NASA Announces Companies Contracted to Create Competing Next-Gen Spacesuits

June 2, 2022 by Kate Michael
NASA Announces Companies Contracted to Create Competing Next-Gen Spacesuits
(NASA photo)

WASHINGTON — NASA on Wednesday announced two companies that have been newly contracted to produce next-generation spacesuits for use on the International Space Station as well as Artemis missions to the moon and Mars.

Texas-based Axiom Space and North Carolina-based Collins Aerospace were selected.

The pair of companies were chosen to provide some redundancy and maintain competition in the system, according to NASA representatives. These companies will compete to provide fresh takes on the iconic spacesuit that has been NASA’s workhorse over the last 40 years, but is now not only aging technology but under investigation for water leakage concerns.

“History will be made in these suits,” Vanessa Wyche, director of NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, said, reminding that Artemis crews wearing these suits will include the first woman and first person of color on the Moon.

“Spacesuits have been an incredible part of every mission… and they continue to be a key focal point,” Lindsay Aitchison, program executive for the Extravehicular Activity and Human Surface Mobility Program at NASA’s headquarters added. She suggested that new spacesuits and a human rover system will help NASA to explore more of the moon than ever before, as well as support and encourage “a space economy.”

“We’re looking forward to bringing spacesuits into the modern age… and then on to the moon!”

Both companies have agreed to meet requirements and standards, including a demonstration in a relevant environment, with NASA certifying alongside continued development.

The next-gen suits must meet NASA’s needs for mass, interoperability with spacecraft systems, and safety, among other factors, such as specifications for a fit and sizing requirement that the suits be adaptable for the 5th percentile female to the 95th percentile male — with rapid resizing.

While suits for the earliest lunar missions in the Apollo program were all custom made, currently, suits on the ISS are modular spacesuits that fit a range of sizes. The goal to renew ISS suits and meet the mission for Artemis is a modular fit with new “tailorability,” according to Dan Burbank, senior technical fellow at Collins Aerospace and former NASA astronaut.

Through a “constantly evolving” process of design, build, test, and repeat, he said Collins Aerospace plans to create a suit compatible with the entire spectrum of crew members that “feels like a ruggedized set of extreme sport outerwear.”

“It shouldn’t feel like a spacecraft,” he said. “We want to be able to create an immersive environment that, for the crew member, gives them the most amount of mobility.”

Neither company had preliminary images to show as designs continue to be finalized, but a demonstration of the new suits could happen within a couple of years — with a target of 2025 to demonstrate at the ISS.

Once the suits are ready, they will be used with continuing operations on the ISS through 2030 as well as preparations for eventual crewed-landing missions to the moon and Mars.

“Not that the suit that exists today isn’t a great suit, but evolution is important,” Axiom CEO Michael Suffredini said. “You want to build a suit that can evolve over time; Refine it as we learn more, do the job better over the life of the suit, and once you get to the lunar surface as well.”

Kate can be reached at [email protected]

 

A+
a-
  • NASA
  • new spacesuits
  • In The News

    Health

    Voting

    Space

    January 17, 2024
    by Tom Ramstack
    NASA’s Delay of Manned Moon Mission Prompts Questions in Congress

    WASHINGTON — Members of Congress reaffirmed their commitment Wednesday for a manned U.S. return to the moon and on to... Read More

    WASHINGTON — Members of Congress reaffirmed their commitment Wednesday for a manned U.S. return to the moon and on to Mars but wanted to know why the mission is being delayed. Last week, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration announced a one-year delay for its Artemis... Read More

    First US Lunar Lander in Over 50 Years Launched but Problem Develops on Way to Moon

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The first U.S. lunar lander in more than 50 years rocketed to space Monday, launching... Read More

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The first U.S. lunar lander in more than 50 years rocketed to space Monday, launching a race for private companies to deliver experiments and other items to the moon. But about seven hours after liftoff, Astrobotic Technology reported the solar panel... Read More

    January 5, 2024
    by Tom Ramstack
    SpaceX Lawsuit Opposes Authority of National Labor Relations Board

    HOUSTON — SpaceX sued the National Labor Relations Board Thursday in a lawsuit that seeks to undercut the agency's fundamental... Read More

    HOUSTON — SpaceX sued the National Labor Relations Board Thursday in a lawsuit that seeks to undercut the agency's fundamental authority to rule in workplace disputes. SpaceX hit back with the lawsuit one day after the NLRB filed a labor complaint against the company.  The NLRB... Read More

    August 1, 2023
    by Dan McCue
    For Globe-Trotting Strategy Expert, the Excitement Never Stops

    NEW YORK — When last we spoke to Marie de Foucaud, the energetic brand expert had just founded Elovation Consulting and... Read More

    NEW YORK — When last we spoke to Marie de Foucaud, the energetic brand expert had just founded Elovation Consulting and the world had gone haywire, shutting down due to a global pandemic. But two years on, things are going quite well for de Foucaud and her... Read More

    April 3, 2023
    by Dan McCue
    NASA Names First Moon Mission Astronauts

    HOUSTON — Christina Hammock Koch will be the first woman and Victor Glover the first African American to venture around... Read More

    HOUSTON — Christina Hammock Koch will be the first woman and Victor Glover the first African American to venture around the moon, NASA announced on Monday, as it revealed the four-person flight crew for the upcoming lunar orbital flight of the Artemis II spacecraft. In another... Read More

    September 30, 2022
    by Madeline Hughes
    FCC Shortens Length of Time Satellites Allowed to Remain in Orbit

    WASHINGTON — Low-earth satellites must be deorbited after five years, the Federal Communications Commission decided Thursday at its monthly meeting.... Read More

    WASHINGTON — Low-earth satellites must be deorbited after five years, the Federal Communications Commission decided Thursday at its monthly meeting. This rule change severely shortens the amount of time satellite operators have to remove their instruments from the skies. They previously had about 25 years, and... Read More

    News From The Well
    scroll top