Science | Mars Man's Ticket to Mars: Inflatable Heat Shield? Device inflates to deflect heat and force By Liam Carnahan Posted Jul 24, 2012 6:49 PM CDT Copied This image provided by NASA shows an Inflatable Reentry Vehicle Experiment (IRVE-3) as it is launched on Wallops Island, Va. in Atlantic, Va., Monday July 23, 2012. (AP Photo/NASA) It sounds like something out of an HG Wells novel, but NASA's newest innovation may pave the way to getting humans on Mars. The agency successfully tested a $17 million inflatable heat shield yesterday, reports Space.com. The Inflatable Re-Entry Vehicle Experiment 3 (IRVE-3) blasted off from a NASA site in Virginia and then re-entered Earth's atmosphere without a hitch, protected by what amounts to "high-tech balloons," explains DVice. In theory, NASA could use similar devices to land big payloads on Mars, despite its thin and "tricky" atmosphere. The test is "a first step for how we explore other worlds," says a NASA researcher. More tests are planned to continue fine-tuning the technology. (Should humans make their way to Mars, click to read about what they might eat on their journey.) Read These Next Updated list of free days at national parks is raising some eyebrows. Another stabbing on a Charlotte train gets Trump's attention. Judge blocks DOJ from certain evidence in Comey case. An incredible hush-hush effort saw 55 cartel bosses brought to the US. Report an error