The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has released Sleeker Spacesuits for future United States journeys to the moon.
According to News Agencies, Moonwalking US astronauts of the future will have sleeker and more flexible spacesuits as NASA is ditching the puffy white suits worn by Neil Armstrong and his fellow Apollo astronauts half a century ago.
NASA on Wednesday, March 15 released the first prototype for a newly-designed next-generation spacesuit, specially tailored and accessorized for the first astronauts expected to venture back to the Moon’s surface in the next few years.
The future moon-wear was displayed at the Johnson Space Center in Houston during an event hosted for the media and students by Axiom Space. NASA awarded the Texas-based company a $228.5 million (Ksh 29.7 billion) contract to build suits for Artemis the successor to the Apollo Moon program.
The Artemis program aims to return humans to the Moon in late 2025 for the first time since the historic Apollo missions ended in 1972, an initial step towards an eventual voyage to Mars.
The new suits, branded by Axiom as the “Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit” or AxEMU for short, are more streamlined and flexible than the old Apollo suits, with a greater range of motion and variability in size and fit.
The pressurized garment has multiple protective layers, a backpack with life-support systems as well as lights, and a high-definition video camera mounted on top of the bubble-shaped helmet.
“The 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’s administrator Bill Nelson said.
“The new suits would be tested in a ‘space-like environment’ prior to their use for the Moon mission”, NASA said in a statement.
“Inside of this box are all the parts and the components to keep you alive,” Russell Ralston, deputy program manager for extravehicular activity at Axiom Space, said of the suit’s “portable life support system”.
“You can think of it as like a very fancy scuba tank and air conditioner kind of combined into one,” Ralston said.
Designed to be worn for up to eight hours at a time, the new suits will fit a broad range of potential wearers, accommodating at least 90 percent of the US male and female population-NASA said.
The precise look of the suits, however, remained a closely guarded trade secret. Those on display Wednesday came with an outer layer that was charcoal grey with dashes of orange and blue as well as Axiom’s logo on the chest – intended to obscure Axiom’s proprietary outer fabric design.
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The company said the suits to be worn on the lunar south pole by astronauts will be white because that is the best colour to reflect the harsh sunlight on the Moon’s surface and protect the wearer from extreme heat.
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Vanessa Wyche, the Johnson Space Center director, said the new suit has “more functionality, more performance, more capability” than the bulky version worn by Apollo astronauts.
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“We have not had a new suit since the suits that we designed for the space shuttle and those suits are currently in use on the space station,” Wyche said.
Axiom said it collaborated with costume designer Ester Marquis from the Apple TV+ lunar series for All Mankind to create the custom cover layer using Axiom’s logo and brand colours.
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