This is how NASA banishes odors in space

How do space agencies keep the International Space Station from smelling like a sweaty locker room? NASA engineer Robert Frost and retired astronaut Clayton C. Anderson reveal a few secrets.

Retired astronaut Clayton C. Anderson aboard the International Space Station.Clayton C. Anderson

Humans eat smelly things. Our bodies produce stinky outputs. And if we build up a sweat, our clothes start to smell too.

The International Space Station is a big, climate-controlled environment that houses six people at any given time. As you can probably imagine, these humans produce odors just like the rest of us. So how do NASA and other space agencies make the International Space Station a decent-smelling place to live for those stuck there for months at a time?

NASA engineer Robert Frost took to Quora to answer that very question, and his answer is filled with all sorts of engineering goodness. In the ISS' service module, for example, a micropurification unit removes both low- and high-molecular weight contaminants, and a "Trace Contaminant Control Subassembly "does this in the lab environment. Both are serviced regularly and help to keep the ISS smelling fresh.

"Either one is capable of providing the trace contaminant removal for the entire ISS," Frost said.

Astronaut Clayton C. Anderson, who's spent more than 167 days in space, including 159 aboard the ISS, said that though these systems work nearly flawlessly, that doesn't stop some smells from permeating the ISS. Anderson noted that if sweaty clothes aren't dried properly, the air smells a bit like a locker room.

"Oleg Kotov, my Expedition 15 Russian crewmate and our Soyuz commander, liked to stash his used workout clothes above the forward-facing FGB (Functional Cargo Block, Russian Module) hatch," Anderson said. "This was not my favorite choice for the stowage of sweaty workout gear as there was not a very good chance that they would dry out effectively."

Continued Anderson: "I chose to put my nasty shorts/socks/T-shirt onto a handrail in the US segment's Node 1 module. This handrail was near an A/C vent, meaning fresh, cold air would blow across my sweaty laundry for many hours until I donned them -- dry as a bone -- the next day. Decreasing their ability to generate any 'locker room' odors, that special placement also allowed for our environmental systems to easily soak up my sweat and turn it into drinking water for later!"

Some foods, like versions of seafood gumbo, were actually banned from several shuttle missions, and it could take the ISS' systems a few hours to clear that fishy smell out of the hull.

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This is how NASA banishes odors in space

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