Life on Mars, together
With Project MADMEN, two MIT students experience the challenges and bonding associated with a Mars analog mission.
With Project MADMEN, two MIT students experience the challenges and bonding associated with a Mars analog mission.
The “oriented” samples, the first of their kind from any planet, could shed light on Mars’ ancient magnetic field.
Political science and physics major Leela Fredlund wants to ensure fairness and justice prevail in humanity's leap into space.
A new technique uses remote images to gauge the strength of ancient and active rivers beyond Earth.
The device would be a key component of a portable mass spectrometer that could help monitor pollutants, perform medical diagnoses in remote areas, or test Martian soil.
A new study shows that simple hand magnets erase a meteorite’s magnetic memory.
Day and night, and across seasons, the instrument generates breathable oxygen from the Red Planet’s thin atmosphere.
Aeronautics and astronautics PhD candidate George Lordos develops technologies to enable life on Mars.
BART and MARGE will reliably produce, store, and distribute 50 tons of rocket fuel per year on the surface of Mars.
The fellowship supports research contributing to the field of planetary science and astronomy.
The findings include signs of flash flooding that carried huge boulders downstream into the lakebed.
In his research, the geomorphologist seeks connections among landscape evolution, biodiversity, and human history.
Thanks to an MIT-designed instrument, a NASA mission has produced oxygen on another planet for the first time.
Following touchdown, MOXIE will brew up oxygen while geologists comb for sediments to sample.
Maya Nasr’s work on the Mars 2020 mission has led her to become an advocate for expanding international cooperation in space.