Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 14
Astronauts Report Metallic Smell After Spacewalks as Orbital Exposure Alters Suits and Tools
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 14

Astronauts Report Metallic Smell After Spacewalks as Orbital Exposure Alters Suits and Tools

2 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 14

Summary

  • Astronauts repeatedly say suits and gear brought back from spacewalks carry a sharp metallic odor once the airlock is repressurized and helmets come off.
  • Low Earth orbit exposes outer surfaces to atomic oxygen, ultraviolet radiation, charged particles and vacuum, likely creating reactive residues that become noticeable only when cabin air returns.
  • NASA veterans including Don Pettit and Scott Kelly have likened the smell to seared steak, hot metal, welding fumes or burning metal—consistent analogies rather than a single identified compound.
  • NASA has treated the reports seriously enough that accounts link a training-scent recreation effort to British chemist Steve Pearce, underscoring that the odor is a repeatable effect of gear crossing from vacuum into air.

Insights

What specific chemicals create the 'space smell' on suits, and could they pose a hidden health risk to astronauts?
How will material decay in deep space alter astronaut safety on future long-duration missions to Mars?