Science

NASA astronaut applications open

Need more office space? How about outer space? NASA opened its astronaut-application website Monday. It's accepting applications through Feb. 18.

Pay starts at $66,000 US, and candidates may be able to try 4 different spacecraft

More than 6,000 applied for NASA's last astronaut class in 2013, with only eight picked. It's an elite club, numbering only in the 300s since the beginning. (Reuters)

Need more office space? How about outer space?

NASA opened its astronaut-application website Monday. It's accepting applications through Feb. 18.

Contenders need to be U.S. citizens with a bachelor's degree in science, math or engineering. Expect intense competition: More than 6,000 applied for NASA's last astronaut class in 2013, with only eight picked. It's an elite club, numbering only in the 300s since the beginning.

Future astronauts will have four spacecraft at their disposal: the International Space Station, two commercial crew capsules to get there, and NASA's Orion spacecraft for eventual Mars trips. Pay is between $66,000 and $145,000 US a year, and you'll have to move to Houston.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, a former astronaut, says this next group will help "blaze the trail" to Mars.

Canadians are not allowed to apply for the job unless they hold dual citizenship with the U.S. Interested Canadians are encouraged to reach out to the Canadian Space Agency, which had its last recruitment drive back in 2008.