NASA has commissioned two companies, Axiom Space and Collins Aerospace, to develop the spacesuits that will be worn by future astronauts on the Moon. These suits will also be used for the International Space Station (ISS).
The current ones have been in use for regarding forty years.
“History will be made in these suits,” said Vanessa Wyche, director of the US space agency’s Johnson Space Center, on Wednesday. ‘The first person of color and the first woman’ to set foot on the moon, ‘will be wearing these suits,’ she said.
NASA had originally planned to develop this new generation of suits itself, but had fallen way behind schedule. The choice to finally entrust them to two companies confirms the emphasis placed by the American agency in recent years on partnerships between the public and private sectors.
Needs and requirements
‘This allows us to save some costs, because we share the investments,’ argued Vanessa Wyche. The two companies are investing “a significant amount of their own money,” NASA said in a statement.
The details of the amount of the respective contracts have not yet been revealed, but in total the program has a ceiling of 3.5 billion dollars, for a service rendered until 2034. The agency reserves the right to choose ultimately only one of the two companies, or both, or even add others.
Axiom Space, which has already sent space tourists to the ISS with SpaceX, plans to build its own space station. The company will thus itself need spacesuits for its future customers.
NASA has detailed a whole series of needs and requirements, both for operating on the Moon and for outings in low orbit around the ISS. The two environments do not present the same challenges, for example the weight of the suit is not an issue in weightlessness, while dust must be taken into account on the Moon.
It’s up to Axiom Space and Collins Aerospace to decide whether it will be a single combination or two separate ones.
/ATS