Posted on 03/16/2023 5:56:38 AM PDT by Red Badger
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The suits feature new capabilities for space exploration. Photo courtesy Axiom Space
Axiom Space today unveiled the spacesuits for NASA's Artemis III mission in 2025 to send humans to the moon. Photo courtesy Axiom Space
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March 15 (UPI) -- Axiom Space on Wednesday unveiled its next-generation spacesuit that astronauts from NASA's Artemis III mission will be wearing when they return to the moon.
The spacesuits, which will be delivered to NASA this summer, provide more flexibility and greater protection to withstand the environment and contain built-in specialized for exploration and scientific opportunities, Axiom said in a statement.
"Our expert team is ready to provide NASA the next-generation spacesuit," Mark Greeley, Axiom Space, Extravehicular Activity (EVA) program manager, said. "We carefully considered years of lessons learned by NASA and used that experience to build a spacesuit for the Moon and for our future Axiom Space customers."
No human has set foot on the moon since Apollo 17 left in late 1972 and no other countries have sent explorers to the lunar surface.
RELATED SpaceX's Starship clears latest hurdle in quest to return to moon But Artemis III is scheduled to carry American astronauts including the first woman and person of color to land on the moon sometime in 2025.
"NASA's partnership with Axiom is critical to landing astronauts on the moon and continuing American leadership in space," NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement. "Building on NASA's years of research expertise, Axiom''s next-generation spacesuits will not only enable the first woman to walk on the moon but they will also open opportunities for more people to explore and conduct science on the moon than ever before."
NASA has identified 13 landing sites near the moon's southern pole for the mission. Since specific landing sites are tightly coupled to the timing of the launch window, NASA said that having multiple sites ensures the flexibility to launch the mission throughout the year.
“designed to absorb all wave lengths”
Famous last words....
The kinetic energy of a grain of sand is HUGE when it is doing 50,000 Miles Per Hour......................
Sorry ... but it has been answered. The answer is you smell it. For a long time.
Doesn’t require an answer. It’s self evident
If you smelt it you dealt it
I wouldn’t want to be wearing a black suit in outer space unless I was hoping nobody could ever find me if I got loose somehow.
On Earth, farts are typically no big deal — smelly, harmless, and they quickly dissipate. But if you’re an astronaut, every fart is a ticking time bomb. The gases in farts are flammable, which can quickly become a problem in a tiny pressurized capsule in the middle of space where your fart gases have no where to go. In this “oldie but goodie” study from the late 1960s, scientists fed subjects a then-state-of-the-art space diet compared with a “bland formula.” They discovered that the space diet actually produced more gas than the control diet, and noted that “volumes would be larger at reduced spacecraft and suit pressures.” This explains why astronaut food doesn’t include freeze-dried beans…
LOL!..........Imagine being the scientist tasked with that project!....................
...Unless your comms are open.
With the unfiltered rays of the sun that suit will overheat in minutes. Stupid move!
Didn’t the Japanese invent activated charcoal underwear?
Is there a maternity version?
Just put it on backwards.....................
Useful space gloves... aye, there's the rub.
Is this the inside suit? The suits should be white to reflect the sun.
Nope, this is it.....................
#9 The high boots do not look good.
Well, they should have a small valve.....................😜
Too stupid to think of things like that
They aren’t weightless in the lunar surface because there is partial gravity on the moon.
Check valve
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