Outer Space has a Smell 274
repapetilto writes "ISS Science Officer Don Pettit reports in his journal that outer space gives off a smell best described as "a rather pleasant sweet metallic sensation." Kind of odd considering smell is supposed to be due to volatilized chemical compounds."
Take a big wiff (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Take a big wiff (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Take a big wiff (Score:4, Funny)
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You'd even have a few seconds of useful consciousness to take a whiff and stick your head back in!
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Re:Implied Lisa? (Score:5, Funny)
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Or in case of asploding, Dan Savage.
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Obligatory Star Trek Reference (Score:5, Funny)
Chekov: "One parsec sir. Close enough to smell them."
Spock: "That is illogical, ensign. Oders cannot travel through the vacuum of space."
http://www.badmovies.org/tvshows/startrek/tribbles/tribbles1.wav [badmovies.org] (135 KB)
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At least that's what they did on Futurama.
Sounds Like Ozone (Score:5, Interesting)
When I was a teenager I read a lot of short stories. Especially all the sci-fi & horror ones like Ray Bradbury, Philip K. Dick or Stephen King. I don't recall which one it was but a character had a train set that had a short in it on the tracks. The arcing electricity would give off this same smell. I learned through this short story that this is an incidental way to produce ozone (O3) [wikipedia.org], a greenhouse gas. And that the smell is in fact a low amount of ozone. Perhaps you've detected it at the dentists office or while operating an engine? From the Wikipedia entry:
The human nose can be an extremely strong tool for some individuals, perhaps this is more than just psychosomatic? It would drive me crazy to never investigate this if I were in his shoes. It may seem trivial but sometimes a peculiar notion is what drives scientists make a novel discovery
Re:Sounds Like Ozone (Score:5, Funny)
If there's tiny molecules of ozone floating around in orbit of the earth, I'm certain that would be scientifically interesting.
Indeed. I'm sure scientists would be astounded to discover that there is a "layer" around the Earth comprised of "ozone".
Re:Sounds Like Ozone (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't worry, I'm already working on it. ::sprays on deodorant::
Re:Sounds Like Ozone (Score:4, Funny)
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"perhaps this is more than just psychosomatic?"
I would imagine so - even if somehow you were able to "smell" a complete vacuum, your own body (including the nasal passages themselves) will be giving off odors. If they are so subtle as to normally be overwhelmed by the usual natural background, that may be your first chance to detect them.
Based on all the sweaty hero-in-space-attacking-monolithic-fortress-of-evil-guy footage, however, I predict that most of the time space is rather sweaty and disgusti
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"perhaps this is more than just psychosomatic?"
I would imagine so - even if somehow you were able to "smell" a complete vacuum, your own body (including the nasal passages themselves) will be giving off odors. If they are so subtle as to normally be overwhelmed by the usual natural background, that may be your first chance to detect them.
Well, we get used to whatever's around. When I went backpacking for a few weeks in the desert of Utah, I stopped smelling my own B.O., but I gained the ability to smell peanut butter through two plastic bags, ten feet away. It was pretty sweet. I'm sure the same increasing sensitivity happens to astronauts who live in a mostly sterile, boring, environment.
Re:Sounds Like Ozone (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a commercial ozone generator that I bought to use after my basement flooded to kill the mold. I had it on a timer for a while to run for an hour at night. Power went out, the timer got offset, and I went down there during the day while it was on. One lungful and I had a sore throat for a week.
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Luckily it is also short lived. It rapidly breaks down into plain oxygen, and the smell goes away. I don't understand, though, how people can be in a room with one of those poorly made Ionic Breeze devices. They generate just enough ozone to drive me nuts. I don't even like walking by the outside of a Brookstone/Sharper Image store in the mall because of them.
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Re:Sounds Like Ozone (Score:5, Insightful)
perhaps the smell is coming from all the ionized molecules on their suits and gear.
Also, the space station is not entirely out of the atmosphere, is it? Isn't the top layer a lot of ionized gas as well - due to the same radiation sources?
It would be interesting to compare the molecules per cubic meter in the ISS airlock with the number of molecules per cubic meter a human nose can detect..
I hope he does continue to research this curiosity!
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Origin of Ozone in the Ozone layer [wikipedia.org]
Re:Sounds Like Ozone (Score:5, Funny)
Ozone... around the Earth?
You mean like some kind of... layer?
(Yes, I know, I know. Couldn't help it.
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Diff between pilots and scientists (Score:5, Insightful)
After over 40 years in space this is the first guy to bring this up?? Hm... Smells fishy if you ask me..
Reminds me of an anecdote from one the Apollo 17 astronauts: He noticed that moon dust smelled and wondered why no one had mentioned it before. Eventually he realized it was a cultural thing: In pilot culture, "out of the ordinary" can get you grounded, where "out of the ordinary" is what science culture is all about. And the early Apollo astronauts were all pilots, mostly test pilots.
It only takes one curious person to open a new door and most of us don't notice the door is there, even if we pass it by every day of our lives.
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I also arc-weld, and do all sorts of other welding, and I think the sweet smell you noticed is much more likely vaporization of the flux, filler rod, and base material, surface contaminants (or any combination of the above) than it is to be of ozone, because those are produced in much higher quantities than ozone, and here
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The lunar astronauts have several theories on the (perhaps related) phenomenon of the smell of 'fresh' moondust, and seem quite interested in having this investigated further:
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2006/30jan_smellofmoondust.htm [nasa.gov]
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...this is an incidental way to produce ozone (O3)
Arcing also produces a minuscule amount of tritium [wikipedia.org]. Normally, this would be completely harmless (Yes, it's a beta emitter and shouldn't be inhaled in large quantities, but a single small arc only generates a couple of molecules...) The exception to this is when you find yourself working with spark-gap switches [wikipedia.org] and somebody makes a tritium joke around an ES&H rep. It then becomes hugely hazardous because you'll find yourself spending hours doing paperwork and trying to explain radiation basics to li
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Good news, everyone! (Score:5, Funny)
local sources... (Score:5, Funny)
[Everyone looks at Zoidberg]
Dr. Zoidberg: Hooray! Now I'm the center of attention.
Re:Good news, everyone! (Score:5, Funny)
In space, no one can hear you scream... (Score:2)
but they can smell your bad breath.
Oblig Futurama (Score:4, Funny)
smelloscope (Score:3, Funny)
don't worry (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:smelloscope (Score:4, Funny)
Re:smelloscope (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe in the future, Uranus and Pluto will just be referred to by the phrase, "and the rest", like the professor and Mary Anne from Gilligan's Island.
outgassing of materials (Score:4, Insightful)
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Outer Space has a Smell
Dammit, I told you not to play "Pull my finger" while wearing a space suit!Houston, we have a problem. Send up some Bean-O.
Wasn't me (Score:2)
Maybe, maybe not.... (Score:2)
That's nothing compared to... (Score:2, Funny)
I hear (Score:2, Funny)
And now... ladies and gentlemen... Carrot Top!!!
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Nah, that's just Scotty's aftershave... (Score:2)
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Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Come on... (Score:5, Insightful)
Someone else said this wasn't "worthy" of Slashdot. Maybe that's true but it doesn't make it stupid. It's just one of those millions of things that doesn't require enormous analysis. Blame whoever submitted it and gave it the headline.
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Just like during sand storm, a cubic meter of air may contain a handful of sand at any time, but capture all sand that passes through a trap a square meter big carried by a 100km/h wind, and you'll have tons of it in no time.
Besides, thes
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Sir, I take my hat off to you.
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Well that apparent clusterfarge is actually apropos-- The RCA handbook uses cm^3, and the tube in question was rerally close to having a square inch of exposed plate surface.
And gas absorption is a surface phenomenon, so inches^2 does happen to be the right dimensionality.
He's writing about the *Experience*, not physics (Score:3, Interesting)
Of course vacuum doesn't have a smell, and it's much more likely that the smell is from the way space suits react to being in vacuum than gasses wafting up from earth getting stuck on them. Or it could be from some of those funky molds that grow on the space station. But that's not really relevant, because he's not writing about physics, he's writing about the experience of being in a space-ship, and smell is one of
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Indeed. Just like we'd hope the people posting to
doez it haz a flavor??? (Score:2, Funny)
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I'd say... (Score:2)
rj
Odd? What's Odd? (Score:2)
I clearly remember using trichlorethelene(sp?) as a teenager working on cars and remember the smell being not-so-bad. (Don't ask how we got it.) Automobile coolant is another one. Grease car owners also have the pleasure of french fries smell.
Burning auto brakes is gross though.
Professor Farnsworth was right! (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.gotfuturama.com/Information/Encyc-21-SmellOScope/ [gotfuturama.com]
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
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Propellants from Shuttle and Soyuz? (Score:2, Insightful)
Smell isn't caused by chemicals in the air (Score:5, Interesting)
If you take away the sense data, the brain is still interpreting something, namely the absence of data. It could be that this odor is simply how the brain handles a null dataset.
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Things IN space have a smell... (Score:2)
Perhaps the 'smell' wasnt that of space at all. The description of the 'smell' was one of being metallic, and noticing it while around the airlock.
Could this smell instead be from the materials that are coming in and out of spacecrew cabin. In space there will be more intense radiation and temperature extremes, which will affect the materials in question. Being bombarded by the radiation of outer space, that is normally blocked by the minimum shielding of the crew cabin, might just be enough to 'vaporize'
Nothing like the smell on ISS (Score:2, Interesting)
You know what they say... (Score:2)
pehaps it is not the smell of space (Score:2)
Perhaps the effects of unfiltered solar radiation, cosmic rays, etc cause
the suit materials to outgas some odor due to a change in the materials they are
made of.
obligatory 2001 (Score:3, Funny)
This kinda makes sense (Score:2)
Most of the welding I have done that has a "sweet, metallic smell" has been done with a gas welder. Flux welding stinks something awful! But the gases, depending on what gases are used, can have a very pleasant smell. You have to watch it though 'cause as nice as it might smell, it'll still make you woozie and probably causes dain bramage.
But the smell comes from the oxidation of the metal used in the welder and the s
So space does have a terrible secret!!! (Score:2)
E03
A more down to earth answer... (Score:3, Informative)
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Hydroponics will fix that (Score:2)
Easy to reproduce or falsify (Score:2)
Ahhhhh (Score:2)
Apollo astronauts experienced something similar... (Score:2)
Quantum mechanics at work in the nose? (Score:2)
The smell of space (Score:2)
The easiest way is to use a gravitational sink like a planet. But then it will be contaminated.
Anyhow - I wonder why this article was posted - it seems to attract more than the usual share of oddball flies (comments).
Swirly thing alert! (Score:2)
ISS Science Officer Don Pettit reports in his journal that outer space gives off a smell best described as "a rather pleasant sweet metallic sensation."
"I hate to go all technical on you, but... all hands on deck, swirly thing alert!"
"Where?"
"It's not on the radar yet - but I can smell it."
"Nothing here."
"Nothing on long-range. Sir, is it possible you could have made a mis-smelling?"
"Listen, butter-pat head, my nostril-hairs are vibrating faster than the springs on a Spaniard's honeymoon bed! I'm telling you, there's something out there!"
"Don't get your double-helix in a strict! No one's questioning your nasal integrity."
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"OH GOD! It smells like ozone, burned flesh, and Thai food!"