Skip to main content

NASA’s take on future space travel is a wild sci-fi ride

Although huge amounts of time and money have been invested in sending humans to space, we’ve so far only gone as far as the moon.

In recent years, there’s been much talk about sending humans to Mars, a far more ambitious mission considering the distance from Earth and the red planet’s harsh conditions.

NASA's Visions of the Future

Looking way, way ahead, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center has imagined how crewed trips could one day be more commonplace, taking humans to far-flung places in our solar system, and even beyond.

Goddard’s video (hit the player’s “CC” button for information on what you’re looking at) offers a cool look at the kind of wild space adventures that could be taking place many years from now. The team behind the video imagines communities living on the moon and Mars, and wild space tourism rides to places like Enceladus, Saturn’s sixth-largest moon.

Just when you think it couldn’t get any crazier, a “space kayaker” is shown paddling in the oceans of another faraway moon, while a skydiver is seen hurtling toward exoplanet HD 40307 g.

“At NASA, our mission is to explore,” Goddard says in a message accompanying the video. “We visit destinations in our solar system and study worlds beyond to better understand big questions. How did we get here? Where are we headed? Are we alone?”

Goddard reminds us that while robotic explorers have been touring our solar system for decades, “the only place beyond Earth where humans have stood is the moon. That’s also the next place we’ll send astronauts. But not the last. While humans haven’t yet visited Mars, we’re planning to add boot prints to the rover tire tracks there now.”

Looking into the distant future, Goddard wants us to imagine how life might one day be, though it admits that with the technology currently available, the adventures depicted in its video appear “fanciful.”

Still, hundreds of years ago, anyone who pointed at the moon and said we’d one day walk on its surface would’ve been told to go and have a lie-down. So who knows how far humans will travel from Earth generations from now … not sure about the kayaking though.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
NASA inspects SLS moon rocket following Hurricane Nicole
NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with the Orion spacecraft aboard is seen atop a mobile launcher at Launch Complex 39B, Monday, April 4, 2022.

As the authorities in Florida begin to assess the wider damage wrought by Hurricane Nicole on Thursday, a team at the Kennedy Space Center is currently performing detailed inspections of NASA’s next-generation Space Launch System (SLS) moon rocket.

The 98-meter-tall SLS rocket, with the Orion spacecraft at its tip, remained on the launchpad as the extreme weather passed through, exposing the vehicle to gusts of up to 82 mph. The rocket arrived on the launchpad last weekend ahead of its maiden flight, which could take place on Wednesday.

Read more
NASA’s mega moon rocket looks tiny in this launchpad shot
NASA's SLS rocket on the launchpad at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

NASA is targeting November 14 for the maiden launch of its next-generation Space Launch System (SLS) rocket from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The rocket will power an uncrewed Orion spacecraft toward the moon where it’ll come within 62 miles of the the lunar surface before returning to Earth for a splashdown landing on December 9.

Read more
Watch NASA demolish a piece of space history in 10 seconds
NASA's Building 4200 at the Marshall Space Flight Center being demolished.

NASA is normally concerned with blasting rockets to space, but on Saturday it focused on blasting a former administrative headquarters to smithereens.

The space agency demolished Building 4200 at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, about 130 miles northwest of Atlanta.

Read more