Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
House Ethics Committee finds indicted Dem Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick ‘guilty’ on 25 counts

House Ethics Committee finds indicted Dem Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick ‘guilty’ on 25 counts

March 27, 2026
March Madness: Trey Kaufman-Renn’s tip-in basketball leads Purdue to Elite Eight

March Madness: Trey Kaufman-Renn’s tip-in basketball leads Purdue to Elite Eight

March 27, 2026
Mormon Wives’ Miranda McWhorter Shares ‘Backstabber’ Post After Jessi and Chase Kiss Drama

Mormon Wives’ Miranda McWhorter Shares ‘Backstabber’ Post After Jessi and Chase Kiss Drama

March 27, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • House Ethics Committee finds indicted Dem Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick ‘guilty’ on 25 counts
  • March Madness: Trey Kaufman-Renn’s tip-in basketball leads Purdue to Elite Eight
  • Mormon Wives’ Miranda McWhorter Shares ‘Backstabber’ Post After Jessi and Chase Kiss Drama
  • Trump reveals Tiger Woods’ playing status for 2026 Masters
  • Synesthesia isn’t just in your mind. The body reacts as if the colors were real.
  • Exclusive | Why do so many young men suddenly have erectile dysfunction?
  • Here’s the most overlooked part of Larry Fink’s yearly letter to shareholders — and why it could be good news
  • Oakland — one of ‘most corrupt cities in America’ — considers huge pay bumps for council members
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Astronauts will ‘absolutely be test subjects’: NASA’s moon plans pose big questions — and big risks
Astronauts will ‘absolutely be test subjects’: NASA’s moon plans pose big questions — and big risks
Science

Astronauts will ‘absolutely be test subjects’: NASA’s moon plans pose big questions — and big risks

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 27, 20264 ViewsNo Comments

Mars is out; the moon is in. And this time, we may be going there to stay.

On Tuesday (March 24), NASA administrator Jared Isaacman announced new plans to build a “sustained human presence” on the moon, complete with a permanent lunar base. Construction of humanity’s new home away from Earth could begin as soon as 2027, Isaacman said.

The announcement came just a month after SpaceX CEO Elon Musk similarly ditched his company’s plans to visit Mars in favor of establishing a “lunar self-growing city” within the next 10 years.

Article continues below


You may like

It’s an exciting prospect — but scientists say lunar colonization won’t be as simple as packing up and lifting off. The moon’s environment is harsh: think razor-sharp, electrified dust and a constant stream of radioactive particles travelling at light speed. Scientists still aren’t sure how this increased dose of cosmic radiation, coupled with the moon’s weaker gravitational pull, relative to Earth, will affect the human body in the medium- to long-term.

And then there’s technological feasibility: Where will astronauts live, and with what resources? At the moment, these big questions are still awaiting answers that may not arrive in time for NASA and Musk’s proposed plans.

“I don’t think we’re quite ready,” Caitlin Ahrens, a researcher at University of Maryland and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center who studies the lunar environment, told Live Science. “A decade may seem far away to some people. To a scientist, it’s the blink of an eye.”

3D-printed launch pads and living quarters, as shown in this concept art, could be a possibility for long-term lunar colonization, NASA says. (Image credit: SEArch+)

Satellite of horrors

Moondust is rather different from what we call dust on Earth. Without wind and liquid water, the moon’s dust doesn’t soften over time. “We’re talking very, very sharp little pollen[-size] shards here,” Ahrens said.

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

It’s also easily electrified. Simply walking on the moon kicks up dust clouds, and rovers traversing the lunar landscape shoot up “rooster tails” of electrically charged, levitating dust, which sticks to anything in its path, Ahrens said. Energized dust can clog breathing vents in potential living quarters, scratch up spacesuits and coat solar panels, potentially overheating and breaking them. (Dust clogs have already spelled doom for several Mars rovers).

Without the soft blankets of Earth’s atmosphere and magnetic shield, moon inhabitants would also be constantly blasted by radiation. Cosmic radiation is “pretty much omnipresent anywhere you go into space,” including on the moon, Dr. Emmanuel Urquieta, an aerospace medicine researcher at the University of Central Florida, told Live Science. “It’s incredibly difficult to shield.”

Cancer is a potential risk, but because health effects of radiation take time to develop, we wouldn’t know for certain if this is a major risk factor until potentially decades after landing human settlers on the moon. “Every person that goes to space… will absolutely be test subjects,” Urquieta said.


What to read next

We’re not ready for self-defense

We have to be very careful not to sell something which [we] don’t have

Giuseppe Reibaldi, president of the Moon Village Association

Humans on the moon would need hefty building materials to protect lunar habitats against these hazards. Metal or glass domes, subterranean habitats and housing made of 3D-printed moon soil are all potential options being investigated.

But Ahrens, who also works on lunar risk assessment, doesn’t think we’re ready to plan construction. For example, if NASA decides to invest in an underground habitat — perhaps the most surefire way to avoid radiation — scientists still have no idea how to dig on the moon, she said.

Even with sufficiently protective living quarters, the moon’s weaker gravitational pull — just one-sixth that of Earth — may pose health risks. From previous space travel we know that, without the gravitational force humans evolved with, our bones and muscles need significant amounts of exercise to prevent them from withering away. But it wouldn’t be practical to lug heavy treadmills, like those used on the International Space Station, to the moon, Urquieta said.

A lack of gravity may also redistribute the body’s natural balance of fluids, with potentially disastrous effects. Normally, due to the downward tug of gravity, up to 80% of our blood is in our legs at any given time, Urquieta said. But on the moon, more fluids would flow to the body’s upper half, causing loss of blood as the body attempts to rebalance itself, as well as potential swelling at the back of the eye and jugular vein thrombosis, a condition that causes potentially fatal blood clots in the neck. Compared to zero gravity, lunar partial gravity may or may not pose similar health risks. Urquieta said researchers won’t know until people spend some time there.

The future of lunar settlement

Ultimately, Ahrens said, these challenges boil down to the need for more data, which scientists are hoping to gather with missions like NASA’s Artemis campaign to return humans to the lunar surface as soon as 2028. But she envisions a much slower timeline than Musk’s and Isaacman’s plans; scientists haven’t even taken a sample of the moon’s ice yet — a resource lunar settlement planners are banking on.

Depending on its depth and composition, lunar ice could provide water, rocket fuel and rare earth metals. But until scientists get a physical sample of ice, they can’t rely on its usefulness or economic prospects. For now, scientific knowledge of the ice’s actual chemical composition is very limited: “We know it’s cold, and we kind of know where it is,” Ahrens said.

When it comes to the moon and its offerings, “we have to be very careful not to sell something which [we] don’t have,” said Giuseppe Reibaldi, president of the Moon Village Association, a non-profit group focused on international collaboration in lunar activities.

An illustration of a circular lunar base sitting on the moon's surface with the Earth in the background.

NASA concept art showing a possible lunar living structure made of glass. The logistics of large-scale construction on the moon remain one of many open questions. (Image credit: NASA/Martin Bermudez)

Reibaldi told Live Science that what we find in the moon’s ice could be the difference between the lunar equivalent of California’s gold rush boomtowns — where settlements sprang up in response to mining opportunities — and Antarctica, where a small number of scientists come and go for solely research purposes.

But even if permanent settlement doesn’t happen as soon as hoped, Ahrens said she is optimistic about the forecast for lunar development. “I think it’s not all sunshine and rainbows, but it’s also not dark rainy clouds either,” she said.


Moon landing quiz: How quickly can you name all 12 Apollo astronauts that walked on the moon?

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Synesthesia isn’t just in your mind. The body reacts as if the colors were real.

Synesthesia isn’t just in your mind. The body reacts as if the colors were real.

The best air purifier we have tested is now 20% off at Walmart and Amazon

The best air purifier we have tested is now 20% off at Walmart and Amazon

‘Major disruption in Neanderthal history’: 65,000 years ago, all Neanderthals in Europe died out except for one lineage

‘Major disruption in Neanderthal history’: 65,000 years ago, all Neanderthals in Europe died out except for one lineage

2 Neanderthals present at same Siberian cave 10,000 years apart were distant relatives, 110,000-year-old bone reveals

2 Neanderthals present at same Siberian cave 10,000 years apart were distant relatives, 110,000-year-old bone reveals

18 million-year-old fossils of ape found in Africa, but in an unexpected place

18 million-year-old fossils of ape found in Africa, but in an unexpected place

Astronauts may struggle to reproduce in outer space, study suggests — what does that mean for the future of space colonization?

Astronauts may struggle to reproduce in outer space, study suggests — what does that mean for the future of space colonization?

Brain aging results from a loss of control over how genes are regulated, mouse study suggests

Brain aging results from a loss of control over how genes are regulated, mouse study suggests

Roman mosaic shows topless woman battling leopard in arena, study finds

Roman mosaic shows topless woman battling leopard in arena, study finds

Live Science Today: Meta and Google fined for causing social media addiction and how dogs were our friends for millennia

Live Science Today: Meta and Google fined for causing social media addiction and how dogs were our friends for millennia

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

March Madness: Trey Kaufman-Renn’s tip-in basketball leads Purdue to Elite Eight

March Madness: Trey Kaufman-Renn’s tip-in basketball leads Purdue to Elite Eight

March 27, 2026
Mormon Wives’ Miranda McWhorter Shares ‘Backstabber’ Post After Jessi and Chase Kiss Drama

Mormon Wives’ Miranda McWhorter Shares ‘Backstabber’ Post After Jessi and Chase Kiss Drama

March 27, 2026
Trump reveals Tiger Woods’ playing status for 2026 Masters

Trump reveals Tiger Woods’ playing status for 2026 Masters

March 27, 2026
Synesthesia isn’t just in your mind. The body reacts as if the colors were real.

Synesthesia isn’t just in your mind. The body reacts as if the colors were real.

March 27, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
Exclusive | Why do so many young men suddenly have erectile dysfunction?

Exclusive | Why do so many young men suddenly have erectile dysfunction?

March 27, 2026
Here’s the most overlooked part of Larry Fink’s yearly letter to shareholders — and why it could be good news

Here’s the most overlooked part of Larry Fink’s yearly letter to shareholders — and why it could be good news

March 27, 2026
Oakland — one of ‘most corrupt cities in America’ — considers huge pay bumps for council members

Oakland — one of ‘most corrupt cities in America’ — considers huge pay bumps for council members

March 27, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.