What's keeping us from Mars? Space rays, say experts

Maggie Fox, Reuters

Published: Tuesday, April 1, 2008

WASHINGTON - Cosmic rays are so dangerous and so poorly understood that people are unlikely to get to Mars or even back to the moon until better ways are found to protect astronauts, experts said on Monday.

And NASA is not properly funding the right experiments to find out how, the National Research Council committee said.

"One of the big issues is they have really cut funding for biology issues," retired space shuttle astronaut James van Hoften, who chaired the committee, said in a telephone interview.

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The walls of Victoria Crater in an approximate true-color picture taken by the panoramic camera on NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity in October 2007. Cosmic rays are so dangerous and so poorly understood that people are unlikely to get to Mars or even back to the moon until better ways are found to protect astronauts, experts said on Monday. REUTERS/NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/Handout

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"It is tough on them when they don't have any new money coming in. They are using old data," he added -- including research done on survivors of the nuclear bombings of Japan during World War Two.

"Given today's knowledge and today's understanding of radiation protection, to put someone out in that type of environment would violate the current requirements that NASA has."

The committee of experts agreed that NASA'S existing radiation safety standards can protect astronauts and they urged the U.S. space agency to keep them in place.

The Earth's bulk, atmosphere and magnetic field protect life from the solar radiation and the cosmic rays that travel through space. Astronauts have just a thin layer of shielding.

Van Hoften knows from personal experience.

"My introduction to space radiation came first-hand as a crew member aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger in April 1984. 'What the heck was that?' I blurted out after seeing what looked like a white laser passing quickly through my eyes," van Hoften wrote in the introduction to the report.

"'Oh, that's just cosmic rays,' said Pinky Nelson, my spacewalking partner and space physicist. The thought of extremely high-energy particles originating from a distant cosmic event passing easily through the space shuttle and subsequently through my head made me think that this cannot be all that healthy. The truth of the matter is that it is not."

NOWHERE TO HIDE

The cosmic rays include galactic cosmic radiation or GCR and solar particles.

"You can put on very thick walls and they just won't protect you from that," van Hoften said. "The younger you are the worse it is," he added, because as with many types of radiation, it can take years for the damage to cause disease.

"It might be OK if you just send a bunch of old guys like me," he laughed.

Any mission to Mars using current technology would take three years, van Hoften said. That long in space would subject astronauts to too much radiation .

"It hasn't really gotten the airing that it needs. In the committee we stewed over this for a long time before we said anything," he added.

Ejections of dangerous particles from the sun can be forecast, but astronauts must hide in specially shielded areas of shuttles or space stations and may miss important tasks, the committee said.

 
COMMENTS ON THIS STORY
Obvious
Tue, Apr 1, 08 at 02:06 PM
Well we better start doing a better job of protecting this planet then. We ain't goin' anywhere soon.
Hmmm
Tue, Apr 1, 08 at 04:56 PM
Do the cosmic rays pass through mirrors? I wonder if they can be reflected or maybe obsorbed instead of 'blocked'?
space case
Tue, Apr 1, 08 at 05:08 PM
Why don't they send a bunch of over the hill astronauts just like Space Cowboys!!! And get that space cadet glow!!!! I got news for you sunshine its too dangerous too go where no man has gone!!
James Alexander
Tue, Apr 1, 08 at 05:11 PM
I say send an entire crew of RCMP. They can use their ray-guns (tasers) to zap those defenseless particles. They may, however, have trouble handcuffing them first.
Dan J Quinones
Wed, Apr 2, 08 at 01:24 PM
It would seem logical to use magnetic shielding much like our own planet does to protect us from harmful GCR.
aireanna
Wed, Apr 2, 08 at 02:04 PM
cool!!!!
Jeff
Thu, Apr 3, 08 at 01:37 AM
Or even back to the moon? If so, how did we get there the first time?
Smith
Thu, Apr 3, 08 at 02:28 PM
This old. I can't believe it, it's such old news that it's new news again! Yes, it's a problem. Well, guess what? The US spent less than twenty years to go from exploding rockets to maned missions. I think that was a greater technological leap than this. And as for protecting this planet, I can only laugh. It would require people to give up their lifestyle. Good luck with that.
Bruce
Sat, Apr 19, 08 at 06:50 AM
I wonder what protects the people in the space station? Must be the proximity to the planet. They are known to spend months in there.
adam
Fri, May 9, 08 at 01:03 AM
put the base under ground. or does that make sense? oops
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