The first Mars Design Reference Mission was a NASA study completed in May 1993, under the auspices of the
Space Exploration Initiative (SEI). The objective was to develop a "Reference Mission" based on previous studies and data, where the Reference Mission serves as a basis for comparing different approaches and criteria from future studies. The study was based on
Robert Zubrin's
Mars Direct mission design. Thus dubbed Mars Semi-Direct by Zubrin, it also made several significant changes, for instance accounting for a larger crew and a dedicated Mars Ascent Vehicle that was to do an Apollo-style Mars-orbit rendezvous with the Earth Return Vehicle, which was to remain in orbit. The Design Reference Mission replaced the preceding SEI as the standing mission plan.
Approach and results • Limit the time that the crew is exposed to the harsh space environment by employing fast transits to and from Mars and abort to the surface strategy • Utilize local resources to reduce mission mass • Use split-mission strategy to pre-deploy mission hardware to reduce mass and minimize risk to the crew • Examine three human missions to Mars beginning in 2009 • Utilize advanced space propulsion (e.g., nuclear thermal propulsion) for in-space transportation • Payloads sent directly to Mars using a large launch vehicle (200+ t to LEO) • Nuclear surface power for robust continuous power The conclusions of the study were that the total mission mass was approximately 900 metric tons for the first crew (3 cargo vehicles, 1 piloted vehicle). The study pointed out that development of the large launch vehicle is a long-lead and expensive system, and approaches using smaller launch vehicles should be investigated. ==Design Reference Mission 2.0==