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What To Wear On Mars

Roland Piquepaille writes "If men ever land on Mars, what will they wear to protect them from radiation, micrometeors and the very cold climate? Several students from the University of Alberta tackled the problem and designed space suits for Mars. Their prototype suit is composed of twelve layers of materials, including one made from Demron, a new nanotechnology material developed by a Florida-based company, Radiation Shield Technologies. The students and their professor, Dr. Barry Patchett, think their suit will largely be ready before real missions to Mars start in about twenty years. They also hope that NASA will pick their design. More details and references are available in this overview, including some illustrations."

9 of 122 comments (clear)

  1. Jennifer Marcy by imag0 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Geek girl developing space suits. How hot is that?

    Man, i'd tap that radiation shielding if I had a chance ;)

  2. What not to wear... by T-Kir · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just don't invite Trinny and Susannah, they'd probably throw all the current stuff out the nearest airlock.

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  3. Important that there be a fly in the front. by dankjones · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So that they can unzip their spacepants and piss on a rock and say "Ha ha! Take that Mars!".

    What else would be the point of spending $9346294673945639046723548409 dollars to send a manned mission to Mars instead of 345767 unmanned probes to all the other planets and moons, and also another bigass space telescope?

  4. Re:Where the fashion going? by acceber · · Score: 4, Informative
    ...the prototype suit weighs only 21 kilograms -- on Earth.

    Wow, 46 lbs for a spacesuit is definitely improved technology, since flight suits generally weigh more than 200 lbs on earth. That prototype would weigh less than 18 lbs on Mars since mass on Mars is about 38% the mass on Earth.

    And this is just the prototype!

  5. It will be antiquated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The students and their professor, Dr. Barry Patchett, think their suit will largely be ready before real missions to Mars start in about twenty years.

    Do they really think they will get NASA to adapt a design that will be twenty years antiquated when they actually use it? You can't run space missions like that! Would we send astronauts into space today with the same technology we used twenty ye... Oh. Maybe I should invest.

  6. Not better than lead... by Jott42 · · Score: 4, Informative

    For the physisists out there: There is no magic involved. According to the specification from the Radiation Shield Technologies homepage:
    "CIVILIANS DEMRON(TM) is effective as a radiation shield, comparable to lead in terms of g/cm2 and tantalum according to the mass attenuation coefficient, against gamma, x-ray and beta emissions."

    Which gives that the weight for equal protection as a certain thickness of lead will be the same!

  7. Material Choices for Mars by isny · · Score: 4, Informative

    Check out this pdf for a full 10 page report.

  8. Re:How many people will go to Mars? by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Please. How long did it take for the robots up there now to pick up a bloody rock or to even get off the landing vehicle? In the time it took a machine to roll 10 feet I would have been able to pick up sacks of rocks and dig a hole 6 feet deep.

    As for the article, why bother designing the suits now? I'm sure that in 20 years there will be materials that will be much more advanced that we'll want to use instead.

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  9. Mars is less harsh than moon, not other way around by kippy · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is cool and all but the article is a bit misleading about the demands of a Moon suit as opposed to a Mars suit.

    - Radiation. Mars has little to no magnetosphere but it does have some atmosphere. This provides some protection that the Moon does not. Also, the Moon is much closer to the sun so the levels of radiation from it are higher. There are also little baby north and south poles around the planet. Landing in one of those will provide a bit more protection.

    - Temperature. The Moon has much higher and lower temperatures to worry about than Mars

    - Sandstorms. True, the Moon doesn't have these but with the low gravity, thin atmosphere and fact that they won't be sleeping in hammocks, explorers/settlers should be able to handle them as long as they wear something thicker than a windbreaker.

    In short, Mars suits have fewer extremes to deal with than Moon suits. The article exhibits some FUD about Mars.