This illustration of Moon to Mars infrastructure shows
astronauts living and working on the surface of Mars. NASA’s Moon to Mars
Objectives establish an objectives-based approach to the agency’s human deep
space exploration efforts; NASA’s Moon to Mars Architecture approach distills
the objectives into operational capabilities and elements.
NASA is getting ready to send four astronauts around the Moon with Artemis
II, laying the foundation for sustainable missions to the lunar surface and
paving the way for human exploration on Mars. As the agency considers deep
space endeavors that could last months or years, it must develop ways to feed
astronauts beyond sending supplies from Earth.
That is why NASA is launching
the Deep Space Food Challenge: Mars to Table, a new global competition inviting chefs, innovators,
culinary experts, higher-education students, and citizen scientists to design a
complete, Earth-independent food system for long-duration space missions.
“In the future, exploration
missions will grow in both duration and distance from Earth. This will make the
critical question of feeding our astronauts more complex, requiring innovative
solutions to allow for long-term human exploration of space,” said Greg Stover,
acting associate administrator of NASA’s Space Technology Missions Directorate
at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Opening the door to ideas from beyond
the agency strengthens NASA’s ability to operate farther from Earth with
greater independence.”
Mars to Table builds on
NASA’s first Deep Space Food Challenge by seeking to integrate multiple food production
and preparation methods into a holistic, self-sustaining system designed for
use on Mars. This new challenge is open now until July 31 to the global public
and carries a prize purse of up to $750,000.
“Future crews on the Moon and Mars
will need food systems that are nutritious, sustainable, and fully independent
from Earth,” said Jarah Meador, program executive for NASA’s Prizes,
Challenges, and Crowdsourcing Program at NASA Headquarters. “Food will play a
pivotal role in the overall health and happiness of future deep space
explorers. The Mars to Table Challenge is about bringing all those pieces
together into one comprehensive design.”
Solvers are tasked with creating a complete meal plan suitable for astronauts living on Mars, using a NASA-created mission scenario as their guide. Each team will design a full food system concept, including a detailed operations plan and system design layout that supports a surface mission. Teams must consider every detail – from nutritional balance and taste to safety, usability, and integration with NASA’s Environmental Control and Life Support Systems.
Participants in the Mars to Table
Challenge are also encouraged to address food security on Earth. Innovative
growth systems designed for space could make fresh food production possible in
harsh, remote, or resource-limited areas, such as research stations located at
Earth’s poles or in rural areas with limited access to traditional supply
chains.
“This challenge isn’t just about feeding
astronauts; it’s about feeding people anywhere,” said Jennifer Edmunson, acting
program manager for NASA’s Centennial Challenges at NASA’s Marshall Spaceflight
Center in Huntsville, Alabama. “Novel meals that are compact, shelf-stable, and
nutrient-rich could expand culinary options for groups like military personnel
or disaster relief responders. By solving for Mars and future planetary
expeditions, we can also find solutions for Earth.”
NASA’s Centennial Challenges have a
20-year legacy of engaging the public to solve complex problems that benefit
NASA’s broader initiatives. Past challenges have spurred advances in robotics,
additive manufacturing, power and energy, textiles, chemistry, and biology.
Mars to Table is a collaborative,
cross-program Centennial Challenge with support from NASA’s Division of
Biological and Physical Sciences, Heliophysics Division, Planetary Science
Program, Human Research Program, and Mars Campaign Office. Subject matter
experts at the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston
and Kennedy Space Center in Florida support the challenge. This
challenge is part of the Prizes, Challenges and Crowdsourcing program within NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate.
NASA has partnered with the Methuselah Foundation and contracted Floor23
Digital to support the administration and management of this challenge.
To learn more about the challenge,
including timelines, submission requirements, and future webinar dates, visit:
https://www.deepspacefood.org/marstotable
Source: Food System Design Challenge

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