The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NASA unveils new suit for Artemis astronauts

Latest in lunar wear comes from Axiom Space in Houston.

- Kenneth Chang

In space, moon suits are the height of fashion, and NASA officials on Wednesday lavished praise on what astronauts will be wearing when they step on the moon in the coming years.

“We’re developing a spacesuit for a new generation,” Robert D. Cabana, NASA’s associate administra­tor, said during an event in Houston unveiling the new suit.

The latest in lunar space wear — black with orange and blue highlights — comes from Axiom Space in Houston.

By turning to this private company, NASA is again relying on new commercial space enterprise­s to provide key components faster and cheaper than it could itself develop.

The approach follows the template NASA used in hiring Elon Musk’s company SpaceX to get astronauts to and from the Internatio­nal Space Station, and to the lunar surface on the mission for which the Axiom suits were designed.

The moon suit is a key component that is required for the Artemis program, which will be sending astronauts back to the moon as NASA faces heightened competitio­n in space and on the moon from China’s booming space sector. The Axiom suits will be worn during the Artemis III mission, the program’s first moon landing, which is scheduled for 2025.

During Wednesday’s reveal on a stage at Space Center Houston, James Stein, the suit’s chief engineer, demonstrat­ed the lunar gear, showing how he could easily squat and move around. The large clear bubble around the head provides wide visibility as well as lighting, which will be important when astronauts step into shadowed craters near the lunar south pole, where NASA hopes to study water ice at the bottom of cold, shadowed craters. It also has a mount for a high-definition camera.

Astronauts will get into and out of the spacesuit via a hatch in the backside. And on the back is a backpack-like contraptio­n containing the life support system.

But the prototype shown Wednesday was not exactly what will be going to the moon.

For one, the actual suits will be white instead of dark, reflecting heat from sunlight instead of absorbing it.

In addition, the current outer covering keeps the inner portions from being scuffed or damaged during ground testing.

For the moon, the suit will have an outer insulation layer to protect the astronaut from extreme temperatur­es, radiation and dust.

 ?? AXIOM VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Axiom Space’s prototype suit for NASA’s Artemis program is shown. The actual spacesuits will be white to help manage temperatur­e extremes.
AXIOM VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Axiom Space’s prototype suit for NASA’s Artemis program is shown. The actual spacesuits will be white to help manage temperatur­e extremes.

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