NASA is Looking for New Astronauts (nasa.gov) 54
"With a renewed interest in sending humans back to the Moon and then eventually to Mars, NASA needs all the able-bodied space explorers it can get..." writes BGR.
"The requirements are, well, pretty strict, but what else would you expect from a group that sends humans into space?"
Quoting NASA.gov: Since the 1960s, NASA has selected 350 people to train as astronaut candidates for its increasingly challenging missions to explore space. With 48 astronauts in the active astronaut corps, more will be needed to crew spacecraft bound for multiple destinations and propel exploration forward as part of Artemis missions and beyond...
The basic requirements to apply include United States citizenship and a master's degree in a STEM field, including engineering, biological science, physical science, computer science, or mathematics, from an accredited institution... Candidates also must have at least two years of related, progressively responsible professional experience, or at least 1,000 hours of pilot-in-command time in jet aircraft. Astronaut candidates must pass the NASA long-duration spaceflight physical... As part of the application process, applicants will, for the first time, be required to take an online assessment that will require up to two hours to complete...
After completing training, the new astronauts could launch on American rockets and spacecraft developed for NASA's Commercial Crew Program to live and work aboard the International Space Station, 250 miles above Earth, where they will take part in experiments that benefit life at home and prepare us for more distant exploration. They may also launch on NASA's powerful new Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft, docking the spacecraft at the Gateway in lunar orbit before taking a new human landing system to the Moon's surface. After returning humans to the Moon in 2024, NASA plans to establish sustainable lunar exploration by 2028. Gaining new experiences on and around the Moon will prepare NASA to send the first humans to Mars in the mid-2030s.
NASA expects to select the new class of astronaut candidates in mid-2021 to begin training as the next class of Artemis Generation astronauts.
"We're celebrating our 20th year of continuous presence aboard the International Space Station in low-Earth orbit this year..." NASA said in its statement.
Applications will be accepted from March 2nd through March 31st.
"The requirements are, well, pretty strict, but what else would you expect from a group that sends humans into space?"
Quoting NASA.gov: Since the 1960s, NASA has selected 350 people to train as astronaut candidates for its increasingly challenging missions to explore space. With 48 astronauts in the active astronaut corps, more will be needed to crew spacecraft bound for multiple destinations and propel exploration forward as part of Artemis missions and beyond...
The basic requirements to apply include United States citizenship and a master's degree in a STEM field, including engineering, biological science, physical science, computer science, or mathematics, from an accredited institution... Candidates also must have at least two years of related, progressively responsible professional experience, or at least 1,000 hours of pilot-in-command time in jet aircraft. Astronaut candidates must pass the NASA long-duration spaceflight physical... As part of the application process, applicants will, for the first time, be required to take an online assessment that will require up to two hours to complete...
After completing training, the new astronauts could launch on American rockets and spacecraft developed for NASA's Commercial Crew Program to live and work aboard the International Space Station, 250 miles above Earth, where they will take part in experiments that benefit life at home and prepare us for more distant exploration. They may also launch on NASA's powerful new Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft, docking the spacecraft at the Gateway in lunar orbit before taking a new human landing system to the Moon's surface. After returning humans to the Moon in 2024, NASA plans to establish sustainable lunar exploration by 2028. Gaining new experiences on and around the Moon will prepare NASA to send the first humans to Mars in the mid-2030s.
NASA expects to select the new class of astronaut candidates in mid-2021 to begin training as the next class of Artemis Generation astronauts.
"We're celebrating our 20th year of continuous presence aboard the International Space Station in low-Earth orbit this year..." NASA said in its statement.
Applications will be accepted from March 2nd through March 31st.
Re:gatekeeping much? (Score:5, Insightful)
So college degree is required. Hasnâ(TM)t this already been debunked?
You think you'd stand a chance without a degree? Maybe you should look through some of the Wikipedia pages for the current astronauts and see what sort of chance you'd have.
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As part of the application process, applicants will, for the first time, be required to take an online assessment that will require up to two hours to complete...
Wouldn't it be interesting to take the written exam anyway? I would imagine there are any number of people that aren't qualified that would jump at the opportunity even if it was only a two hour online assessment.
Re: gatekeeping much? (Score:2)
"You see a fellow astronaut slipping moon rocks into his pocket while Mission Control isn't looking. What would you do?"
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You forgot the multiple choice...
A. Alert Mission Control.
B. Take photos for blackmail purposes.
C. Do nothing.
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I can't believe anyone took the PP seriously, it's about the silliest thing I have ever seen on Slashdot, and thats saying something.
Re:gatekeeping much? (Score:5, Insightful)
We are going to be sending these astronauts to the moon and mars to explore, to take samples, to carry out experiments and to expand our knowledge of these places. Doesn't it make sense that we would want the astronauts who are being sent to have the scientific skills to carry out such a mission?
And I suspect that even if a college education wasn't a requirement, there is no way anyone who didn't have at least a BS in a relavent field would even get past the first stage (given how many highly qualified people with Masters or even Doctorates are going to be applying)
Re: gatekeeping much? (Score:2)
Right , and the history of space flight tells us that when things go wrong it's the smart guys who feet the astronauts home, and in any space endeavour that's gonna mean postgrads , airforce aces and seriously talented engineers (covered by first)). Or as we might put it here in Australia "mad cunts with degrees"
Your high school diploma from the school of hard knocks isn't gonna get you past the interview I'm afraid
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If you really want smart people make the applicants take a full IQ test. Not everyone has the money to go to university. The most intelligent person I have ever met and the best programmer never graduated from uni. It wasn't because he was too stupid. It was because he was not interested. He wanted to start his own business instead of being a super-intelligent wage slave and that is what he did. Trying to use university as some kind of indirect IQ test is highly questionable.
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There is a big difference between working on features no-one asked for at Google or Facebook or Apple and flying a space capsule all the way to another planet.
You may be able to get a job at a "tech company" without a college degree but I don't of know too many rocket scientists who don't have at least some sort of relavent degree under their belt (even Elon Musk over at SpaceX has a college education)
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Because Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix and Google are known for never fucking up? Oh, right... they've all repeatedly fucked up in huge ways that took down their own sites because they didn't think things through when they did something.
So...
Would you trust a surgeon to operate on you if you found out he skipped college because he was too busy learning skills at a pace that the educational system couldn't keep up with?
Would you believe that the extremely fast, self-taught crash course on surgery didn't s
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computer “science” being a notable example of this; there’s a great many very good self-taught people without degrees there
OK, I'll bite. Where's all those CS papers written by people without academic credentials?
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OK, I'll bite. Where's all those CS papers written by people without academic credentials?
Academic publication is not the world's only measure of success.
Some people would consider becoming a billionaire to be a successful accomplishment and many CS dropouts have done that.
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Or writing an extremely clever and efficient computer program. Just passing the same courses everyone else does and graduating doesn't make you a great programmer. What makes you a great programmer is writing great programs.
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What you are saying is that programming is art, not science. Possible, but that also makes it useless for astronauts.
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Yeah, there's always a "catch", lousy elitists! That's how they get ya.
Why don't they just pick people at random?
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Why don't they just pick people at random?
Even better, don't pick them.
NASA should just contract out the lunar and Mars missions to SpaceX, and let SpaceX make the hiring decisions.
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So college degree is required. Hasnâ(TM)t this already been debunked?
When you're at the space station or on the moon, there is no one to rely on. There's no big box store to replace items that break. And even if everything goes perfectly, there are still experiments to perform and report back. The people that go have to have an intimate understanding of science, higher math functions,etc.
Sure, there are probably a few un-degreed Joe Schmoes that can do Cal III, advanced physics, etc and have a high level understanding of a physical science. But perhaps NASA doesn't want
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Sorry, amateur hour is over. If you want to sit on top of a multi-million dollar transport, the least I'd expect is you to be able to justify putting you there.
Back in the late sixties (Score:2)
Back in the late sixties as a little kid I wrote (well with the help of my parents) to NASA about becoming an astronaut. They actually replied to me, but boy did they break my heart when they told me that they only accepted US citizens. Even back then I couldn't see that happening.
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Back in the late sixties as a little kid I wrote (well with the help of my parents) to NASA about becoming an astronaut. They actually replied to me, but boy did they break my heart when they told me that they only accepted US citizens. Even back then I couldn't see that happening.
If you got $100 million dollars lying around it's probably not too late yet, they got a Japanese billionaire lined up for the #dearMoon Starship project so once all the boxes are ticked for crewed Dragon I think it's open to most nations. The launch profile is around 3g for a minute, which is way below the 9g they cite for combat pilots and 5g for a normally fit adult. Also you'd be wearing a g-suit and since you're just a passenger passing out for a few seconds wouldn't be a big deal. All you have to do is
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There's no hurry (Score:2)
Boeing Starliner (Score:4, Funny)
Makes sense.
If they are going to be flying Boeing's Starliner, they'd best stock up and not find themselves short-staffed like in the Shuttle days.
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Dark humor is the best humor.
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Q: What is black lying in the bed and does not move after a room fire?
A: A paralytic after a room fire.
Q: What is black and is laying on the staircase and can not move?
A: His brother, he tried to rescue him.
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Yeah they certainly wouldn't want to find themselves Needing Another Seven Astronauts.
"Returning to the moon in 2024" (Score:3)
Yeah, when pigs fly.
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Yeah, when pigs fly.
RFC 1925: (3) With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine.
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Ross Callon is the savior of mankind... and maybe... just maybe.... a few pigs
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But Mike Pence and the Orange One have said it will happen, and they've never over-promised and under-delivered!
Reup rate for astronauts (Score:1)
Let's get real... (Score:4, Insightful)
This anti-science/anti-education attitude in this country is finally laughable.
Of course you need an advanced degree to go into space. NASA needs to know what a prospective astronaut knows before they need to use it. This actually is rocket science.These people need to be competent.
Sure... you might find 20 million people in the USA with the smarts needed to be an astronaut. After you weed out anyone with an advanced degree outside of STEM you are left with the autodidacts and people with relevant advanced degrees.
Then you have to throw out the autodidacts. They are brilliant innovators that have contributed to the human condition in ways that cannot even be measured reliably. They are geniuses. But they aren't team players. They are as a demographic not physically fit. They can't sit in a classroom and learn anything. They don't join the military. They rarely play sports.
After all...who wants to see Steve Wozniak shot into space? (At the same time building a computer from scratch, with commodity parts, and writing an operating system for it is a useless skill for an astronaut.)
Then you have to throw out the people that do not meet the physical or psychological requirements. That's so they don't physically fall apart during launch or "freak out on the asteroid".
So maybe there's 1000 people in the age range that want to be astronauts.
NASA took about 18,000 applications: and have 38 astronauts in the program.
Someone needs to do a little math. Oh wait... knowing math is "elitist".
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Me, me, me! Oh, you meant and have him come back....
Meals ready to eat (Score:2)
Slashdotters apply! "Send me to Mars, I have almost a year's worth of MRE's pre-stored!"
Studying the effect of microgravity on obesity (Score:2)
I'm still waiting for NASA to want to study fat people in space. Until then I'll keep "training".
No Broken Bones (Score:1)
Sounds fun (Score:2)
I don't care who goes (Score:2)
As long as we get more stories along the lines of "First left-handed, tri-gender Jewish, Inuit astronaut..."