Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

NASA shows off the new spacesuits that astronauts will wear to the moon

Add as a preferred source on Google

Artist concept of an astronaut in the xEMU space suit setting up a science experiment on the lunar surface. NASA

NASA has big plans for its upcoming Artemis mission: First setting up a long-term base on the moon, then sending a manned mission to Mars from there. On Tuesday, October 15, the agency showed off its new spacesuit designed for this ambitious mission at a presentation at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Recommended Videos

The Exploration Extravehicular Mobility Unit, or xEMU suit, is designed to protect astronauts against temperatures ranging from minus 250 degrees to plus 250 degrees Fahrenheit, which is important for planned missions to the moon’s south pole. Astronauts in the xEMU suit can move much more freely than was possible in previous suit designs and are able to cross their arms as well as raise them overhead. The suit also has bearings in the waist and the lower half, allowing greater motion which is useful for performing maintenance and other delicate tasks.

As part of the demonstration, an engineer wearing the new suit was able to bend to the ground and pick up a rock and then pass it. This sort of complex movement with bending at the waist would have been difficult or impossible in previous generations of suit.

Another factor to consider in suit design is pressurization, which is key for space missions but usually limits mobility considerably. The new suit operates at 8 pound per square inch of pressure, which is about the same operating pressure as a basketball.

“My job is to take a basketball and shape it like a human, to keep them alive in a harsh environment,” Amy Ross, a spacesuit engineer, explained. “We have to make the suit flexible under pressure. We use 100% oxygen to protect the astronaut from decompression sickness.”

The suits have equipment in the backpack to allow changes in pressure levels, which should make preparing for and executing spacewalks faster. The astronauts can lower the pressure levels when they need more dexterity, for example, if they need to move their fingers precisely to control a piece of equipment.

Another challenge is the issue of lunar dust — very fine particulate matter which is all over the moon. It wasn’t anticipated just how much of a problem the dust would be until Apollo astronauts found it covering everything. To protect against the dust, the new suits have fewer seams and covered seals.

Following issues with spacesuit sizing that caused the first all-female spacewalk to be canceled earlier in the year, NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine was sure to mention that the new suit will fit everyone on the upcoming mission. “We as the Artemis generation are building spacesuits that will fit all of our astronauts,” he said. “We want every person who dreams of going into space to be able to say to themselves that they have that opportunity.”

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Artemis II crew preps for lunar orbit – and Orion’s cosmic commode
'It's the one place we can go during the mission where we can actually feel like we’re alone.'
The Orion spacecraft's toilet.

Four astronauts are about to embark on a historic voyage that will take them around the moon in a spacecraft about the size of a large camper van.

During the Artemis II mission, NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, and the Canadian Space Agency’s Jeremy Hansen, will spend 10 days inside the Orion capsule after being blasted to space by the SLS rocket from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, hopefully next week.

Read more
It’s here! NASA reveals full livestream schedule for crewed moon mission
The coverage starts on Friday.
NASA's SLS lunar rocket on the launchpad at the Kennedy Space Center, with the moon shining brightly in the background.

The excitement is building with NASA now just a few days away from sending four astronauts on a voyage around the moon.

On Wednesday, the space agency shared its schedule for coverage of the final buildup and main event, including a Q&A with the astronauts this Friday, blast off on Wednesday, April 1, and regular updates as the crew make their way to the moon.

Read more
Peek inside NASA’s Mars habitat where humans train for life on the red planet
Four volunteers are staying in isolation for more than a year.
A scene inside NASA's Mars simulation habitat.

NASA has offered a sneak peek inside its Mars simulation habitat where four volunteers have now spent 150 days isolated from the outside world.

By living within the confines of the 1,700-square-foot Mars Dune Alpha habitat at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Ross Elder, Ellen Ellis, Matthew Montgomery, and James Spicer are helping NASA to better prepare for long-duration missions that will take humans into deep space.

Read more