Innsbruck, Austria (CNN) -- It takes Dr Gernot Groomer three hours to put on the spacesuit he hopes will, one day, walk across the surface of Mars.
It's worth taking time
when you're wearing a suit made from roughly 10,000 parts, designed for
the most treacherous environment yet to be encountered by a human being.
Groomer is the Austrian
astrobiologist responsible for building a spacesuit for the Mars
explorers of tomorrow -- and he's taking inspiration from armor worn by
medieval knights.
He explains that -- after
the titanic effort required to get there -- simply surviving on the red
planet will be a grueling battle.
Mars: survival
Groomer paints a
terrifying picture of an astronaut's view over the Martian landscape:
abrasive particles of glassy sand, whipped into dust-storms (with wind
speeds of 200kph/125mph); Galactic cosmic rays of radiation, with only
the thinnest atmosphere to block it; temperatures plummeting to minus
130 degrees Celsius.
Mars is totally unforgiving and we must never forget that
Dr Gernot Groomer
Dr Gernot Groomer
It's an environment the enthusiastic scientist refers to -- without risking exaggeration -- as "fairly" hostile.
Aouda.X: a wearable spacecraft
In a small research facility -- nestled among the Alps in Innsbruck, Austria -- Groomer's team at the Austrian Space Forum are developing a suit to withstand the challenge. The result: a "spacecraft to wear."
The 45 kilogram suit
incorporates air and power supplies, communication devices, sensors to
take biometric readings, and ventilation -- plus all the facilities
required to allow the astronaut to eat, drink and (even) scratch their
nose while away from base.
No contact
It's a robotic creation
with all the life-supports systems of a conventional spacesuit but with
added capabilities needed to operate all alone on a distant planet --
where fast communication with earth is impossible.
Wearing space suit no easy task
There, the suit will
have to double as companion, adviser and mission control to the
astronaut. It's 50% software, says Groomer: a built-in virtual assistant
will be on hand to say "be careful you're running out of oxygen" or
"your next target is 2 kilometers away."
Staying tough
Wearing the Apollo-era
suits sported by moonlanders, the Mars explorers would be "very dead,
very soon", Groomer warns -- the suits being not nearly robust enough
for the longer term missions they'll be expected to undertake across
Mars' "totally unforgiving" landscape.
The suits are designed
to be repaired mid-mission but Groomer says he's also been looking to
medieval armories for inspiration for the tough mars suits -- taking
cues for the design of its upper torso from an armor suit he found
recently.
The smart suit
Groomeer's main concern, though, is not toughness.
He and his team are caught up in a mini-Space Race: developing suits in competition with NASA and North Dakota University's NDX-2, MIT's BioSuit, and others.
Where the other teams'
suits are strongly focused on withstanding the physical strains of
walking on Mars, Groomer claims his team's effort is the most
intelligent:
"The big difference in
our suit is that we consider it as a central hub for an entire family of
instruments," meaning the wearer can keep control of a robotic explorer
vehicle and all the devices and sensors to be housed at the Martian
base station.
It might sound
impressive, but the word Groomer keeps mentioning is "safety." The
complex computer systems are as much as he can do to keep the astronauts
of the future safe, 380 million kilometers from home.
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