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NASA made enough oxygen on Mars to last an astronaut for 100 minutes

NASA鈥檚 MOXIE experiment on Mars has produced about 100 minutes鈥 worth of breathable oxygen, raising hopes for future crewed missions

By Jacklin Kwan

31 August 2022

Artist's concept pf Perseverance rover

The MOXIE experiment landed on Mars on NASA’s Perseverance rover (artists’s impression)

NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA鈥檚 small experiment to produce oxygen on Mars managed to generate about 100 minutes鈥 worth of breathable oxygen in 2021. Now it is set to be scaled up to support future human exploration.

The Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment (MOXIE) is a small oxygen-generating device that landed on the Red Planet atop the Perseverance rover in February 2021.

The science of supernovae

Over the course of seven hour-long production runs during that year, MOXIE was able to reliably produce roughly 15 minutes of oxygen per hour in a variety of harsh planetary conditions. That added up to a total of 50 grams of oxygen in total 鈥 about 100 minutes鈥 worth of breathable oxygen for a single astronaut.

鈥淎t the highest level, this is just a brilliant success,鈥 says at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Haystack Observatory, who co-leads the MOXIE experiment.

In day or night, at different extreme temperatures and in the wake of a dust storm, Hecht says that MOXIE continued producing high-purity oxygen.

The NASA team is now looking to create a bigger version of the device, which would produce not only enough life support for a crewed Mars mission, but also enough oxygen to propel a return rocket to Earth.

MOXIE requires pumps and compressors to suck in carbon dioxide from the Martian atmosphere as well as heaters that can raise the air鈥檚 temperature to 800掳C (1470掳F).

The device then pulls the oxygen atoms from the carbon dioxide to produce oxygen gas, which MOXIE has been measuring, before releasing it.

There will be some challenges in scaling up this technology, though, says at the NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas.

These include being able to insulate a larger version of MOXIE to manage its internal temperature and ensuring that the device heats up uniformly to prevent it from breaking.

Sanders also says that an oxygen device that can support a human mission would need to operate continuously for about 400 days, and so far, MOXIE鈥檚 runs have only lasted for an hour each.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a lot of hours to put on the hardware, irrespective of what the technology is,鈥 he says.

Nonetheless, MOXIE鈥檚 first year of success has been a big step forward in showing the technology鈥檚 potential, says Sanders.

NASA is now testing the hardware needed at a scale that would be relevant to a human mission. The larger version is likely to be about a cubic metre in size, which shouldn鈥檛 present a problem for launches.

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