A space suit is a complex system of garments, equipment and environmental systems designed to keep a person alive and comfortable in the harsh (lack of) environment of outer space. This applies to extra-vehicular activity outside spacecraft orbiting Earth and has applied to walking, and riding the Lunar Rover, on the Moon.
Some of these requirements also apply to pressure suits worn by people such as high-altitude reconnaissance pilots who may fly so high that breathing pure oxygen at surrounding pressure would not provide enough oxygen for them to function: see hypoxia. Space suits are also used when dealing with certain types of biological hazards.
All space suit designs try to minimize or eliminate this problem. The most common solution is to form the suit out of multiple layers. The bladder layer is a rubbery, airtight layer much like a balloon. The restraint layer goes outside the bladder, and provides a specific shape for the suit. Since the bladder layer is larger than the restraint layer, the restraint takes all of the stresses caused by the pressure of the suit. Since the bladder is not under pressure, it will not "pop" like a balloon, even if punctured. The restraint layer is shaped in such a way that bending a joint will cause pockets of fabric, called gores, to open up on the outside of the joint. This makes up for the volume lost on the inside of the joint, and keeps the suit at a constant volume. However, once the gores are opened all the way, the joint cannot be bent anymore without a considerable amount of work.
In some Russian spacesuits strips of cloth were wrapped tightly round the spaceman's arms and legs outside the spacesuit to stop the spacesuit from ballooning when in space.
There are three theoretical approaches:
One inconvenience with some spacesuits is the head being fixed facing forwards and being unable to turn to look sideways: astronauts call this effect "alligator head".
The development of the spheroidal dome helmet was key in balancing the need for field of view, pressure compensation, and low weight.
In May 2006, Fabio Sau, a student at the University of North Dakota, teamed up with forty other students in five North Dakota schools to develop a new spacesuit to be used by astronauts that travel to Mars. The students were working off of a $100,000 grant by NASA, and the suit was tested in the Theodore Roosevelt National Park Badlands of western North Dakota. The suit weighs 47 pounds, and costs only a fraction of the standard $22 million cost for a NASA spacesuit. The suit was developed in just over a year by students from the University of North Dakota, North Dakota State, Dickinson State, the state College of Science and Turtle Mountain Community College. *
Skintight spacesuits (skinsuits) appear in the original Buck Rogers comics. The Buck Rogers scenario has become familiar enough to cause expressions such as "Buck Rogers outfit" for real protective suits that look somewhat like spacesuits. Skinsuits are more common in modern science fiction. On the other end of the spectrum one can find the ideas of heavy powered armor. Robert A. Heinlein's novel Have Space Suit-Will Travel draws on his experience designing pressure suits during World War II.
It is possible that fictional spacesuit design influenced real spacesuit design somewhat, at least in getting real spacesuits to use a hard helmet and not a soft pressurized hood.
Alien spacesuits in the Gerry Anderson UFO series are filled with a breathable liquid to resist acceleration stresses.
After NASA started, fictional spacesuits often followed real spacesuit design, in such features as having a large rectangular backpack. In making the spacesuits that are seen in the Dune movie, the prop and costume designers stated a need to avoid "that NASA look", and the same consideration may have arisen in some other movies and series.
Spacesuits are commonly used in the Gundam anime metaseries, but are often renamed to avoid confusion with space-use mobile suits. In the Universal Century timeline, spacesuits are called "normal suits"; the After Colony timeline calls them "astrosuit". Gundam spacesuits often have a pouch full of adhesive strips, used to temporarily seal tears in the suit or cracks in the helmet (as demonstrated in Mobile Suit Gundam and Char's Counterattack respectively).
Rebreathers | Environmental suits | Space exploration | Spacecraft components
Raumanzug | Combinaison spatiale | חליפת חלל | Ruimtepak | 宇宙服 | Skafander kosmiczny | Скафандр | Avaruuspuku | Rymddräkt | 太空衣
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