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NASA Seeks Ideas To Aid in Mars Exploration

  •  Steve Milne 
Tuesday, July 5, 2016 | Sacramento, CA
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Courtesy of NASA
 

Courtesy of NASA

NASA is trying to figure out how future astronauts will survive the long trip to Mars. The agency is asking for ideas and offering a $500,000 prize.

NASA's Vascular Tissue Challenge is part of the agency's citizen inventor prize program.

"We are looking at people that are not normally associated with NASA in solving NASA problems to come and help us get to Mars," says NASA's Monsi Roman.

She says the agency wants to test the effects of deep space on humans without actually using humans. Creating thick tissue that function like organs in the human body will help NASA test how to mitigate radiation and other hostile environments.

Roman says the challenge could also speed up new research and development in the field of organ transplants.

"We could potentially help people that need organs on earth by taking their cells and growing tissue that functionally works like what they need," says Roman.

The $500,000 prize will be divided among the first three teams that successfully create thick, metabolically-functional human vascularized organ tissue.


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    JUNO Astronomer Dr. Tobias Owen

    Wednesday, July 6, 2016
    Juno continues its work today - the spacecraft joined the orbit of the planet Jupiter on the 4th of July. We'll be talking with Dr. Tobias Owen, an astronomer from Fair Oaks who was influential in the JUNO project.

 scienceNASA

Steve Milne

Morning Edition Anchor & Reporter

Steve is the Morning Edition anchor for Capital Public Radio. He covers stories on a wide range of topics including: business, education, real estate, agriculture and music.  Read Full Bio 

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