Radiation levels measured by Nasa’s Mars Curiosity rover show astronauts would likely exceed current US exposure limits during a roundtrip mission to Mars, scientists say.

At Nasa’s request, the Institute of Medicine panel is looking into ethics and health standards for long-duration spaceflights

The rover landed on Mars in August to search for habitats that could have supported past microbial life.

Results taken during Curiosity’s eight-month cruise to Mars indicate that astronauts would receive about 660 millisieverts of radiation during a 360-day roundtrip flight, the fastest travel possible today.

That dosage does not include any time spent on the planet’s surface. A millisievert is a measurement of radiation exposure.

Nasa limits astronauts’ increased cancer risk to three per cent, which translates to a cumulative radiation dose of between 800 millisieverts and 1,200 millisieverts, depending on a person’s age, gender and other factors.

“Even for the shortest of (Mars) missions, we are perilously close to the radiation career and health limits that we’ve established for our astronauts,” Nasa’s chief medical officer Richard Williams told a National Academy of Sciences medical committee.

An astronaut living for six months on the International Space Station, which flies about 400km above Earth, receives a dosage of about 100 millisieverts.

An abdominal X-ray scan generates about 10 millisieverts.

At Nasa’s request, the Institute of Medicine panel is looking into ethics and health standards for long-duration spaceflights.

“We’re looking at that three per cent standard and its applicability for exploration-type missions,” added Nasa’s Edward Semones, spaceflight radiation health officer at the Johnson Space Centre in Houston, during a conference call later with reporters.

“The snapshot today is that we would exceed our limit,” Semones said.

Nasa is also looking into altern-ative propulsion technologies to speed up the trip to Mars and different types of spacecraft shielding.

Information from Curiosity about how much and what type of radiation astronauts can expect on the Martian surface is due to be released later this year.

The research was published in this week’s edition of the journal Science.

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