NASA is planning a manned mission to an asteroid in 2025! By 2025 NASA is hoping to have the proper space shuttles to complete the difficult, never done before mission. President Obama had meet with NASA directors to discuss more advancements in space discovery and travel and the asteroid would be the first step. President Obama and NASA believe that we could have people being sent into space to orbit Mars and eventually land on Mars by 2030! I know that seems like a long way from now, but it’s really no. Can you imagine traveling to Mars?!?! Read the full story from ABC after the jump.

@Julie1205

It’s a little soon for astronauts to suit up, but NASA is planning to send a manned mission to an asteroid in 2025.

In keeping with President Barack Obama’s 2010 vision, the space agency has shifted its sights from returning to the moon and, instead, is aiming for a smaller — and possibly more dangerous — rock in space, Space.com reports.

“By 2025, we expect a new spacecraft designed for long journeys to allow us to begin the first-ever crewed missions beyond the moon into deep space,” Obama said last year at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

“So we’ll start by sending astronauts to an asteroid for the first time in history. By the mid-2030s, I believe we can send humans to orbit Mars and return them safely to Earth, and a landing on Mars will follow.”

At least the first asteroid-bound trip won’t follow the script of the 1998 sci-fi adventure “Armageddon.” In that scenario, a deep core drilling team, led by Bruce Willis, is sent to a huge asteroid on a collision course with Earth. Their mission: to nuke it before it arrives and causes chaos to our home planet.

While scientists consider ways to avoid a possible future asteroid-Earth collision, they’re also figuring out which of the 7,000 known rocky asteroids between Mars and Jupiter might make a suitable landing spot for astronauts.

“Long outbound and inbound trip times are going to be very challenging,” said Andy Thomas, a veteran space shuttle astronaut who works for the exploration branch of the Astronaut Office.

“These missions are going to be very, very risky,” he added. “They are going to be as much risk as the Apollo missions were. To try and sell it to the public purely on the basis of the scientific return … would probably not work.”

A round-trip journey to an asteroid in a cramped spacecraft would take about six months.

Part of the risk of sending humans to one of these giant space rocks involves the weak gravitational field of many asteroids. It would be very difficult to actually land on one. The option would be to travel side-by-side with the asteroid as astronauts go back and forth collecting samples and doing science experiments.

Are the scientific results worth the effort? Is it better to send people instead of robots? And is there an available budget for this endeavor?

All good questions.

First, asteroid materials can provide scientists with clues about how the solar system was created and, in turn, help us learn how life started on Earth.

Asteroids may also become valuable sources of metals, minerals, gases and even water that can be used as future resources.

Sending robots vs. humans to an asteroid would certainly be less risky and expensive, but experts need to address the question of whether robots can perform all of the intricate tasks that astronauts would be better trained for.

And, of course, as with any scientific and enormous technological endeavor, there’s the cost factor.

“Despite national advisory council recommendations, congressional mandates and the newly recognized needs for both exploration and planetary defense, there is no new funding and, thus, no administrator who wants to get stuck with the bill,” said Richard Binzel, a planetary science professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

“The issue is sorely in need of an adult sense of responsibility.”