For the first time, there were more women than men in a Nasa astronaut class.
They include a geologist who worked on Nasa’s Curiosity Mars rover, a SpaceX engineer who flew on a billionaire-sponsored spaceflight that featured the world’s first private spacewalk and a former SpaceX launch director.
LIVE: Meet our new class of astronaut candidates!
Chosen from over 8,000 applicants, our 2025 candidates will go through nearly two years of training before they graduate as flight-eligible astronauts. Tune in for the reveal. https://t.co/psQrtY3wHw
— NASA (@NASA) September 22, 2025
The group will undergo two years of training before becoming eligible for spaceflight.
Acting administrator Sean Duffy said one of them could become the first person to step on Mars.
It is the 24th astronaut class for Nasa since the original Mercury Seven made their debut in 1959. The previous class was in 2021.
“One of these ten could actually be one of the first Americans to put their boots on the Mars surface.” @SecDuffyNASA speaks to NASA’s newest class of astronaut candidates. pic.twitter.com/vTIhCRQ9Oh
— NASA (@NASA) September 22, 2025
Only 370 people have been selected by Nasa as astronauts, making it an extraordinarily small and elite group composed mostly of men.
The latest additions – revealed during a ceremony at Nasa’s Johnson Space Centre in Houston – will join 41 active US astronauts currently serving in the corps.
Nasa flight operations director Norm Knight said competition was stiff and called the newcomers “distinguished” and “exceptional”.