By Brian Vastag
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Millionaire space tourist Dennis Tito has a vision to send two Americans to Mars on a high-risk, budget-class, 501-day journey that would — if achieved — smash the barrier to deep space.
The proposed passengers are a middle-aged married couple, handy with tools and not prone to claustrophobia.
The Inspiration Mars Mission for America would launch, by necessity of orbital mechanics, on Jan. 5, 2018.
There is no spaceship yet, and little notion of a budget. There is no funding beyond a two-year research and development commitment by Tito. But the wealthy former rocket scientist and financier has assembled a team of credentialed advisers and plotted a mission that teeters, outside experts say, on the edge of credibility.
“It’s about inspiring the children,” Tito said at a news conference Wednesday to announce the scheme.
Moments earlier, the onetime flier to the international space station — he paid $20 million to go there in 2001 — had lambasted what he characterized as a four-decade stagnation in the U.S. human spaceflight program.
Three years ago, President Barack Obama touted a possible NASA Mars landing in the mid-2030s.
“I’ll be 95 years old,” Tito said. “I don’t want to wait until that time.”
But there will be no landing on Tito’s mission. No footprints and flags in ruddy soil, no rock-grabbing, no search for Martian life.
Eight months after launch, Mars will loom, then vanish in the rearview mirror.
Tito said he will sell media rights. The Mission for America might become the Red Bull Mission to Mars, the Cool Ranch Doritos Mars Shot.
“I can imagine Dr. Phil talking to this couple and solving their marital problems,” Tito said.
The nearly 18-month trip will cover 818 million miles.
Time spent within 60,000 miles of Mars: 10 hours.
Time spent pining for a bath: a seeming eternity.
“It’s not nuts,” said Taber MacCallum, chief executive of Tucson, Ariz.-based Paragon Space Development, which is engineering the life support systems for the flight. “This is possible.”
A celestial harmony makes such a plan feasible — a once-every-15-years alignment of Earth and Mars wherein a modest craft can shoot there and back with minimal fuel.
Tito won’t fly. He’s 72. But MacCallum, 48, and his wife, Jayne Poynter, 50, offered themselves as candidates for the most grueling marriage test ever conceived.
Two decades ago, the pair spent two years inside Biosphere2, the steel-and-glass sci-fi cathedral in Arizona conceived in part as a simulated space colony.
“We used to sit inside the Biosphere and just sort of fantasize about going to Mars,” Poynter said. “Oh yeah, we did.”
The risks of this mission soar beyond those NASA would allow, said Tito adviser Jonathan Clark, a former NASA space doctor now at the Baylor College of Medicine.
Beyond low Earth orbit, cosmic radiation rises dramatically, upping the risk of cancer. If illness or injury occur, there is no hospital for millions of miles, no chance to abort, and no escape.
Because radiation can damage sperm and eggs, Tito decided the world’s first Martians should be older than reproductive age.
The new face of space travel will be wrinkled.
Other risks include missing a small “keyhole” in space near Mars and slingshotting to infinity, or vaporizing above Earth upon the fastest atmospheric re-entry ever attempted.
Tito said a burgeoning new American space industry is on board. But this is, for now, largely a paper mission. NASA engineers are working on a heat shield. Paragon is building urine recycling and air purification systems. The life support apparatus will be kept simple, non-automated, and easily wrenched back to working order. There will be fecal sacks to change out, bulkheads to scrub. And plenty of time for both.
“A lot of this stuff is kind of MacGyvered,” said Clark, a reference to the late-’80s-early-’90s TV hero who fixed problems with chewing gum and paper clips.
The required hardware includes a capsule for launching and landing, a habitat module, and a big rocket — or multiple small ones. Tito said several companies are in the running to build the components in time for the brief launch window.
While NASA is not funding the mission, Tito has briefed agency leadership.
“NASA will continue discussions with Inspiration Mars to see how the agency might collaborate on mutually beneficial activities,” said NASA spokesman David Weaver.
This week, a boy who had heard about the project sent Tito — a fabulously wealthy man — $10.
“If you have a billion or two dollars, it’s technically feasible,” said Robert Zubrin, president of the Mars Society and a longtime proponent of colonizing that planet. “My main point of skepticism is not technical. It’s, ‘Do these guys have a billion dollars?’ “
They apparently do not. Tito did not crack the Forbes 500 billionaires list, and on Wednesday he shook a digital tin cup to begin fundraising for this “philanthropic” flight. The Inspiration Mars Foundation is in talks with the National Geographic Society and the Challenger Center for Space Science Education to bring the mission into classrooms and otherwise broadcast it.
“Imagine a 13-year-old girl and her classmates getting tweets from a female astronaut at Mars,” Poynter said.
The mission — if Tito can pull it off — would reshuffle the possibilities for human space travel. Zubrin likened it to Charles Lindbergh’s first flight across the Atlantic. “It breaks the mental cage that we cannot go interplanetary until we have miraculous new propulsion,” he said.
The last time humans sailed beyond Earth orbit was the final Apollo moon mission in 1972. That was the final act of the Cold War space race.
The goal then, funded by tax dollars: beating the Soviets.
The goal now, funded by donations: beating burgeoning space power China.
“Wouldn’t I want to do that?” Tito said when asked if besting China motivated his plan. “Wouldn’t I want America to do that?”
Science/Technology
Mars mission has long way to go, even with millionaire’s backing
- Science/Technology
-
-
Toddler is youngest to ever get lab-made windpipe
CHICAGO — A 2-year-old girl born without a windpipe now has a new one grown from her own stem cells, the youngest patient in the world to benefit from the experimental treatment.
-
EPA methane report further divides fracking camps
PITTSBURGH — The Environmental Protection Agency has dramatically lowered its estimate of how much of a potent heat-trapping gas leaks during natural gas production, in a shift with major implications for a debate that has divided environmentalists: Does the recent boom in fracking help or hurt the fight against climate change?
-
NASA chief: Visiting an asteroid is all agency can afford
WASHINGTON - A NASA plan to send astronauts to an asteroid was met with skepticism Wednesday when NASA Chief Charlie Bolden presented the idea to top space officials in Congress - though their doubts may not be enough to sink the program.
-
At Navy Yard, ’living lab’ of energy efficiency
PHILADELPHIA - Building 661 at the Navy Yard was never a thing of beauty. Built in 1942, during the first months of U.S. involvement in World War II, the brick-and-concrete structure’s purpose was to house an indoor swimming pool, basketball courts, and offices, a function it pragmatically performed until the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard closed in 1995.
-
Expo seeks to inspire new generation of robot-builders
Robots that can transfer plastic rings. Robots that can toss Frisbees into targets. Robots that can climb, swim, dance, or make music. Robots that can clean up a nuclear plant after a Fukushima-style disaster, sparing human beings the risk of radiation poisoning.
-
UN official hopeful about 2015 climate talks
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Governments are more serious and the impact of climate change is more dramatic, improving chances of a groundbreaking global warming pact in 2015 in contrast with the failure of such an effort in 2009, the U.N. climate chief said Tuesday.
-
Whiz kids show their stuff at White House science fair
In his dark blue business suit, President Barack Obama climbed onto a bicycle anchored to the ground outside the White House. He pedaled in his polished dress shoes, generating electricity to run a water sanitation system built by a group of Florida teenagers.
-
How Rocking a Baby Is Like Holding a Kitten by the Neck
A human mother rocking a baby in her arms and a cat carrying her kitten by the scruff of its neck have the same physiological effect on both young animals and probably stem from the same maternal instinct to protect their young. That's the conclusion of a new study, which for the first time has compared the physiological impact of maternal carrying behaviors across species. The findings may lead to better parenting techniques for people and possibly to new ways to detect developmental disorders early in life.
-
'Living Fossil' Gets Its Genome Sequenced
The coelacanth isn't called a "living fossil" for nothing. The six-foot-long, nearly 200-pound fish was thought to have gone extinct 70 million years ago — until a fisherman caught one in 1938 — and the animal looks a lot like its fossil ancestors dating back 300 million years. Now, the first analysis of the coelacanth's genome reveals why the fish may have changed so little over the ages. It also may help explain how fish like it moved onto land long ago.
-
Ancient Mating Dance Offers Ranchers, Birds a Lifeline
BURWELL, Neb. — Under an indigo pre-dawn sky, as a frigid wind whipped across the plains, a half-dozen brown-and-white birds emerged from tufts of dry grass. They emitted a low cooing sound, akin to the hooting of an owl.
- More Science/Technology Headlines
-
Toddler is youngest to ever get lab-made windpipe



