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Space Style: Axiom and Prada have officially introduced a jointly developed spacesuit during the recent International Astronautical Congress held in Milan, Italy. The suit is almost ready for action, though it is still undergoing testing procedures and simulations in prohibitive conditions.

American private space company Axiom and Italian luxury brand Prada announced a partnership to design a new spacesuit for the NASA Artemis program in 2023. The fruits of that labor are beginning to appear. The Axiom Extravehicular Mobility Unit (AxEMU) is almost complete, and the two companies have teased the quasi-definitive design a year before actual astronauts will get to wear it.

While working on the prototype, Axiom staffers covered the AxEMU with a dark layer to protect the company's proprietary technology. However, the finished suit is a "white material" that helps reflect heat and protects astronauts from high temperatures and lunar dust.

Prada didn't just bring Italian style to the AxEMU project. The company used innovative sewing techniques and itssignificant expertise in working with different materials to bridge what Axiom describes as the gap between engineered functionality and aesthetics. The AxEMU suit looks stylish while remaining fully equipped for space exploration. The companies claim that it is also quite comfortable.

The suit accommodates a "wide range" of crewmember sizes, with enhanced flexibility, mobility, and safety compared to classic NASA spacesuit designs. Its most interesting modern features include 4G/LTE communication capabilities, biometric monitoring, and a new control interface. The gloves and boots are custom-fit and designed to withstand lunar temperatures and terrain conditions.

The AxEMU suit can provide astronauts with enough oxygen to perform spacewalks for eight hours or more. It also has several redundant systems, an onboard diagnostic computer, and other innovations for performing limited scientific tests during moonwalks. The AxEMU suit employs a monolithic design, with a single "foundational architecture" that allows future designs to evolve and scale to NASA's future exploration programs.

The US agency plans to employ AxEMU for the first time during the Artemis III mission in 2025. American and European astronauts will return to walk on the Moon for the first time after the abrupt end of the Apollo program, preparing humanity for even grander space exploration goals like Mars and deep space. The AxEMU suit is almost ready for service, though Axiom plans to further examine the device with crewed underwater tests before 2025.

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I feel like space exploration just made a circle. Nazi German officers were dressed by Hugo Boss, and then Werner von Braun (who was at least once photographed wearing It for formal occasions) was taken to US to build It's space program.
;-)
 
I'm sure the Moon people silently judging the attire of Earth astronauts will be highly impressed
 
Seems everyone wants to be in the space program after seeing Amazon and SpaceX making the bucks. What's next? customized leather spaceship chairs with your name embroidered on it? If that ever happens I hope the astronauts can take them home.
 
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In the meantime millions of Americans struggling to make ends meet. Perhaps instead of useless Moon and Mars bullshit programs creating jobs and making salaries liveable is a better idea.
 
I had a different comment ready until I read this:

...innovative sewing techniques and its significant expertise in working with different materials...

Whew!
 
That visor needs a big f-ng smiley.
 
I'll pretend I didn't read that.
Why? The Apollo era suits were designed by a bra company. It requires expertise to know how to fit the various materials together while incorpoating all necessary tech. Who better than clothing experts?
 
I find it a bit surprising and disappointing that after so many years and millions of new stronger materials invented, these suits did not shrink in size. no, I get it, the weight is not a problem on the moon, but look how bulky it is. How come could they not make it thinner? Did they just copy and paste last successful suits?
 
I find it a bit surprising and disappointing that after so many years and millions of new stronger materials invented, these suits did not shrink in size. no, I get it, the weight is not a problem on the moon, but look how bulky it is. How come could they not make it thinner? Did they just copy and paste last successful suits?
The last suits on the moon were not very good for mobility, these ones will be far more flexible. They have to be big and bulky to withstand the pressure differences. outside is a vacuum, inside is squishy and needs to be kept in one piece.
 

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