CHAPEA Crew Begins Stay Inside NASAβs Mars Habitat for Second Mission
A crew of four research volunteers stepped inside NASAβs CHAPEA (Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog) habitat on Oct. 19, marking the start of the agencyβs second 378-day simulated Mars mission.
Ross Elder, Ellen Ellis, Matthew Montgomery, and James Spicer are living and working inside the roughly 1,700-square-foot 3D-printed habitat at the agencyβs Johnson Space Center in Houston until Oct. 31, 2026.
βThe information and lessons learned through CHAPEA will inform real-life mission planning, vehicle and surface habitat designs, and other resources NASA needs to support crew health and performance as we venture beyond low-Earth orbit,β said Sara Whiting, Human Research Program project scientist. βThrough these lessons, NASAβs Human Research Program is reducing human health and performance risks of spaceflight to enable safe and successful crewed missions to the Moon, Mars, and beyond.β
The crew will face the challenges of a real Mars mission, and only leave to perform simulated βMarswalkβ activities directly outside the habitat, wearing spacesuits, to traverse a simulated Mars environment filled with red sand. During these Marswalks, they will remain isolated within the building that houses CHAPEA at NASA Johnson.
βThese crewmembers will help provide foundational data for mission planning and vehicle design and inform trades between resources, methods, and technologies that best support health and performance within the constraints of living on Mars,β said Grace Douglas, CHAPEA principal investigator. βThe information gained from these simulated missions is critical to NASAβs goal of sending astronauts to explore Mars.β
During the year ahead, the crew will complete a variety of activities designed to replicate life and work on a long-duration mission on Mars, including high-tempo simulated Marswalks, robotic operations, habitat maintenance, physical exercise, and crop cultivation. The mission also aims to investigate how the crew adapts and responds to various environmental stressors that may arise during a real Martian mission, including limited access to resources, prolonged isolation, 22-minute communication delays, and equipment failures. Researchers will study how the team manages these conditions, which will inform future protocols and plans ahead of future crewed missions to Mars.
TheΒ first CHAPEA mission, which took place in the same habitat, concluded on July 6, 2024.



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NASAβs Human Research Program
NASAβsΒ Human Research ProgramΒ pursues methods and technologies to support safe, productive human space travel. Through science conducted in laboratories, ground-based analogs, commercial missions, the International Space Station and Artemis missions, the program scrutinizes how spaceflight affects human bodies and behaviors. Such research drives the programβsΒ questΒ to innovate ways that keep astronauts healthy and mission ready as human space exploration expands to the Moon, Mars, and beyond.