The Problem With Landing Humans on Mars (and How to Fix It)

If all goes according to plan, later this week NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory will lift-off from Cape Canaveral and set out on an eight-month trip to the Red Planet. When it touches down at Gale Crater in August of 2012, the one-ton probe – five time more massive than NASA’s previous rovers, Spirit and Opportunity — will be the largest and most complex piece of unmanned machinery ever to land on another world. But here’s a little secret:

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