ROCKET SCIENCE
SpaceX unveils peek at sleek new spacesuit
by Staff Writers
Miami (AFP) Aug 23, 2017


Spacex's chief executive Elon Musk gave a sneak peek Wednesday at the California-based company's futuristic new spacesuit.

In an Instagram post, the sleek, white material appears lighter weight than the bulky spacesuits worn by NASA astronauts, and is accented with gray stitched seams and an American flag patch on the shoulder.

The male model wearing it is seat-belted inside a spaceship, and also dons a white helmet with shaded face-shield. No details below the chest are visible.

"First picture of SpaceX spacesuit. More in days to follow," Musk wrote.

"Worth noting that this actually works (not a mockup)," he added.

"Already tested to double vacuum pressure. Was incredibly hard to balance esthetics and function. Easy to do either separately."

The suit could be worn by the first astronauts to ride to space on SpaceX's upcoming Dragon crew capsules, with flights scheduled as early as next year.

SpaceX is working on a version of its Dragon cargo capsule that will be able to carry people to low-Earth orbit.

Once it does, the United States will again have access via its own spaceships to the International Space Station.

Ever since the US space shuttle program was retired in 2011 after 30 years, Americans have had to rely on Russia for rides to space aboard the Soyuz spacecraft.

ROCKET SCIENCE
The Phantom Lunar Dragon
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Aug 23, 2017
In February, SpaceX announced plans to send a crewed Dragon capsule on a private circumlunar mission in late 2018. The announcement caught most of the space community by surprise. It was a bold plan for a company that hasn't even flown astronauts into Earth orbit, but SpaceX founder Elon Musk is famous for thinking big. The circumlunar mission was tame compared to his bold plan to colonize ... read more

Related Links
Rocket Science News at Space-Travel.Com

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

ROCKET SCIENCE
Japan deploys missile defence over N. Korea threat to Guam

Jacobs Technology awarded $4.6B contract for missile defense services

US successfully tests missile intercept system

S. Korea speeds up US missile defence over North's missile test

ROCKET SCIENCE
Romania approved for U.S. rocket system buy

Air Force successfully launches LRASM missile from B-1B Lancer

Raytheon receives $104.9M contract for Griffin missiles

Kiev says engine type 'used in N.Korea missiles' made for Russia

ROCKET SCIENCE
Could the X-37B Space Plane be Preparing for a Mission in September

Do video game players make the best unmanned pilots

Insitu receives contract for U.S. Navy Special Warfare ScanEagle support

Mobile Force Protection Aims to Thwart Adversaries' Small Unmanned Aircraft

ROCKET SCIENCE
82nd Airborne tests in-flight communication system for paratroopers

North Dakota UAS Training Center Depends on IGC Satellite Connectivity

Envistacom wins $10M Army communications contract

New SQUID-based detector opens up new fields of study with new level of sensitivity

ROCKET SCIENCE
Energized fabrics could keep soldiers warm and battle-ready in frigid climates

LOC Performance receives $49.1 million Bradley upgrade contract

University of Florida, US Army develop model for lighter armor

Lockheed wins Special Operations logistics contract

ROCKET SCIENCE
Defence firms eye billion-dollar chance for 'made in India'

China showcases weapon systems to possible foreign buyers

Kratos receives $46.2 million contract for Saudi Arabian defense services

DOD's acquisition, technology and logistics office to get a makeover

ROCKET SCIENCE
Erdogan says top Turkish general must accept demotion

India says China stand-off will end soon

On third MH17 anniversary, families unveil 'living memorial'

Top American general says attack on Japan same as on US

ROCKET SCIENCE
How to move objects at the nanoscale

New method promises easier nanoscale manufacturing

Nanoparticles could spur better LEDs, invisibility cloaks

New material resembling a metal nanosponge could reduce computer energy consumption