China is offering one lucky, intelligent foreigner more than a million dollars plus benefits to operate the world’s largest radio telescope, but there are a few catches.

Standing in China’s southwestern remote mountainous province of Guizhou, the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical radio Telescope (FAST) has an opening for chief director of scientific operation. The job has reportedly been reserved for a foreigner only and carries with it a roughly $1.9 million research grant and free housing, among other perks. The pool of contenders is shallow, as the job requires more two decades of experience, including previously heading a large-scale radio telescope project and holding a scientific position at a leading university or institution. But local experts said being in charge of what’s been called humanity’s best chance yet to discover extraterrestrial life is a worthwhile position.

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“FAST is a portal to new discoveries. For an astronomer, running FAST could be the opportunity of a lifetime,” Wang Tinggui, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei, Anhui, told the South China Morning Post.

The job does come with some serious drawbacks, he warned.

“It is not a job for a scientist. It’s for a superhero,” Wang added.

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