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Mars Space Suit Trials in North Dakota

AbsoluteZero writes to tell us Space.com is reporting that a new spacesuit prototype being designed for Mars exploration is currently being tested in North Dakota. From the article: "The Mars spacesuit is the culmination of 14 months of work by faculty and students with the North Dakota Space Grant Consortium, which received $100,000 from NASA to develop the prototype. The local public is invited to view the Mars spacesuit in action on Sat. May 6, weather permitting, at its North Dakota test site."

124 comments

  1. Confusion by Umbral+Blot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I am a bit confused, they will cancel the test if there is bad weather? It's a spacesuit, it shouldn't be affected by bad weather, and if it is it shouldn't be used in planetary exploration. Otherwise you end up with the following situation: "I would have been the first man to set foot on mars, but it was windy out, so we went home".

    1. Re:Confusion by OverlordQ · · Score: 1

      I dont know about you, but I'd rather not stand outside during a lightning storm in a big suit with lots of nice metal on it.

      --
      Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
    2. Re:Confusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's a spacesuit, it shouldn't be affected by bad weather

      Because if there's one thing a mars space suit needs, it's the ability to function in a rainstorm?

    3. Re:Confusion by Tx · · Score: 1

      ...a series of challenges, including mock-Martian hikes, sample collections and - this Saturday - a simulated sandstorm.

      No idea how they're planning to simulate a sandstorm, but I can imagine any number of weather conditions that would undoubtedly make it tricky.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    4. Re:Confusion by Gnavpot · · Score: 3, Funny
      I dont know about you, but I'd rather not stand outside during a lightning storm in a big suit with lots of nice metal on it.
      I dont know about you, but I'd rather not stand outside during a lightning storm in a big suit withOUT lots of nice metal on it.
    5. Re:Confusion by allanc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because not everyone's going to be wearing a space suit.

      (I.e., if the weather's crappy, the guy in the suit will be fine, but the spectators won't be having much fun)

    6. Re:Confusion by nkuttler · · Score: 1

      Because it doesn't rain on mars.

    7. Re:Confusion by DigiShaman · · Score: 3, Informative

      Most likely, they were testing the suit by walking up partial cliffs and very rocky areas as indicated by the photos. Doing this in rainy weather makes for a slippery experience. At the very least, you slip and fall on your ass. At the worst, you break your neck.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    8. Re:Confusion by TenLow · · Score: 5, Funny

      So how are they going to protect the spectators on mars?

    9. Re:Confusion by rossdee · · Score: 1

      The summary said the test would go on 'weather permiting' That doesn't necessarily mean they need good weather, in fact they may be hoping for cfold weather (which would be why they were in ND) but it could be too hot to simulate martian conditions. I dont thenk Mars gets to 100F, but it is possible in ND (as well as the cold conditions more typical to Mars)

    10. Re:Confusion by hazem · · Score: 1

      If they're already in a sandy place, they probably will just use big fans like they do on movie sets. It doesn't have to be a huge sandstorm. Just a vigorous one in the area immediately around the person in the suit.

      If it's not already sandy, they can probably put piles of sand in front of the fan.

    11. Re:Confusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ponchos. Big yellow ones.

    12. Re:Confusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet.

    13. Re:Confusion by Fordiman · · Score: 1

      While Mars and North Dakota are similar in that they are barren and lifeless, you must understand that the conditions to be expected in the two locations must be engineered against in completely different ways.

      Mars: <14 psia, almost no humidity, almost no atmospheric movement

      North Dakota: 13-15 psia, depending on the >=10% humidity, plenty of atmospheric movement (wind), precipitation is even possible.

      Besides, it only takes one sharp thing carried by the wind to reduce a multi-thousand dollar space suit to a worthless punctured high-tech rag.

      --
      110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
  2. "Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by dtmos · · Score: 1

    Who're they kidding? It's got the most brutal weather of the contiguous 48 US states. Is this some sort of gag?

    1. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1

      It was in the low 70's (F) and sunny. No problem. November through March, you never know.

    2. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those guys are testing the suit for its hostile weather. "Permitting" refers to whether anyone can take a peek in at all.

    3. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by DeathByDuke · · Score: 1

      which would be quite tame compared to Mars... winds, dust storms, tornadoes etc...

    4. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by DrEldarion · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, the gag is that people are invited on May 6th, but this wasn't posted until the 7th...

    5. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmo · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Pffft! North Dakota weather is positively TEMPERATE compared to the place that has a sign that reads:

      US Forest Service

      STOP

      THE AREA AHEAD HAS THE WORST WEATHER IN AMERICA. MANY HAVE DIED THERE FROM EXPOSURE, EVEN IN THE SUMMER. TURN BACK NOW IF THE WEATHER IS BAD.

      Mount Washington has hurricane force winds and sub-freezing temperatures _every month of the year_. The highest wind speed over land ever recorded was measured from the summit at 231MPH before the anemometer was destroyed. The number of days of hurricane force winds average 110 days/year. In January, that means every 3 out of 4 days.

      Deaths: http://www.mountwashington.com/deaths/index.html

      North Dakota doesn't even come close.

      --

      BMO

    6. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, this proves it, South Dakota is like Florida, while no-one wants to go to Alaskan North Datota. If they want higher property prices and jobs, they will have to merge with the south.

    7. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by PhotoGuy · · Score: 1
      Pffft! North Dakota weather is positively TEMPERATE compared to the place that has a sign that reads:

      US Forest Service

      STOP

      THE AREA AHEAD HAS THE WORST WEATHER IN AMERICA. MANY HAVE DIED THERE FROM EXPOSURE, EVEN IN THE SUMMER. TURN BACK NOW IF THE WEATHER IS BAD.

      While your point is well taken, and it is nasty weather, the number of deaths isn't as bad as you point out. Look at the causes; very few are from exposure (hypothermia), most are from other causes not directly related to the weather (but no doubt made worse by it): falls, train crash, plane crash, heart attack, slideboard accident, skiing accident, murder(!), and so forth. Mountaineering is dangerous to start with, it seems.

      --
      Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
    8. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmo · · Score: 2, Informative

      "very few are from exposure (hypothermia)"

      Really?

      (This one has the same data, roughly, but it's organized better for counting)

      http://www.mountwashington.org/about/visitor/survi ving.php

      Falls: 41
      Hypothermia: 29
      "Natural Causes" i.e., heart attacks and other distress: 17
      Avalanches: 11
      Aircraft deaths: 10
      Rail (ALL) related: 9
      Falling ice: 5
      Slideboards: 4 (Prohibited after 1919)
      "Carriages" horse-drawn and auto: 2
      Disappearances: 1
      (on original page) Murder: 1
      (on original page -since 2002-) 2 falls, one hypothermia.

      I don't know about you but I count hypothermia being second to falls. That doesn't seem like "very few" to me. Very few to me comes under "slideboards" "carriages" and murders.

      --
      BMO

    9. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by torpor · · Score: 1

      north dakota has the worst weather region with the most favourable logistics. sure, mt. washington is worse; but does it have all the required industry infrastructure in a nearby region that would make scientific research feasible? no point going up there if you can't overnight fedex yourself something from a lab nearby ..

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    10. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmo · · Score: 1

      "mt. washington is worse; but does it have all the required industry infrastructure in a nearby region that would make scientific research feasible? no point going up there if you can't overnight fedex yourself something from a lab nearby .."

      First off, I was disputing the point the OP said about North Dakota having the "worst weather in the contiguous 48", which it doesn't, by far. And secondly, Mount Washington isn't exactly remote. Due to a freak of geology, it's a relatively high peak surrounded by much lower mountains while also being subjected to one of the most common storm tracks in North America. So you have "The World's Worst Weather" within driving range of every halfwit who wants to "go climb a mountain"

      The "problem" with Mount Washington is that it's very accessible, - which is why it's so heavily travelled and drives the park rangers nuts. It's only 160 miles from Boston driving highway all the way. As for logistics, there's a _road_ that goes up all the way to the top. If you ever need to weather test something within the driving range of a major university, Mount Washington is your baby.

      --
      BMO

    11. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by Doppleganger · · Score: 1

      Yes, but hypothermia still only covers 28% of the deaths. The majority are accounted for by other causes.

      Personally, I'm going to stay well away from any area with extreme cold temperatures where there's almost a 75% chance that I'll die from something other than the cold. Sure, I'm not likely to die in a plane crash while climbing a mountain on foot, but you can't be too careful!

    12. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by smchris · · Score: 1


      Yeah? But Fargo may one of the few places in the U.S. where you can freeze to death on a metropolitan interstate off-ramp. They started volunteer 4-wheel-drive patrols to try to avoid that sort of thing happening again.

      I do question May 6 however. Weather.com says it is 61F at 10:00 a.m. in Bismarck as I write. January 6 would be more appropriate at plus or minus 0F.

    13. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmo · · Score: 1

      "Yes, but hypothermia still only covers 28% of the deaths. The majority are accounted for by other causes."

      Yes, but those other deaths are of the "shit happens" type, mostly. I'm not sure what your point is anymore. Using your logic, don't leave the house...and don't bathe, you might slip.

      Now that I think of it...this _is_ slashdot.

      "Personally, I'm going to stay well away from any area with extreme cold temperatures where there's almost a 75% chance that I'll die from something other than the cold. Sure, I'm not likely to die in a plane crash while climbing a mountain on foot, but you can't be too careful!"

      Now you're being silly.

      It's called being prepared. People go up the mountain all the time. It's the people who, in the heat of August, decide to go up there with a tee-shirt and shorts, which far too many people attempt. It may be the worst weather in the world, but there has been an occupied weather observatory the top of it for nearly 75 years.

      It hasn't killed a meteorologist yet.

      --
      BMO

    14. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmo · · Score: 1

      "But Fargo may one of the few places in the U.S. where you can freeze to death on a metropolitan interstate off-ramp"

      Fargo is metropolitan?

      "They started volunteer 4-wheel-drive patrols to try to avoid that sort of thing happening again"

      In metropolitian areas? BMO looks around and tries to wrap his head around the concept of metropolitan areas where you might freeze to death on a highway ramp. Jeez, do that here and you'll get a tow and a ticket for blocking traffic.

      --
      BMO

    15. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmajik · · Score: 1

      When taken aggregately, state wide, it certainly is one of the coldest places. We regularly stay in the -30F range for a couple days at a time, and then we'll have 30mph winds that go with it. Fyi, exposed skin in those conditions isn't good for more than a couple of minutes until its frostbitten. When I walk from my car in the parking lot to my building entrance, wearing a full face mask with eyeholes, i have a headache by the time i get to the door, and the bridge of my nose is numb.

      There are days that the NWS says "stay inside today".

      This doesn't begin to involve snowy conditions. All the interstate on ramps have manual train-crossing-style gates across them. The highway patrol will block entrance to the interstates if the right combinations of wind, cold, and snowcover converge. That's because if there's an accident, nobody will be able to come get you.

      Someone else was talking about some kind of freak mountain that has a lot of bad weather and accidents. Ok, sure, and Mt Everest is also cold and dangerous. It's a mountain, what do you expect? People dont do mountain climbing because its low-impact cardio.

      North Dakota is one of the only places I'm aware of in the 48 contiguous states where there's nothing to hit, no elevation changes, no hurricaine/volcano/earthquake issues, and yet still has a high risk of weather-related death. This is not about looking for adventure on some mountain - there are days when you decide that taking the flat, straight, well paved highway is too high of a risk just to get to the grocery store.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    16. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmajik · · Score: 1

      I see that you enjoy being pejorative towards ND. On behalf of the residents of Fargo, we're cautiously optimistic that you're planning on staying in Boston. People that can tolerate or even thrive in New England (especially the Peoples Republic of Massechussets -- there's me returning the favor) probably can't tolerate Fargo, so I'd guess that you and I have made the correct decisions about where each of us should live, respectively :)

      Fwiw, the Fargo/Moorhead/WestFargo "metro area" has something like 180k people. It's not exactly rural - especially compared to the rest of the state.

      The amusing thing is that for many residents, Fargo "is" the big city - there are only a handful of towns within a days drive that have a 5 digit or higher population. People move to Fargo from outlying areas and some of them can't handle the size.

      My wife and I moved here from Seattle. The thing I miss most is the lack of insects. Our house didn't have screens on the windows because it didn't need them. The mosquitos here are quite unpleasant...it really dampens the ability to enjoy the nice seasons (you get all 4 of them here, also unlike Seattle)

      The nice thing about the US is that there's a huge variety of people, and there seems to be a place that's tailor made for just about everybody's natural comfort level. This might sound like segregation or several other words with negative connotations, but I'd claim it's more like "Mosaic Of Subcultures", but at a macroscopic level. (See Christopher Alexander if you don't catch the reference)

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    17. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by pimpimpim · · Score: 1
      Is it me or are the people of MT washington really proud on their death rate, publishing all this data on their website. I already found that they're setting up a memorial part with details about the deaths: http://www.mountwashington.com/deaths/details.html .

      Maybe they should join with the people from nelson rocks in their quest to make their place really unattractive to tourists.

      --
      molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
    18. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmo · · Score: 1

      "I see that you enjoy being pejorative towards ND"

      Only smirkingly. ;-D

      "you're planning on staying in Boston. "

      Oh, no, I'd never live in Boston. I live about a mile south of Providence, RI. I actually grew up next to a farm, if you can believe that. I don't wanna be a Masshole.

      "People move to Fargo from outlying areas and some of them can't handle the size."

      I find that's what it's like in the small cities in the lower Ontario peninsula. Once you're outside of places like the Toronto Metro Area, it's a lot of small towns and cities like Peterboro, Lindsay, and...Woodstock (heh, Fargo makes Woodstock look small), there's a whole lotta nuthin'.

      BTW, you'd appreciate this. Canada has a lot of "roadside attractions." In Woodstock in front of the Canadian Tire (lovingly called Crappy Tire by the natives) plaza there's a monument to...The Springbank Snow Countess. A Cow. A very LARGE monument, with a granite base, and a life sized bronze casting of a cow.

      No expense was spared.

      http://www.woodstocknow.com/photoalbum.php?object_ id=19531&category_id=0&&page_id=&menu_id=2296

      My GF at the time didn't understand why I wanted a picture of me standing in front of it...she took rural (Kawartha Lakes Region "cottage country") life for granted.

      "My wife and I moved here from Seattle. "

      My bro moved out to the West (Seattle, Portland, Denver) and now he's back here in the People's Republic of Watertown MA.

      "The mosquitos here are quite unpleasant."

      Mosquitos everywhere are unpleasant. Fortunately where I live, there are plenty of bats to keep the population down. It just sucks when they make their way indoors.

      Moderators: I have clicked "no karma bonus" so don't waste mod points making this invisible. Use karma productively, please.

      T.Y.V.M.

      --
      BMO

    19. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by bmo · · Score: 1

      "Is it me or are the people of MT washington really proud on their death rate, publishing all this data on their website."

      And as you can see, people _still_ Darwin themselves, even in these days. You can't shout it loud enough, it seems. Even with all the yellow warning signs on the mountain itself.

      --
      BMO

    20. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by Postmaster+General · · Score: 1

      What does that have to do with the article?

      Are you suggesting that they have the university students flown to an area to test something in a possibly life-threatening environment?

    21. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by beakburke · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, roadside cows huh, you mean like these?? http://www.roadsideamerica.com/attract/NDSALcow.ht ml http://www.roadsideamerica.com/set/titans.html He isn't kidding about mosquitoes either, well, at least in the eastern part of the state. They share Minnesota's mosquitos, affectionately known as the state bird. On the upside they aren't the right kind to be carrying malaria. So by jungle comparisons, the mosquitoes aren't bad at all. Compared to other "temperate" climates though, they are quite bad I guess.

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    22. Re:"Weather permitting" in North Dakota!?! by Doppleganger · · Score: 1

      "I'm not sure what your point is anymore."

      Check the authors, I'm not the original one. My point was that the "very few" was technically not very far off.

      "Now you're being silly."

      Yes, yes I am. Odd that you insisted on responding seriously even after realizing that.

      Of course, the fact still remains that most of the deaths weren't hypothermia. ;)

  3. Just my luck by Carpe+PM · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would have been there, since I live in North Dakota, but oddly enough I was in outer space at the time. How ironic.

  4. Planetary spacesuit? by Tx · · Score: 4, Funny

    "We wanted to really concentrate on the suit to improve mobility and to create a planetary spacesuit instead one for zero [gravity],"

    Surely if it's used in space, it's a spacesuit. But if it's for use on a planet rather than in space, it should be called something else. I propose we call it a Hazardous EnVironment or HEV suit ;).

    --
    Oh no... it's the future.
    1. Re:Planetary spacesuit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "I propose we call it a Hazardous EnVironment or HEV suit ;)"

      I propose we lose the V and call it a HE Man suit.

    2. Re:Planetary spacesuit? by FusionDragon2099 · · Score: 1

      Gordon Freeman, is that you?

    3. Re:Planetary spacesuit? by quarkscat · · Score: 1

      Surely not!

      A metallic planetary suit for Hazardous EnVIronmets would be a HEVI suit.

      Why bother! BushCo NASA funding means a Mars environmental suit field
      tested in North Dakota (you ARE kidding, right?) and deployed in a Utah
      desert soundstage. There will be no USA/NASA manned trip to Mars, let
      alone back to the Moon. But it will likely be offshore outsourced to a PRC -
      based private enterprise space corporation in alliance with PRC real estate
      developers, using the interest on current/future USA trade deficit.

    4. Re:Planetary spacesuit? by jdbartlett · · Score: 1

      And when it's used in North Dakota, it's a North Dakotasuit, right?

  5. Joints by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is a lot of comment in the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal about future planetary space suits. Comments from the moon walkers tend to be that engineers today are trying to solve the wrong problems. People assume that the apollo suits were not mobile enough, in fact they were, but the joints in suits were a maintenance nightmare. So if a future suit is more complex because of this supposed moblity requirement then it will be harder to keep it working for a month on Mars.

    TFA doesn't say how they plan to improve mobility. They are only pressurising this suit to 1 PSI, about a quarter of what is required. I would like to see them work on the PLSS system as well. Lunar suits were limited to seven hours outside, but the tanks in the back pack were filled by high pressure tanks in the LM descent stage. If oxygen is to be extracted from water during the mission a lot of energy will have to be put into pressurising the PLSS tanks (to 1000 PSI, more would be better) while on the surface.

    One of the limiting factors in EVA time will be electrical power. Energy is going to be needed to heat the hands and feet while outside. If a way can be found to distribute heat between to torso and the extremities while outside then power won't be needed for this. Perhaps a liquid cooled garment can be used to distribute heat to cold parts of the body.

    Its good to see people working on this kind of thing. Its a pity that there aren't going to be any rides to mars in the forseeable future.

    1. Re:Joints by Oldsmobile · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "They are only pressurising this suit to 1 PSI, about a quarter of what is required."

      This raises questions about "ballooning". When a suit is pressurised, it balloons out and soon our intrepid space traveller is walking and looking like the Michelin man. This can of course be solved by making the suit out of hard materials, but probably increases complexity.

      I do agree with parent, that making it as simple as possible should be a priority. Those things will have to be maintained with simple tools and thus should be made foolproof.

      --
      Some say he is made with ascii, others that he is eyeballed daily by millions. All we know is, he is known as the Sig
    2. Re:Joints by Floody · · Score: 1
      There is a lot of comment in the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal about future planetary space suits. Comments from the moon walkers tend to be that engineers today are trying to solve the wrong problems. People assume that the apollo suits were not mobile enough, in fact they were, but the joints in suits were a maintenance nightmare. So if a future suit is more complex because of this supposed moblity requirement then it will be harder to keep it working for a month on Mars.


      I'm not sure I agree with this; at least not fully. The original apollo era EVA suits were quite mobility limiting. Take a thick durable mylar balloon and inflate to postive 4 PSI, then try to bend it. Now imagine your arm is inside the thing for 8 hours of work; including needing to bend your limbs. That's a simplication without any joint aperatus, but you get the idea ... After apollo 11 (or perhaps 12), the positive pressure in the suits was lowered slightly in order to increase mobility, but it's simply not physiologically safe to go below 3-4 psi even with pure O2.

      I will agree that lunar environmental conditions, specifically particulate matter, were a major issue as well. Suits have come a long way since apollo, but all new innovation has been lacking the requirement of withstanding conditions which might damage or foul mechanical joints. The lunar environment is a strange one; billions of years of meteorite impact dust build-up and a lack of erosion have produced surface "dirt particles" with sharp burr-like edges. The stuff stuck to everything and was a nightmare to remove from intricate mechanical assemblies.

      The questions to be answered, in my opinion: What erosion processes have existed in the past on mars, how long ago and are any still present in sufficient quantity to yield less "sticky dust?"
    3. Re:Joints by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Informative
      The original apollo era EVA suits were quite mobility limiting.

      My post was based on these comments by Dave Scott.

      [Scott - "It was probably due to the suit fit. I don't know how much time other people spent, but I spent a fair amount of time getting suits fitted, from early days. I was going to do an EVA on Gemini VIII. I spent a lot of time on the Gemini suit, getting it fitted, because one of the problems that Ed White had (on Gemini IV) was mobility. So they felt that if you had a proper fit, then you had better mobility. So I spent a lot of time with the suit guys, and they spent a lot of time with me. And I had good mobility. And that's why, today, when you look at the suits, they're trying to build with all these joints and I think they're missing the point. I think if you take this design and fit it properly, it's fine. I mean, you don't really need to bend over much, but I don't remember any conscious problem in bending over. Certainly it wasn't effortless but, on the other hand, it didn't require a big deal. You want to bend over, you go bend over. But I have to give it to the suit guys; they fit me very well. They did a good job tailoring the suit, which probably costs a lot less than building a suit with twenty joints, or whatever they're trying to do. (Guffaws)"]
    4. Re:Joints by dynamo52 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      What erosion processes have existed in the past on mars, how long ago and are any still present in sufficient quantity to yield less "sticky dust?"

      I would expect that a Martian dust storm possesses the requisite erosion capabilities you mention

      --
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    5. Re:Joints by Firehed · · Score: 1

      I really hope we don't need foolproof items for our first spacesuits (and people within them) going to Mars...

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    6. Re:Joints by evangellydonut · · Score: 1

      Uh... the biggest problem about manned travel to Mars is radiation effect. A Geo-Synchronous satellite has enough trouble with its electronics from harsh radiation effects (much more so than a Low Earth Orbit satellite), much due to the lack of protection from Van Allen's belt; think about people, who's tolerance is one thousands if not one millionth that of semiconductors. Doesn't matter what kind of spacesuit you have, you can't shield against heavy particles, and unless the time it takes to travel to Mars gets reduced substantially, (say to 1/100th of what we are theoretically capable of, based on time to travel to the moon) you really could have Fantastic Four by the time the astronauts come back to Earth...

    7. Re:Joints by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      We had working hardsuit designs in the 1960s. I've seen one on display at some museum someplace, think it was the SJ Technology museum. We also regularly use them in diving. Obviously a whole different set of problems, but you can dive to 2,000 feet in the one linked above...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  6. I would go but.. by SillySnake · · Score: 2, Interesting

    May 6th was yesterday. I'm a big fan of Slashdot, and usually disagree with people that bad mouth editors and what not. I don't troll about speling or gramur.. but not knowing what day it is?
    The funny thing is, that this has happened to me twice today already.. Heard a radio ad for a concert on May the 6th on my way home from a post midnight Taco Bell run.. Crazyness.

    1. Re:I would go but.. by yobjob · · Score: 1

      Even informing us on the day would have been enough notice. I mean, i'm in Australia, but I can ping a server in North Dakota in under a second, easy.

    2. Re:I would go but.. by Mordaximus · · Score: 1

      It's only been May 7th for 52 minutes in the Samoa time zone. In 8 minutes, it will be May 8th in Japan. Not every slashdot post originates in the US.

    3. Re:I would go but.. by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but the last time I checked, North Dakota *was* in the US.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
    4. Re:I would go but.. by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      So you are saying you think people in Samoa still could have seen the trial run of the space suits (in North Dakota) when this story came out? I don't think you fully understand how timezones work...

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    5. Re:I would go but.. by Torontoman · · Score: 1

      Oh but come on... when has NASA done anything on time?

      I think they should be more concerned about the launch vehicle *from mars* to bring the folks back. We have enough trouble taking off from earth... and we're here to do stuff to hopefully get it right. I wonder what the betting line will be on a successful launch from mars for the return trip.

  7. How about by thealsir · · Score: 1

    developing a craft that can go to mars more than 40 years after we made it to the moon?

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    Do not downmod posts "overrated" simply because you disagree with them.
    1. Re:How about by Oldsmobile · · Score: 1

      They can't do that, because first they have to build way to get up into orbit, but all the money they have is being sucked up by the Space Station and the Shuttle. And if they ever get those developed, G.W.Bush said we should go to the moon FIRST and that is going to take like 20 years and suck up all the cash and by the time they FINALLY get around to planning the Mars mission the US is going to be a totally broke third world country being totally pushed around by China and India.

      IMHO they should just drop everything (except the ISS) and do two things:

      First of all build as many Space probes as they can and send them to Mars and other planets. At the same time start planning a Mars mission right away and use the "one-way" approach.

      --
      Some say he is made with ascii, others that he is eyeballed daily by millions. All we know is, he is known as the Sig
    2. Re:How about by kenpachi101 · · Score: 1

      I agree, it is pretty damn sad that we have taken this long, but the reason is probably because money has been devoted to more important things (starting wars for getting oil)

      --
      You're special, just like everyone else
  8. Wrong place to test it by bufalo_1973 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I think they should test it in Antartica, not in North Dakota. Mars is NOT a hot desert but a cold one (mean surface temperature: 210 Kelvin). And I remember some images of a place in Antartica that were just like Mars except for the atmosphere.

    1. Re:Wrong place to test it by Ebirah · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Using the dry valleys of Antarctica would push up the cost of testing considerably. While they do approach Martian temperatures more closely than most terrestrial sites, the environment is predominantly bare rock, and the atmospheric pressure is normal for Earth.

      So they only really (approximately) satisfy one of the conditions (temperature) that needs to be tested, which can probably be dealt with just as well (and much more cost-effectively) in a large refrigerator. The suit's handling of Martian atmospheric pressure can't really be tested in any natural terrestrial environment. I suspect North Dakota probably provides an adequate facsimile of Martian terrain, though (and at a reasonable price).

      --
      It's never so bad that it can't get worse.
    2. Re:Wrong place to test it by bufalo_1973 · · Score: 1

      Then, why not "load" a refrigerator chamber with rocks and dust, cold it to -65C and turn up the fans?

    3. Re:Wrong place to test it by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure this is so much an actual test as it is a public demonstration. What with inviting people to view it and all, it seems more PR than science. Not that that's a bad thing - I assume there's been plenty of scientific testing leading up to this point.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    4. Re:Wrong place to test it by tverbeek · · Score: 4, Funny
      I think they should test it in Antartica, not in North Dakota.

      They probably wanted to test it in an environment without a lot of people. So North Dakota won.

      --
      http://alternatives.rzero.com/
    5. Re:Wrong place to test it by plutes · · Score: 1

      NoDak weather in May is about the same as Northern California. Upper 60's & low 70's, fairly dry but with some chance of rain - maybe warmer in the Badlands. No I think it is the rugged conditions - babyhead rock gravel, dry dusty terrain with very little vegetation, loose and steep slopes, that made for choice of testing location. The article is scant on this but I surmise they're testing mobility not ability to handle exposure.

    6. Re:Wrong place to test it by lbmouse · · Score: 1

      You obviously haven't been to ND. I lived there for a couple of years. Slogan: "Why Not Minot?" Answer: "Freezin's The Reason"

    7. Re:Wrong place to test it by plutes · · Score: 1

      Spent my first 21 years there, and then promptly left. Did my time in 40 below, getting caught out in blizzards, going for 30 days of subzero, becoming acclimated to the point where when 45 degrees above feels warm enough to walk around outside in a t-shirt. May is not that bad, probably nicest time of year.

  9. Pressurized? by jeti · · Score: 1

    It looks like the whole suit is pressurized. Is there actually any need for this or could the material be permeable like with a scuba diving suit?
    That way there wouldn't be any problems with the joints, and a small rip would not cause much of a problem.

    1. Re:Pressurized? by Tango42 · · Score: 3, Informative

      The human body needs pressure to prevent liquids from boiling, gasses coming out out solution in the blood (the bends), etc.

      The pressure on Mars is effectively zero.

    2. Re:Pressurized? by multimediavt · · Score: 1

      Mars atmosphere is quite a bit thinner than Earth's; about one percent as thick to be exact. A simple Google search would have told you this: http://starryskies.com/solar_system/mars/martian_a tmosphere.html Plus, Mars atmosphere is mostly carbon dioxide (95 percent) which would suffocate a person in a short period of time.

    3. Re:Pressurized? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Gas pressure isn't the only way to provide the pressure to the human body.

      That pressure can also be applied mechanically, by tensioned materials.

      Check out the Bio-suit research at MIT.

    4. Re:Pressurized? by excaliber19 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Exactly. Mod parent up. A suit can provide pressure via tension all over the body. A full helmet or scuba-like breathing apparatus can provide oxygen. There is no need to pressurize the entire suit, its just a waste of energy and makes things needlessly difficult (less flexible, worrying about tears, etc etc).

      Assuming a person did get a small tear on a 'tension suit', the worst that would happen is very bad bruising. The ripped area would be exposed to the environment (low pressure) which would pull the flesh a fair amount outside the suit. Nasty bruising, but not fatal at all and confined to the ripped portion of suit.

    5. Re:Pressurized? by Tango42 · · Score: 1

      How would you regulate temperature in such a suit? It would be like wearing skintight PVC over your whole body. Skin needs to sweat etc. Also, the body is hardly a good shape - a small pocket of air could mess the whole thing up - it would need to be designed to cope with the pressure even if it wasn't designed to be pressurised.

      It might be practicle for very short periods, but not for hours of EVA.

    6. Re:Pressurized? by TheArtfulPianist · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I would assume that only the innermost layer would be skintight, taking care of the pressure problem. I bet it could be extremely permeable; it's an interesting materials science problem to find a material that could provide the correct tension and yet allow the skin to breathe.

      I think additional layers on top of the inner skintight layer could take care of thermal and radiation problems. These layers would be like wearing regular clothing, because there would be no need to pressurize it. However, it would probably need to be airtight and contain a friendly gas at mars atmospheric pressure...I'm not sure how the skin would respond to the Mars atmosphere.

      (I'm the AC from before)

    7. Re:Pressurized? by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      Haha, i read it is as "tears" as in crying tears.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
  10. This proves it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which just goes to show you how desolate North Dakota really is.

  11. It eludes me, by diaper+biscuit · · Score: 2, Funny

    why anyone would take a space suit to court. Let alone in North Dakota! Or maybe someone is suing the Space around Mars, hence "space suit".

  12. Makes perfect sense by OzPhIsH · · Score: 3, Funny

    To me this makes perfect sense, as they only have to really be sure the suit will work at the location that the landing will be filmed at.

    --

    "To lead the people, you must walk behind them"

  13. What's the big deal? by Red+Samurai · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It doesn't look much different to any other spacesuits.

    1. Re:What's the big deal? by jfz · · Score: 0

      Other than the nod to BSDM space suit fetishist?

  14. How much use is a space suit... by Pedrito · · Score: 3, Insightful

    if we can't get them to Mars alive? As far as I know, they still haven't come up with a way to protect people from the year-long travel's exposure to radiation. I think the trip would register somewhere near the maximum allowed by NASA guidelines (which is a lot higher than your average Joe gets), and that's assuming there's not some sort of solar event along the way. You get a singificant solar event, and everyone is going to start glowing in the dark for the last few minutes of their lives.

    So, a space suit? That's easy. Build a safe ship. That's what I want to see. I don't think we're anywhere near doing that.

    And that doesn't even address the issue of bone and muscle degeneration which from over a 1 year period in space and a year and a half in reduced gravity will be pretty significant. It's the bones that are the real problem. There are some possible medical treatments that might help, but at the moment, nothing that's going to be able to deal with the problem on that scale. I guess that's one of the disadvantages of being an adaptable species.

    We got to the moon because the entire country was focused on it. Let's face it, the general public could really care less about a manned trip to Mars. They certainly don't care as much as they did back in the early Apollo days. And without that sort of public commitment, this just isn't going to happen anytime in the next few decades. NASA has a dwindling budget and the public doesn't really care. You simply can't go to Mars like that and expect to bring the crew home.

    I'm all for going to Mars, but I'm also all for bringing the crew back in one piece. Without that, it's simply not worth it.

    1. Re:How much use is a space suit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The spacecraft and it's occupants can be protected by cosmic rays via a magnetic or electrostatic field.

      http://www.islandone.org/Settlements/MagShield.htm l

    2. Re:How much use is a space suit... by Pedrito · · Score: 1

      I'm no physicist, but that looks like it uses a lot of electricity. And seeing as you're basically deflecting high energy cosimc rays, I suppose you'll need a fair amount of energy to effectively deflect them. What kind of solar panels will you need to run that?

    3. Re:How much use is a space suit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called a 'nuclear reactor'

      look into it

    4. Re:How much use is a space suit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't know anything about physics, don't bother trying to nitpick the article. In fact, if you would have actually bothered to read it, you would have discovered that the author explicitly states that it is feasable to maintain a charged plasma feild with a power output of 10 kW.

    5. Re:How much use is a space suit... by lbbros · · Score: 1

      There have been some projects, including one from Nobel Prize Carlo Rubbia: that one in particular would cut the time needed to get there to a handful of months, rather than one year. I'm surprised no one even looked into this (save the Italian Space Agency).

      --
      A CC-licensed illustrated horror novel
  15. $100,000 by alex_vegas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is anyone struck by how inexpensive $100,000 seems for a space suit

    1. Re:$100,000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because it's ugly.

  16. Uh... by The+MAZZTer · · Score: 1

    Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Sunday May 07

    The local public is invited to view the Mars spacesuit in action on Sat. May 6, weather permitting, at its North Dakota test site."

    Uhhhhhhh...

    1. Re:Uh... by drobotnik · · Score: 1

      uhhhhh yourself
      linear time = lie
      cubic time = truth

  17. have you seen the suit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the only thing to smell worse that a wet dog would be a wet cat.

  18. don't break it by v1 · · Score: 1

    The local public is invited to view the Mars spacesuit in action on Sat. May 6, weather permitting, at its North Dakota test site.

    Hopefully they are not concerned about the suits getting rained on...

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  19. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  20. This is a job for the Movie Industry by coop535 · · Score: 1

    Hell, they got lots of suits from various movies just lying around I'm sure. Like Mission to Mars, or Red Planet. We can save on fitting if we just send Val Kilmer, in his original suit, on a one way trip!

  21. Its the climate, stupid! by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1

    Is the climate in North Dakota like the climate on Mars? Interested foreigners want to know!

    --
    Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    1. Re:Its the climate, stupid! by alexwcovington · · Score: 1

      Not so much the climate as the terrain they're testing the suit on. Man, those are some BAD lands.

      --
      (It's never too late to join the Renaissance)
    2. Re:Its the climate, stupid! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the climate in North Dakota is anything like South Dakota, then it's like a demented monkey with Alzheimer's and a dissociative identity disorder. It's spring here and we can have temperatures approaching "nice sunny day" where you have to wear SPF 35 one day and the next you're busting out the parka and turning on the furnace.

      If you pick the right day, you'll get an exact replica of Martian weather. Hell... pick the right day and you'll even get the dust storms!

  22. Umm by wingman358 · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be a good idea to make the space suit a different color than the terrain its going to be used on?

    1. Re:Umm by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 0

      ...and get shot by martian sniper while bringing them democracy? No way.

  23. They should have used Utah by jdbartlett · · Score: 1

    "Well, in those days, Mars was just a dreary uninhabitable wasteland, much like Utah. but unlike Utah, it was eventually made livable."

  24. Mars, Slashdot, and Radiation by Howzer · · Score: 4, Informative
    It seems like every time there's a Slashdot story on Mars, someone runs around like Chicken Little shouting "The Radiation! The Radiation!"

    Of course, as anyone with any real interest in the topic would quickly find out, it's not in any way, shape, or form, a mission-stopper.

    There's so much research out there about this! Even NASA - sensibly conservative and cranking up the "danger" to manufacture a mission for the ISS ("Seeing what radiation in space does" as if we don't know from 30+ years of space flight) - isn't as strident as some people who should search before they post.

    I guess if the New York Times can get "space radiation" wrong, as they did in 2003, then Slashdot denizens can too, but I foolishly expect more tech-aware people here. Here's the real deal on Mars Mission radiation from the Mars Society based on real science, not on half-remembered sci-fi movies.

    To the second point, "bone and muscle degeneration", there are two sets of data on this. First, the very real bone and muscle degeneration experienced by long-term Soviet Mir-jockeys, who simply didn't do their exercises, and second, the remarkable amelioration of these "effects" by all long-term US astronauts, who did do their exercises.

    I guess we'll have to recruit the Mars crews from the pool of "following the doctor's orders" astronauts rather than the "ignoring sensible medical advice" group.

  25. Why so big? by Guspaz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why are the darned things still so big and bulky? Three points come into mind:

    1) It has been 40 or 50 years since the Apollo-era spacesuits were designed.
    2) It has been at least 30 years since the current NASA spacesuites were designed
    3) The moon has no atmosphere. Mars DOES have an atmosphere. You don't need space suits on Mars, just suits to handle lower atmospheric pressure.

    So, it has been 30 years since the last spacesuit redesign, and these things aren't even space suits, why the heck are they so damned big and bulky? You'd think 30 to 50 years of technological advancement would have led to bigger improvements than this...

    1. Re:Why so big? by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
      The moon has no atmosphere. Mars DOES have an atmosphere. You don't need space suits on Mars, just suits to handle lower atmospheric pressure.
      And insulation to handle the extreme temperatures.
      So, it has been 30 years since the last spacesuit redesign, and these things aren't even space suits, why the heck are they so damned big and bulky?
      Because they still include the same two systems that made space suits of the 60's so big and bulky - insulation and a pressure retention layer (and all the hardware to prevent 'balooning' and to preserve mobility).
      You'd think 30 to 50 years of technological advancement would have led to bigger improvements than this...
      Why would you think so in the first place?
    2. Re:Why so big? by 4181 · · Score: 1
      The moon has no atmosphere. Mars DOES have an atmosphere. You don't need space suits on Mars, just suits to handle lower atmospheric pressure.
      Martian atmospheric pressure is less than 0.01 ATM (0.7-0.9 kPa, compared to Earth's 101.3 kPa). This is effectively a vacuum as regards spacesuit design.
  26. Called off due to weather. by BobPaul · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am a bit confused, they will cancel the test if there is bad weather? It's a spacesuit, it shouldn't be affected by bad weather

    Well first off, I only skimmed the article, but I have a classmate working on part of the project at NDSU here. My first thought, though, is that it's a space suit... it doesn't rain in space, it just has to withstand the pressure and the occasional impact by high volecity objects. It also doesn't rain water on Mars, but with the atmosphere there could be something similar to look out for, I don't know. That brings me to my second thought.

    This is a very early prototype. The last line in the article even says that the project isn't nessicarly to create a final project, but to "train the new generation of space studies students." Really they just have to show the fundamental goals are reachable within the budget requirements for an individual suit, but it doesn't have to be finished and polished. Making it waterproof is relatively easy compared to some of the other design requirements, I'm sure. Regardless, you don't go build a prototype for a parachute and immediately jump out of an airplane; you test the materials strengths, etc first and then gradually put it into conditions that may harm it, even if those conditions are expected, normal circumstances.

    For the final disclaimer, my friend is an electrical engineering student working on the health monitoring system. That said, I know little of the design requirements or stage of the project beyond the little I know of what my friend is doing. I've never seen the suit, just some sensors and circuit boards.

    Finally, congratulations John, you guys made slashdot!

  27. Obligatory Futurama quote by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    LEELA: How many atmospheres of pressure can the ship withstand? PROFESSOR: Well it's a spaceship, so I'd say anywhere between zero and one

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  28. Hah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    North Dakota? Perfect place! Just like Mars!

  29. Damned Trials by ThatsNotFunny · · Score: 1

    The only ones who get rich in these space suit trials are the lawyers.

    --
    "Was it a millionaire who said 'Imagine No Posessions?'" -- Elvis Costello
  30. Brown color? by awtbfb · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who thinks the color should be something easy to pick out from the Martian landscape? Brown is not exactly high contrast for the red planet...

  31. course its cheap by woolio · · Score: 1

    Nah... That's bound to be cheap....

    That spacesuit is not an Armani.

  32. Wrong problems ... exactly ... by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    Darn right they're trying to solve the wrong problems ...

    They're trying to make suits for men that will make them more like robots. We don't need men for planetary exploration. All we need is robots. They're cheaper.

    $100,000 is a waste of money pursuant to a 2 trillion dollar project that should never happen until we can figure out a way to make earth to orbit transport cheaper. A Mars mission is nothing more than an expensive joyride.

    NASA's core mission of space exploration is perfectly suited to robots and it should stay that way until humans have some actual purpose in space besides visiting.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  33. Unless the skin ruptured ... by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    ...

    And if the skin ruptured, than your blood would drain with no possibility of clotting and you would die.

    Besides, after wearing knee braces, I'm not sure that astronauts would appreciate the amount of chafing that such a suit would cause.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    1. Re:Unless the skin ruptured ... by jeti · · Score: 2, Informative

      Horror movies are not a good source for scientific information.
      Have a look at this page about vacuum exposure.

  34. Experiment ... by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    I think you need to put on a layer of longjohns, then squeeze a skinsuit one size too small over it as an experiment. The practical aspect is you have to mow your lawn in this getup and collect "samples".

    After you've peeled (or cut) yourself free of this arrangment, you should know the error of your thinkin.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    1. Re:Experiment ... by jeti · · Score: 1

      Well - it's no fun to mow your lawn in a scuba suit, either.
      But compared to a pressurized suit where you can hardly bend
      the joints, it should be like a stroll int the park.

  35. Have you heard of the Van Allen Belt? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know about this right? It's a pair of radiation belts that surround our planet that is lethal to anything from our planet that passes through it. We have NEVER developed anything that will allow any living creature to survive passing through this. I know it's hard to believe that the moon landing was faked. But then once you understand that we can't go throught those belts and we have never, even untill this day, developed anything that will let pass through them. So ya, why bother with these suits, unless they will get us past those belts. Haha, what a joke...

  36. Hoax! by bettlebrox · · Score: 2, Funny

    It's a hoax! They're actually really on Mars and trying to pretend they're in North Dakota. It's easy to tell because of the shadows and when he hit the golfball it so obviouly was in a lighter gravity. And one could tell that they used filters to make the lighting look earthlike ...

    --

    I have a very small mind and must live with it.
    -- E. Dijkstra

  37. I have to call BS to this. by jd · · Score: 1

    Nobody would believe North Dakota was Mars. North Dakota is far colder and far less hospitable.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  38. I'm thinking of ... by willtsmith · · Score: 1


    I'm thinking of the effect this will have on your skin. I'll take the pressurized suit any day over a overly tight scuba suit.

    What is really needed in this cases are articulated joints so you're not trying to "bend" a balloon that you happen to be wearing.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    1. Re:I'm thinking of ... by TheArtfulPianist · · Score: 1

      I might be wrong, but I think a tight scuba suit would feel a lot different if you wore it in a vacuum. Ideally, it would squeeze you only as tightly as the earth's atmosphere is squeezing you right now. The key, and I think this is your concern, is to make it breathable. It will also help to make it tension only in the circumferential direction around your joints, to ease bending.

  39. Based on physics, not horror ... by willtsmith · · Score: 1


    I don't base this assertion on horror movies, I base it on physics. If you have an open wound and you apply a vaccum to it, it will suck out your blood with no chance of coagulation since the blood will not pool but rather will keep on pouring.

    The rate of blood flow would be scrictly a function of your blood pressure vs the pressure of the outside air plus the effective presure applied to the rest of your body. Since you will be constricting every other part of the body with a pressure suit, but will squirt out of a laceration that is exposed to a vaccuum.

    You can test this with a knife and a vaccum cleaner. Alternatively it is demonstrated tens of thousands of times a day with needles and a syringes at hospitals and medical clinics all across the country. They call this "drawing blood" and it is done by applying negative pressure (vacuum) to an intentionally afflicted puncture wound (hollow needle).

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!