangular figure that somewhat suggests everything from an inverted cocked hat, a slice of watermelon, a bird or large bat flying toward you or perhaps even a boat.

    Everything, that is, but a goat with a fish tail!

    At one time the winter solstice was in Capricornus. Perhaps the reason the ancients used the figure of a goat — an expert climber — was that the sun appeared to begin its climb up the sky from its lowest position in that spot. Its most notable star, Deneb Algedi, is really a pair of stars so widely separated from one another that they can be easily distinguished without any optical aid. Below Deneb Algedi is the star Dabih, also a pair, though binoculars are needed to see the dim companion of the brighter star. [Best Night Sky Events of September 2015 (Stargazing Maps)]

    You have goat to be kidding me!

    It should be emphasized to astronomy newcomers that the currently accepted name of this constellation is Capricornus, and not Capricorn. Astrologers (and some older astronomy books) use “Capricorn” to denote the zodiacal sign rather than the constellation. “Whoso is born in Capricorn shall be rich and well loved,” said an old almanac. Then it went on to say that Capricorn was the House of the planet Saturn that often had an unfavorable influence on human affairs. Though born under Capricorn, one might therefore be poor after all.

    One of the oldest references to a particular constellation is supposedly from the records of Sargon, founder of the first Semitic empire of Babylon in about  2800 B.C. The records foretold the destruction of the world by fire if all the five naked-eye planets should ever meet together in the sign of Capricorn.

    Chinese astronomers in 2449 B.C. supposedly observed such a conjunction of all five planets in Capricorn, but it took place without any dire consequences. Then again, the truth is that this exceedingly rare “celestial summit meeting” never took place. Recently I used a computer program that depicts what the sky looked like for thousands of years in the past or future to check where the planets were in 2449 B.C. —no such planetary gathering occurred.

    So much for foretelling the destruction of the world.

    Quite frankly, if the Sea Goat were not in the zodiac most people probably would not even know its name.

    Oh, well, whatever floats your goat.

    Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmer’s Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, New York.

  • The Crescent and the Ring: Moon Meets Saturn Tonight!

    Moon by John Nelson
    Look to the skies this week to see a crescent moon and Saturn pair off. John Nelson took this image of the moon on May 31, 2014.
    Credit: John Nelson

    If the weather is clear in your area this evening, you’ll have an opportunity to see two of the most popular objects to view through a telescope: the moon and Saturn.

    About an hour after sunset, roughly one-quarter of the way up in the southwest sky will be a crescent moon, just over one-quarter (27 percent) illuminated by the sun.

    And if you look about 1.5 degrees to the lower left of the moon, you’ll see a bright “star” shining with a steady, yellow-white glow. Except that’s not a star, but rather the ringed wonder of the solar system, the planet Saturn. [Photos of Saturn’s Rings and Moons]

    Of course, the moon is nowhere near Saturn in terms of actual miles. The moon is 246,300 miles (396,200 kilometers) from Earth, but Saturn is 965.8 million miles (1.55 billion km) away from this planet. Or, put another way, Saturn is more than 3,900 times farther out in space than the moon. And yet, tonight, the two objects will be conveniently placed near to one another in the mid-September evening sky. The moon’s placement in the sky relative to Saturn makes it quite easy for neophytes to identify the wondrous ringed planet

    Both the moon and Saturn will be available for viewing until they set at around 10 p.m. local daylight time.

    Without question, Saturn is the showpiece of the night sky. The famous rings can be glimpsed with a telescope with magnification of 30-power or higher, and currently these rings are tilted 24.5 degrees to Earth-based skywatchers’ line of sight. The rings consist of billions of particles, ranging in size from pieces of dust to chunks measuring perhaps 30 feet (about 9 meters) across. The particles are composed largely of water-ice and some rocky meteoroids.

    The ancients regarded Saturn as the “highest” planet, occupying the outermost or highest sphere before that of the fixed stars. Galileo, using his crude, imperfect “optick tube,” found that Saturn has an odd pair of appendages or companion bodies on either side. He announced this discovery in 1610 with an anagram written in Latin; the jumbled letters could be transposed to read: “Altissimum planetam tergeminum observavi” (“I have observed the highest planet to be triple”).  Not until a half-century later did telescope lenses improve enough to reveal the ringlike nature of these “appendages.” 

    Currently, Saturn is in the constellation of Libra, the Scales. Since Saturn requires 29.5 years to orbit the Sun, the planet’s progress through the 12 zodiacal constellations is quite slow, averaging roughly 2.5 years per constellation. This planet was last located in Libra in 1983.

    Joe Rao serves as an instructor and guest lecturer at New York’s Hayden Planetarium. He writes about astronomy for Natural History magazine, the Farmer’s Almanac and other publications, and he is also an on-camera meteorologist for News 12 Westchester, N.Y. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

  • Apollo Lunar Module Lands in Smithsonian 'Milestones of Flight' Gallery

    Apollo Lunar Module in the National Air and Space Museum
    The ascent and descent stages to an Apollo Lunar Module (LM-2) have landed in the National Air and Space Museum’s Boeing Milestones of Flight gallery to debut on display in 2016.
    Credit: Smithsonian

    The Eagle has landed, again.

    An Apollo Lunar Module, the vehicle that ferried astronauts to and from the surface of the moon, was moved into the National Air and Space Museum’s “Boeing Milestones of Flight” Hall this week in preparation for its conservation, modification and display debuting with the hall’s re-opening in July 2016.

    “The Lunar Module [LM] will act as a striking welcome to visitors as they enter the museum and [will] represent the ‘milestone’ of America’s first moon landing in July 1969,” Smithsonian officials said in a statement. [Apollo 11’s Scariest Moments: Perils of the 1st Manned Moon]

    The museum’s moon lander isn’t a replica. The second of the lunar modules to be built, LM-2 was intended for an uncrewed test flight into Earth orbit in 1968. The first test flight, Apollo 5 with LM-1, was so successful though, that LM-2’s flight was deemed unnecessary. No longer needed by NASA, the LM-2 was transferred to the Smithsonian two years later.

    In addition to a careful cleaning, details will be added to the artifact’s exterior to create a near-exact representation of LM-5, the lander flown by Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. Because none of the lunar modules were designed to return to the Earth, all of the examples of the craft that are on display in museums are test vehicles or replicas.

    For almost 40 years, since the opening of the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. on July 1, 1976, LM-2 was exhibited on the east end of the building. It will now be the centerpiece of the renovated Milestones of Flight Hall, which is the museum’s central and largest space.

    The Apollo Lunar Modules (LM) were two-stage vehicles designed to ferry two astronauts from the moon’s orbit to the lunar surface and back. The upper ascent stage included a crew compartment, equipment areas and a rocket engine. The lower descent stage consisted of landing gear, a descent rocket engine and lunar surface experiments.

    The sheer size of the module — when stacked, the stages stand 23 feet tall and 14 feet wide (7 by 4.3 m) — made the LM-2 complicated to move, so its relocation to the Milestones Hall was accomplished in two phases. Last week, the ascent stage was transferred to the new space. The descent stage followed on Tuesday morning (Sept. 15).

    “Conservation of the lunar module will begin immediately and will likely be completed by the end of October, though construction barriers will be put in place in late September, obstructing its view until early 2016,” officials said.

    The real Eagle (LM-5) remains on the moon. Its descent stage is still at Tranquility Base where it landed in July 1969. The ascent stage, which is what the astronauts used to return to orbit after their historic moonwalk, was jettisoned before they returned to Earth and later, under the pull of gravity, impacted the moon’s surface.

    LM-2’s further transformation to represent Eagle will serve to keep the Apollo 11 mission front and center in the National Air and Space Museum after the relocation of the mission’s other spacecraft that carried the crew home.

    “The Apollo 11 Command Module, Columbia, which has been in the Milestones gallery since opening, will move to the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, in Chantilly, Virginia, for conservation later this year,” stated museum officials. “[It] will eventually be displayed in ‘Destination Moon,’ another museum gallery scheduled to open in 2020.”

    For about the next two weeks, visitors to the National Air and Space Museum will have the rare chance to see both LM-2 and Columbia, together, in the same space for the first and only time.

    Ascent Stage to the Apollo Lunar Module

    The ascent stage to the Apollo Lunar Module was the first of the two stages to be moved into the National Air and Space Museum’s Boeing Milestones of Flight hall.
    Credit: Smithsonian

    The renovation of the Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall is set to be completed in time to celebrate the museum’s 40th anniversary, giving the main hall a 21st century look, featuring themes and displays suited to today’s visitors. In addition to LM-2, the new Milestones’ exhibits will include John Glenn’s “Friendship 7” Mercury capsule, the Gemini 4 space capsule, the privately-constructed SpaceShipOne and the original filming model of the Starship Enterprise.

    See more photographs of the Apollo lunar module’s move into the National Air and Space Museum’s Boeing Milestones of Flight gallery at collectSPACE.com.

    Follow collectSPACE.com on Facebook and on Twitter at @collectSPACE. Copyright 2015 collectSPACE.com. All rights reserved. Follow us @SpacedotcomFacebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.

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  • Are We Alone? Survey Finds No Sign of Advanced Alien Civilizations

    Astron Dyson Storm
    Sensitive new telescopes have searched for signs of advanced alien civilizations but haven’t found any.
    Credit: ASTRON

    Nearby galaxies in our universe show no signs of advanced alien civilizations — at least for now.

    A new study that examined the most promising galaxies we can see out of a collection of 100,000 found no signs of the waste energy that such alien civilizations might generate, showing that they’re extremely rare, if not nonexistent. The galaxies were chosen because they emit a large amount of heat, but rather than being the byproduct of alien factories the emissions seem to come from less exotic, natural causes such as buildups of dust.

    “Some of these systems definitely demand further investigation, but those already studied in detail turn out to have a natural astrophysical explanation,” study author Michael Garrett said in a statement. Garrett is a professor at the University of Leiden and the general and scientific director of ASTRON, the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy. [13 Ways to Find Intelligent Alien Life]

    “It’s very likely that the remaining systems also fall into this category — but, of course, it’s worth checking out, just in case,” he said.

    Alien energy signs

    Dyson Spheres could provide power for advanced alien civilizations.

    In 1964, Russian astrophysicist Nikolai Kardashev defined three levels of civilization based on their ability to harness the energy available to them. Since that time, the Kardashev scale has been expanded to include four more levels. Earth’s civilization lies very low on the scale, at about a Type 0.7, because of its ability to harness only a portion of the energy of its planet.

    Earlier this year, a team of astronomers led by Jason Wright, of Pennsylvania State University, studied 100,000 galaxies that NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) spacecraft could best observe, searching for signs of a Type III civilization capable of harnessing the energy of an entire galaxy. Such a civilization would have to be extremely advanced, capable of colonizing multiple stars within a galaxy and using the energy of all of them. Following the laws of thermodynamics, energy harnessed from this kind of technology could not be destroyed but should be radiated away in infrared wavelengths, similar to the way a computer radiates heat.

    Wright’s team identified 93 sources exhibiting both extreme mid-infrared emission and colors. Garrett investigated those that had been well studied in the past, in an attempt to determine possible sources of the excessive radiation. He found that the majority of the systems created emission that could be best explained by natural astrophysical processes, such as dust generated and heated by massive star formation. He concluded that advanced civilizations capable of harnessing the power of their galaxies are scarce or nonexistent.

    “The original research at Penn State has already told us that such systems are very rare, but the new analysis suggests that this is probably an understatement, and that advanced Kardashev Type III civilizations basically don’t exist in the local universe,” Garrett said in the statement.

    “In my view, it means we can all sleep safely in our beds tonight — an alien invasion doesn’t seem at all likely!”

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    The search goes on

    Garrett’s technique could also help to identify less advanced Kardashev Type II civilizations, which might harness the energy output of a single star. He now plans to search for these civilizations, which may be more common than their Type III counterparts.

    “It’s a bit worrying that Type III civilizations don’t seem to exist,” Garrett said. “It’s not what we would predict from the physical laws that explain so well the rest of the physical universe.”

    He suggested that such civilizations could be far more energy efficient, producing very little waste heat, beyond scientists’ current understanding of physics.

    “What’s important is to keep on searching for the signatures of extraterrestrial intelligence until we fully understand just what is going on,” Garrett said.

    The research was detailed Sept. 15 in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

    Follow Nola Taylor Redd on Twitter @NolaTRedd or Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.

  • A Manned Mission to Mars Is Closer to Reality Than Ever: NASA Chief

    NASA is closer to putting boots on Mars than it’s ever been before, the space agency’s chief says.

    NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, a former space shuttle commander, said he envisioned becoming the first person to explore Mars when he checked in for astronaut training at Houston’s Johnson Space Center in 1980.

    Back then, a crewed Red Planet mission was believed to be 30 years away, Bolden said. That proved to be an overly optimistic assessment, of course. But NASA’s current goal of getting astronauts to Mars in the 2030s is eminently achievable, Bolden added. [5 Manned Mission to Mars Ideas

    “We are farther down the path to sending humans to Mars than at any point in NASA’s history,” Bolden said Thursday (Sept. 17) during an event at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. that detailed NASA’s manned Mars plans.

    NASA Deputy Administrator Dava Newman and Jim Green, director of NASA’s planetary science division, also took part in the discussion, which was webcast live on NASA TV. So did a number of NASA researchers, as well as Andy Weir, author of the sci-fi novel “The Martian,” which has been made into a movie starring Matt Damon that opens on Oct. 2.

    “We have a lot of work to do to get humans to Mars, but we’ll get there,” Bolden said.

    Some of this work includes developing a capsule called Orion and the Space Launch System (SLS) megarocket to help get astronauts to deep-space destinations. Orion and the SLS are scheduled to fly together for the first time, on an unmanned test flight, in 2018.

    Newman cited the fact that astronauts recently grew (and ate) lettuce on the International Space Station, as part of an experiment designed to better understand the production of food crops away from Earth.

    Furthermore, two crewmembers on the orbiting lab — NASA astronaut Scott Kelly and cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko — are halfway through an unpredecented yearlong mission that is characterizing the pyschological and physiological effects of long-duration spaceflight. Such work should inform planning for crewed Red Planet missions, which could take astronauts away from Earth for 500 days or more, NASA officials have said.

    Newman also mentioned the Mars Oxygen ISRU Experiment (MOXIE), one of seven science instruments that NASA’s next Mars rover will carry toward the Red Planet when it blasts off in 2020.

    MOXIE will pull carbon dioxide from the thin Martian atmosphere and turn it into pure oxygen and carbon monoxide, demonstrating technology that could keep settlers alive on the Red Planet — and help them blast off the surface when it’s time to go home. (Oxygen can be used as an oxidizer, helping to burn rocket fuel.)  

    “We’re going to make oxygen on another planet — the first time ever to make oxygen on another planet,” Newman said. “These experiments — they’re real, they’re here.”

    Such work is being done in service of an epic and monumental goal.

    “[Putting] boots on Mars is possibly the most exciting thing humans will ever do,” Bolden said.

    “We have been engaged in getting to Mars — getting humans to Mars — for at least 40 years, beginning with the first precursors,” he added. “I have no doubt that we can accomplish what we have set our minds to do.”

    Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall and Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebook or Google+. Originally published on Space.com.