Monday, July 23, 2012

Space smells like seared steak, hot metal, astronauts report (+video)

Astronauts returning from spacewalks frequently report a distinct odor clinging to their spacesuits and equipment.?

By Life's Little Mysteries Staff / July 23, 2012

Astronaut Bruce McCandless goes on a jet-pack powered spacewalk during a 1984 space shuttle Challenger mission. Astronauts returning from spacewalks often report an acrid, metallic odor clinging to their suits. Is that what space smells like?

NASA/AP

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Astronauts who have gone on spacewalks consistently speak of space's extraordinarily peculiar odor.

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They can't smell it while they're actually bobbing in it, because the interiors of their space suits just smell plastic-y. But upon stepping back into the space station and removing their helmets, they get a strong, distinctive whiff of the final frontier. The odor clings to their suit, helmet, gloves and tools.

Fugitives from the near-vacuum ? probably atomic oxygen, among other things ? the clinging particles have the acrid aroma of seared steak, hot metal and welding fumes. Steven Pearce, a chemist hired by NASA to recreate the space odor on Earth for astronaut training purposes,?said?the metallic aspect of the scent may come from high-energy vibrations of ions.

"It's like something I haven't ever smelled before, but I'll never forget it," NASA astronaut Kevin Ford said from orbit in 2009. [Space Sights and Smells Surprise Rookie Astronauts]

But astronauts don't dislike the sharp smell of space, necessarily. After a 2003 mission, astronaut Don Pettit described it this way on a NASA blog:

"It is hard to describe this smell; it is definitely not the olfactory equivalent to describing the palette sensations of some new food as 'tastes like chicken.' The best description I can come up with is metallic; a rather pleasant sweet metallic sensation. It reminded me of my college summers where I labored for many hours with an arc welding torch repairing heavy equipment for a small logging outfit. It reminded me of pleasant sweet smelling welding fumes. That is the smell of space."

The interior of the International Space Station smells a little more mundane. Pettit, who recently returned from a second six-month-long mission on the ISS,?told SPACE.com, "[The space station] smells like half machine-shop-engine-room-laboratory, and then when you're cooking dinner and you rip open a pouch of stew or something, you can smell a little roast beef."??

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Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/science/~3/bCkS8XcihWc/Space-smells-like-seared-steak-hot-metal-astronauts-report-video

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