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The Smell of Space

post #1 of 19
Thread Starter 
From http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/station/...ronicles4.html

Quote:
The Smell of Space
Few people have experienced traveling into space. Even fewer have experienced the smell of space. Now this sounds strange, that a vacuum could have a smell and that a human being could live to smell that smell. It seems about as improbable as listening to sounds in space, yet space has a definite smell. Being creatures of an atmosphere, we can only smell space indirectly. Sort of like the way a pit viper smells by waving its tongue in the air and thenpressing it to the roof of its mouth where sensors process the molecules that have been adsorbed onto the waggling appendage. I had the pleasure of operating the airlock for two of my crewmates while they went on several space walks. Each time, when I repressed the airlock, opened the hatch and welcomed two tired workers inside, a peculiar odor tickled my olfactory senses. At first I couldn't quite place it. It must have come from the air ducts that re-pressed the compartment. Then I noticed that this smell was on their suit, helmet, gloves, and tools. It was more pronounced on fabrics than on metal or plastic surfaces. 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.

How long before we see a fragrance having "space smell"?
post #2 of 19
Thanks for the link, great stuff!
post #3 of 19
Wow! Thats neat.

I had also heard the inside of the Mir Space Station was rather rank with BO/locker room.

"This looks like a job for Comme des Garcons!"
post #4 of 19
As a fan of NASA and the whole space program...I would love to sample a "space" scent...
I can only imagine.
post #5 of 19
That's incredible! Thanks for the link. The first scent that came to my mind while reading was Acier Aluminum. I would love to know exactly what it really smells like.

I agree with Bromo, though--this certainly looks like a job for CdG.
post #6 of 19
Wow, that's super cool. More smell on fabrics that come through the air lock. I love it.
post #7 of 19
Very interesting article - thanks for sharing
post #8 of 19
I wonder how hard it would be for BN to try to hire someone to concoct such a scent? I am looking at International Flavors and Fragrances website ...

Hmmmm ......
post #9 of 19
Fantastic stuff, thanks for posting.
post #10 of 19
The smell of space? Joop! In space no one can hear you scream.
post #11 of 19
The ISS orbits in the upper ionosphere which is not really "empty" space yet. It is full of negative ions. I imagine the smell would be similar to an ionic/ozonic smell like that which accumulates around high-voltage apparatuses (the author mentions arc welding). I have smelled this smell around ion generators, new electronic circuit boards and other electronic components, and some fresh-out-of-the-box plastic products. I think a few of the typical ozonic/aquatic frags would come close.
post #12 of 19
Tangentially related-

Im too new to frags to pick out most notes, so I make do with random free associations. The other day I took Dreamer for a test drive, and the emptiness of space was totally the phrase that popped into my head. That and parked in an automatic car wash, listening to Bowies Space Oddity.
post #13 of 19
sweet metalic hmmm.. that reminds me of Blue Jeans??? ... well thanks for the article Mostapha
post #14 of 19
Great article.

I agree with you guys, this smell sounds exactly like something CdG has already attempted or could attempt.
post #15 of 19
Its definitely something that should try to be re-created for the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum - it would be a great addition to the exhibit - a room where you can walk in and "smell" space.

Thanks for the article.

The author uses the word "sweet" which really caught me by surprise, I dont' know why...
post #16 of 19
Quote:
Originally Posted by Bromo33333 View Post

I wonder how hard it would be for BN to try to hire someone to concoct such a scent? I am looking at International Flavors and Fragrances website ...

Hmmmm ......

Somehow the perfumer would first need to experience the odor him/herself, I would think. And what would it be called? Star Trek No. 5?

When I read the first couple of sentences in the article, I thought, "What a load of bunk!", but the more I read the more I started to think of possible ways that space could have a smell. More precisely, I imagine that microparticles in space (which isn't a perfect vacuum) adhere to surfaces and then are wafted up into the astronauts' noses by air currents in the space station. The particles are probably mostly metals and ores blasted off of moons and planets by meteor impacts, and by comets traversing the earth's path. It might also have a more terrestrial origin - exhaust from the space station itself. I wonder if NASA knows what it is? Seems like something they'd be very interested in, especially since astronauts are being exposed to it.
post #17 of 19
hmmm I want a perfume that wouls smell exactly like that!!!
post #18 of 19
Quote:
Originally Posted by Nicolas V View Post

That's incredible! Thanks for the link. The first scent that came to my mind while reading was Acier Aluminum. I would love to know exactly what it really smells like.

I agree with Bromo, though--this certainly looks like a job for CdG.


Wouldn't that be Space-ier Aluminum?

TNMA
post #19 of 19
Quote:
Originally Posted by Snafoo View Post

Somehow the perfumer would first need to experience the odor him/herself, I would think. And what would it be called? Star Trek No. 5?

When I read the first couple of sentences in the article, I thought, "What a load of bunk!", but the more I read the more I started to think of possible ways that space could have a smell. More precisely, I imagine that microparticles in space (which isn't a perfect vacuum) adhere to surfaces and then are wafted up into the astronauts' noses by air currents in the space station. The particles are probably mostly metals and ores blasted off of moons and planets by meteor impacts, and by comets traversing the earth's path. It might also have a more terrestrial origin - exhaust from the space station itself. I wonder if NASA knows what it is? Seems like something they'd be very interested in, especially since astronauts are being exposed to it.

YEs - it really sounds like the smell of ions - I have an electrostatic air cleaner, and when it has been freshly cleaned, for about 10-2 days the house gets a sweet ion smell. I am wondering if charged particles of nickel, iron, rocks, silicon embedded in nylon and plastic would be the primary smell.
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