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Nasa unveils (some) missing pieces in our desire to journey to Mars – but won’t say how much it will cost or when it will happen

Nasa administrator Charles Bolden said that the US space agency is “closer to sending American astronauts to Mars than at any point in our history.”

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Matt Damon portrays an astronaut who faces seemingly insurmountable odds as he tries to find a way to subsist on a hostile planet in "The Martian."

In the Hollywood movie The Martian an American astronaut survives on Mars against all odds, but in reality Nasa admits that huge obstacles remain before humans can reach the Red Planet.

Nasa outlined the many steps ahead in a 36-page document that calls the problems “solvable” but steers clear of saying how much money is needed or when to expect an astronaut mission to Mars.

The strategy was released to the public ahead of talks with Congress about budgets for space exploration and before a major international meeting of the space industry in Jerusalem this week.

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Astronauts who journey to Mars could spend three years in deep space, where radiation is high and so are the risks of cancer, bone loss and immune problems, said the document, called “NASA’s Journey to Mars: Pioneering Next Steps in Space Exploration.”

A low-angle self-portrait of NASA's Curiosity Mars rover. Photo: Reuters
A low-angle self-portrait of NASA's Curiosity Mars rover. Photo: Reuters
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“The journey is worth the risk,” it said, calling Mars “an achievable goal” and “the next tangible frontier for expanding human presence.”

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