Planetary Protection in Advance of Human Missions

The Science Mission Directorate is facilitating a series of virtual events aimed at discussing the priority science goals and Planetary Protection knowledge gaps that NASA should address in advance of human presence on the surface of Mars.

The first seminar took place on July 31 and Aug. 1. You can find additional information on the event's Web page.

A second three-day virtual workshop will take place from Oct. 30-Nov. 1. Additional details about the second workshop will be provided as they are available.

Register for the October/November Virtual Seminar to receive updates and information.

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Event Information

These  workshops will introduce key discussion topics and knowledge gaps, led by community experts and based on the latest available data. Attendees will be asked to contribute to brainstorming sessions to identify forward work and potential priorities for the subsequent workshop.

Attendees will discuss and develop answers to pertinent questions including.

  • What data do we need to collect and what research do we need to conduct to limit harmful contamination of Mars before humans arrive?
  • What scientific research needs to be conducted before humans arrive and how will it inform the activities of the human explorers once they are on the surface?
  • What research will the crew themselves be doing, and how will forward and backward contamination control be incorporated into those research activities?

The results from these workshops will inform future research and mission priorities for the NASA Planetary Protection Office, the Astrobiology Program, and the Mars Exploration Program. This workshop is co-sponsored by the Network for Life Detection (NfoLD), an Astrobiology Research Coordination Network (RCN). We will make a summary of the workshop publicly available.

Access information and presentation slides from the first seminar using the button below:

SMD Summer Seminar Event Page