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CHAPEA Crew Begins Stay Inside NASA’s Mars Habitat for Second Mission

By Eric November 29, 2025

NASA has officially launched its second CHAPEA (Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog) mission, with a crew of four volunteers stepping into a 1,700-square-foot, 3D-printed habitat at the Johnson Space Center in Houston on October 19, 2025. This ambitious mission, lasting 378 days, is designed to simulate the conditions and challenges that astronauts would face on a real mission to Mars. The crew, consisting of Ross Elder, Ellen Ellis, Matthew Montgomery, and James Spicer, will live and work in this habitat until October 31, 2026, undertaking a variety of tasks that mirror the complexities of long-duration space travel.

The CHAPEA mission is critical for NASA’s long-term goals of human exploration beyond low-Earth orbit. As noted by Sara Whiting, a project scientist for NASA’s Human Research Program, the data collected during this mission will inform future mission planning and habitat designs, ultimately contributing to the health and performance of astronauts venturing to the Moon, Mars, and beyond. The crew will engage in simulated “Marswalks,” where they will don spacesuits to explore a red sand environment outside the habitat, as well as participate in robotic operations, habitat maintenance, and even crop cultivation. These activities are designed to assess how the crew adapts to environmental stressors such as limited resources, prolonged isolation, and communication delays, which are all critical factors for a successful Mars mission.

Previous research from the first CHAPEA mission, which concluded in July 2024, has already provided valuable insights into the challenges of space travel. The current crew’s experiences will build on that foundation, allowing researchers to refine protocols and strategies that will ensure the safety and efficiency of future crewed missions to Mars. As Grace Douglas, the CHAPEA principal investigator, emphasized, the insights gained from this mission are essential for understanding how to best support astronauts’ health and performance in the unique and demanding environment of Mars. As NASA continues to push the boundaries of human exploration, missions like CHAPEA play a pivotal role in preparing for the next giant leap into the cosmos.

CHAPEA mission 2 crew members (from left) Ross Elder, Ellen Ellis, Matthew Montgomery, and James Spicer pose in front of the door to the simulated Martian landscape for their first photo inside the CHAPEA habitat after their mission began in October 2025.
Credits: NASA/CHAPEA Crew

A crew of four research volunteers stepped inside NASA’s CHAPEA (Crew Health and Performance Exploration Analog) habitat on Oct. 19, marking the start of the agency’s 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 agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston until Oct. 31, 2026.

“The 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,” said Sara Whiting, Human Research Program project scientist. “Through these lessons, NASA’s 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.”

The crew will face the challenges of a real Mars mission, and only leave to perform simulated “Marswalk” 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.

“These 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,” said Grace Douglas, CHAPEA principal investigator. “The information gained from these simulated missions is critical to NASA’s goal of sending astronauts to explore Mars.”

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.

The 
first CHAPEA mission
, which took place in the same habitat, concluded on July 6, 2024.

The CHAPEA mission 2 main crew and two alternate crew members are pictured in front of the Space Exploration Vehicle, the prototype pressurized rover that transported crew members to the habitat at the start of the mission.
Credits: NASA/James Blair

Ross Elder, CHAPEA mission 2 commander, waves to agency leaders and staff who are supporting the mission before he steps into the habitat.
Credits: NASA/James Blair

Suzanne Bell, CHAPEA Mission 2 Co-Principal Investigator, offers remarks to crew members Matthew Montgomery, James Spicer, Ross Elder, and Ellen Ellis directly before they enter the habitat for the 378-day mission.
Credits: NASA/James Blair

____

NASA’s Human Research Program

NASA’s 
Human Research Program
 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 program’s 
quest
 to innovate ways that keep astronauts healthy and mission ready as human space exploration expands to the Moon, Mars, and beyond.

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