KEY POINTS

  • NASA's new device will create oxygen on Mars
  • MOXIE can be used in establishing human outposts
  • MOXIE can also be used to create spacecraft propellant on Mars

For its upcoming mission to Mars, NASA plans to test a device that’s designed to terraform the Red Planet. Basically, the agency is hoping that the device can produce oxygen from the Martian atmosphere in preparations for a human outpost on Mars.

NASA has announced that it plans to send a new rover to the Red Planet in July this year. It will serve as a precursor to the agency’s first human expedition on Mars.

Aside from exploring the Martian surface, NASA also intends to establish a sustained human presence on Mars. This means that NASA is looking into the possibility of establishing a habitable environment on the Red Planet.

One way the agency plans to achieve this is through the use of a new device known as the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment (MOXIE). Basically, this device, which is about as big as a car’s battery, was designed to produce oxygen on Mars.

NASA will send MOXIE to Mars through its Perseverance rover. It will be installed within the rover near its front side. According to NASA, MOXIE works by using carbon dioxide, which comprises about 96% of the gas in the Martian atmosphere, and turning it into oxygen.

The agency estimated that MOXIE would be able to produce about two hours of oxygen for each experiment. If this device performs smoothly, NASA will develop larger versions of MOXIE that will act as oxygen generators on Mars.

Aside from providing future Mars explorers with oxygen, MOXIE will also be used to create propellant out of liquid oxygen. Michael Hecht, the principal investigator for MOXIE, explained that being able to produce oxygen and propellant on Mars is a vital aspect of maintaining a sustained presence on the Red Planet.

“When we send humans to Mars, we will want them to return safely, and to do that they need a rocket to lift off the planet,” he said in a statement. “Liquid oxygen propellant is something we could make there and not have to bring with us. One idea would be to bring an empty oxygen tank and fill it up on Mars.”

Perseverance
This illustration depicts NASA's Perseverance rover operating on the surface of Mars. Perseverance will land at the Red Planet's Jezero Crater a little after 3:40 p.m. EST (12:40 p.m. PST) on Feb. 18, 2021. NASA/JPL-Caltech