The 17-year-old girl was trained by NASA to become the first person to set foot on Mars

NASA is currently working to train Alyssa so that by 2033, when she is 32 years old, Alyssa will be one of the first to set foot on Mars and try to live on it for 2-3 years.

Many people embrace in their dreams to fly into space, but not everyone has the courage and the power to do that. However, among the many who cannot, a girl named Alyssa Carson, who is only 17 years old, is most likely the first person to set foot on Mars.

Picture 1 of The 17-year-old girl was trained by NASA to become the first person to set foot on Mars
Alyssa Carson.

Alyssa Carson , 17, from Louisiana, USA is the youngest member to participate in the PoSSUM Project (Science Near a Round of Earth on the Midst of the Atmosphere), a non-profit research program about upper layer of the atmosphere, necessary for all astronauts to fly to space. She was also the first to attend all three global trainings by the US Aerospace Agency (NASA).

As a child, Alyssa nurtured a dream to set foot on Mars."I thought about many other things, but being an astronaut is still the first choice. I don't want to meet any obstacle on my way to Mars. Failure is not an option , " Alyssa to speak.

Alyssa can say 4 languages ​​are English, Spanish, Chinese and French. She also regularly shared NASA training courses on her Twitter account and said it would inspire space travel for other children of the same age.

Picture 2 of The 17-year-old girl was trained by NASA to become the first person to set foot on Mars
Alyssa regularly shares images of NASA training courses on social networks.

NASA is currently working to train Alyssa so that by 2033, when she is 32 years old, Alyssa will be one of the first to set foot on Mars and try to live on it for 2-3 years. Paul Foreman, the representative of the US Aerospace Agency, told the BBC: "She is in the perfect age to become the first astronaut to come to Mars. She is doing right, well-trained, ever. step to become a true astronaut ".

Alyssa's father said he and his daughter had frank talks about their trip to Mars, even if it was "a round-trip non-round trip". Even so, the family still supports Alyssa in all its decisions.