For the first time ever, the latest class of NASA astronauts is half female. And they could be on the first team to go to Mars in 15 years.
NASA only inducts new classes every four or five years and Nicole Aunapu Mann, 38, Anne McClain, 36, Jessica Meir, 38, and Christina Hammock Koch, 37, were chosen for the 2013 class from a pool of more than 6,000 candidates after a testing process that lasted about a year and a half, according to Glamour.
The women in the new group have all flown combat missions in the military and they talked to the magazine about the possibility of the historic mission ahead of them.
“I can’t recall ever not wanting to be an astronaut,” McClain said. “I learned a lot [serving 15 months] in Iraq, flying attack helicopters at the front of the front lines. I joined the Army out of a deep sense of duty, but wanting to be an astronaut feels more like my destiny. With so much conflict in the world, space exploration can be a beacon of hope.”
If they’re chosen for the Mars trip, they’ll travel 35 million miles. Just getting to the planet will take up to nine months, so they’ll be gone for two or three years.
“If I get tapped for the mission, I’ll talk to my son about what I’ll be doing,” said Mann, who is one of the two moms in the group. “He’s almost four now but will be a teen or in his twenties by then. His life will change while I’m gone. And that’s a big sacrifice.”