Facing Mars

Facing Mars:  Would you survive the journey?

October 3, 2009 – January 3, 2010

What if you could travel to Mars? Would you be prepared for a long space journey and an inhospitable landscape?

Goodbye, Earth … Hello, Mars

What will you eat on your three-year journey? What will happen to your body in microgravity? How will you get along living with the rest of the crew? Can you protect yourself from radiation and Martian dust storms? If Mars has any signs of life, could you recognize them?

In Facing Mars, your readiness to be a space traveler will be tested in over two dozen simulations of space travel.

Experience walking on Mars at our Mars exhibit opening October 3rd

Take the Challenges

  • Design and test your own rocket
  • Get dizzy in a spinning chair
  • Build a maze for a Mars robotic rover
  • Walk in simulated Martian gravity

Going to Mars will take ingenuity, teamwork, and imagination. Come to think of it, so does living right here on Earth! Challenge yourself in the Facing Mars exhibit and see if you’ve got the right stuff.

Access to the Mars Walk feature of Facing Mars is on a first-come, first-served basis; tickets are $2.00. Mars Walk uses a harness and counterweight system, and for safety reasons, participants must be between 80 and 250 lbs. in weight and 4'8" and 6'6" in height.

Facing Mars was designed and built by the Ontario Science Centre, Ontario, Canada.

Download Education Guides

AttachmentSize
Facing_Mars_Education_Guide.pdf371.24 KB
Facing_Mars_Family_Guide.pdf119.07 KB

Exhibits

  • Girl watching Science On a Sphere's blue marble turn.

    Science On a Sphere (SOS)®

    See the Earth from space— without ever leaving the ground!
  • nanozone logo

    nanoZone

    Think of the smallest thing you can make. A tiny paper airplane? A knot in a string? Now think of making something millions of times smaller. That’s what nanotechnology is…

Story

  • San Diego Science Festival

    San Diego Science Festival

    Many parents also see nanotechnology as a future career field for their children.

  • Nano Gecko

    Lights, Camera, Geckos!

    The episode is one of several on nanotechnology produced in collaboration with leading science museums across the country.

Open Daily 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.  //  Lawrence Hall of Science, Centennial Drive, Berkeley, CA, 94720-5200  //  510-642-5132  //  Email Us  //  UC Berkeley