When Alyssa Carson was three years old, she informed her father that she wanted to become an astronaut. Although it is a dream of many young children, the brave girl quickly turned it into reality - after all, Alissa was called the most likely candidate in the world for landing on Mars in 2030, and the girl is more than ready to accept the challenge.
18-year-old Alyssa Carson is the ambassador of Mars One 2030, a mission to create a human colony on the planet, and she is as advanced in her training as the astronauts are ten years older than her.
“I know that becoming an astronaut and ultimately going to Mars was definitely the craziest dream I could choose, and one of the hardest, ” Alissa told FEMAIL. “But the more I work on it, the more it becomes a reality.”
How it all began
Alyssa qualified at 7 space camps around the world. At age 12, she was the first to complete the NASA passport program in November 2013, having completed training at all 14 NASA facilities in nine states.
Having already received a certificate for suborbital flight, she is now waiting for the start of a university course in astrobiology, in order to subsequently become a full-fledged astronaut.
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Back in 2016, Space X CEO Elon Musk warned that first trips to the Red Planet would be very dangerous, with a high risk of death. But, according to Alyssa, the benefits and experience far outweigh the potential risks.
“I would not say that I’m sure to be scared, ” she said. “This is just part of the mission, and this must be accepted.” You obviously hope that the mission will succeed, you will rely on those people who coped with it, but there is no way to guarantee that the mission to space or to Mars will never be without risk. “The many risks that arise from space travel that I have been learning about for so long now do not necessarily scare me.”
Smart bag
Alyssa recently teamed up with Horizn Studios to develop a special NASA-approved smart suitcase to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the moon landing next week.
Futuristic luggage, which costs £ 40, 000, can be folded up, cleaned and allowed to transmit news from the galaxy to people at home.
If Alyssa is selected as part of the crew for a mission to Mars, this will mean that she will leave her friends and family for up to three years - possibly longer. But although she admits that this will be the “most difficult part” of the mission, it is the sacrifice she is willing to make.
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“I feel that many people are already doing this here on Earth, ” Carson argues.
Thoughts and ideas about the future
Alissa visited space camps from the age of seven and received her first astronaut qualification quite early.
She says that traveling to Mars will be like going through a “full circle” because she will finally complete what she has been working on for so long.
“It would be a great honor for me to be selected and to be able to apply on Mars everything that I studied, my scientific experience, ” the girl said.
She admitted that people often underestimate her knowledge and the amount of training she has mastered because of her age.
Alyssa recalls that her interest in space is related to watching an episode of the animated film “Backyard” called “Mission to Mars”: “I had a poster of this television show in my room, and I constantly asked my dad about Mars and whether there were people there. No one in my family had any scientific or space knowledge, so he just told me what he knew about the moon landings. It sparked all interest in me, and my passion began. ”
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She admitted that at school she is much more knowledgeable in science and mathematics than in English - grammar "makes her angry", but she always tried to keep abreast of school activities.
Alissa’s passion for the universe was fueled by visits to space camps from the age of seven, which led her to complete NASA's passport program. She was set to have her “resume” stand out (this is the advice given to her by Bill Parsons, former director of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center). The girl hopes that this impressive academy, as well as scuba diving, parachuting and a pilot's license, will help her in her quest to become an astronaut.