Gators on Purpose
What does a minor in religious studies have to do with technical systems for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)? More than you think! In this episode, host Briana Lewis sits down with Bethany Eppig ’11, who shares her incredible journey from an undeclared first-year to her career at NASA. Eppig notes how her interdisciplinary education at Allegheny College gave her the foundation to connect ideas in science and policy. Update: Our interview with Bethany Eppig was recorded in January 2026. Since then, Bethany's role at NASA has changed as she leverages the experience in fission surface power that she describes in our conversation to contribute to the next generation of nuclear space systems. In March 2026, NASA announced a series of transformative agencywide initiatives, including creating NASA’s Moon Base and advancing space nuclear power and propulsion. NASA plans to launch the Space Reactor-1 Freedom, the first nuclear fission-powered interplanetary spacecraft, to Mars before the end of 2028. When SR-1 Freedom reaches Mars, it will deploy the Skyfall payload of Ingenuity‑class helicopters to survey potential human landing sites, search for subsurface water, and relay navigation data for future landers. SR-1 Freedom is the first step in a deliberate sequence. It will inform and enable the Lunar Reactor-1, a fission surface power system designed to keep NASA’s Moon Base operating through periods of darkness and in locations where solar power and batteries alone are not sufficient. By flying a reactor first, SR-1 Freedom will provide ground and flight data on reactor and power conversion performance to the lunar fission system without the complexity of a lunar landing. Eppig now supports the SR-1 and LR-1 missions.
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