Hank.Walker@CMU-CS-VLSI.ARPA@sri-unix.UUCP (08/25/83)
The idea of the skin-tight metal space suit comes from an editorial by John Campbell in a 1968-1970 Analog magazine. This editorial also described other neat objects such as microphones that would work from DC to megahertz. The idea of the skin-tight metal space suit has been used in many other SF stories, particularly those appearing in Analog.
davidl@tekecs.UUCP (David Levine) (08/29/83)
The "Belter Skintight" space suit was invented and tested in the early days of the American space program. It was made of a tough knit fabric which supplied the wearer's own skin with sufficient support to withstand the internal pressure aginst vacuum, and provided a built-in temperature control system using the wearer's sweat evaporating through the suit. It was fitted using a measuring device like a giant paper comb and required custom-made pads to fill the body's hollows (armpits and crotch) where the suit couldn't fit close enough. This suit was tested in vacuum chambers and was found to give comparable protection and superior mobility compared to the multi-layer pressure suits used today. Why was it not used? I don't recall exactly, but I think it was political. This information comes from a science fact article by Jerry Pournelle in Destinies magazine/book about two (??) years ago. Dr. Pournelle, if you read this, could you post any new information to the net? -- David D. Levine (...decvax!tektronix!tekecs!davidl) [UUCP] (...tekecs!davidl.tektronix@rand-relay) [ARPA]
okie@ihuxs.UUCP (09/02/83)
I hate to sound like a "school marm" -- but Niven's skintight suits are *not* metal. Read "The Patchwork Girl" for a description. They are fabric, and can be because they *are* skintight. B.K.Cobb BTL, Naperville, IL