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Mars One building simulated colony to vet potential colonists

Popular Science: “Spaceflight contractors Lockheed Martin and Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. are already working with Mars One to develop a robotic lander and a data-link satellite for an unmanned, exploratory mission to Mars in 2018.”

By JC Sevcik
This NASA image taken on February 3, 2013 shows a self-portrait of NASA's Mars rover Curiosity created by a combination of dozens of exposures taken by the rover's Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI), on the surface of Mars, February 20, 2013. Private, Netherlands project based Mars One announced plans Thursday to build a simulated colony to prepare astronauts for life on the red planet. UPI/NASA
This NASA image taken on February 3, 2013 shows a self-portrait of NASA's Mars rover Curiosity created by a combination of dozens of exposures taken by the rover's Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI), on the surface of Mars, February 20, 2013. Private, Netherlands project based Mars One announced plans Thursday to build a simulated colony to prepare astronauts for life on the red planet. UPI/NASA | License Photo

Mars One is a a private, Netherlands-based push to realize a human colony on the red planet by 2025.

In an email statement to Popular Science Thursday, Mars One announced plans to build a simulated colony here on Earth to vet astronauts and make sure they can withstand the cramped and isolated conditions colonists will have to endure before awarding them their one-way ticket.

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They are currently in the process of courting financial sponsors and construction companies, and while the simulated Martian digs won’t actually boast extraterrestrial life-support right off the bat, the company intends to retrofit the technology to the structure down the line.

More than 200,00 people applied for the chance to be among the first colonists. Mars One has already narrowed the pool to just over a thousand candidates, and intends ultimately to send a cadre of 24-40 colonists to the planet.

According to Popular Science, “spaceflight contractors Lockheed Martin and Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. are already working with Mars One to develop a robotic lander and a data-link satellite for an unmanned, exploratory mission to Mars in 2018.”

Mars One has said in the past that they intend to televise the colonization as a means of funding.

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So who’s ready for Big Brother: Martian Edition? That will be reality television worth watching.

[Popular Science]

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