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Moon Astronauts Forced to Do It in Bags as “Burning Odor” Emanates From Toilet

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Why This Matters

The issues with NASA's new space toilet during the Artemis 2 mission highlight the ongoing challenges of developing reliable life support systems for long-duration space travel. These technical setbacks underscore the importance of robust, fail-safe designs to ensure astronaut safety and comfort on future missions to the Moon and beyond.

Key Takeaways

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NASA’s historic Artemis 2 mission launched without a hitch last week, sending the first astronauts toward the Moon since 1972 — but their journey hasn’t been without hiccups.

Their space toilet, in particular — the space agency’s newfangled Universal Waste Management System (UWMS) — has turned out to be a considerable pain point.

Mere hours into their ten-day trip around the Moon, the toilet jammed, with NASA officials delivering the crew an unfortunate piece of news: it was only accepting solid waste.

While the issue was ultimately corrected when NASA astronaut Christina Koch realized the pump hadn’t been primed with enough liquid, the interplanetary commode broke down once again over the weekend.

This time, “it’s an issue with dumping the waste out of the toilet,” as flight director Judd Frieling told reporters on Saturday, as quoted by CNN. “And so it appears to me that we probably have some frozen urine in the vent line.”

And in the midst of it all, yet another issue with the toilet manifested itself in a way that’s particularly alarming in the closed confines of a spacecraft.

“For me, it was some sort of burning odor, and then it was definitely in the hygiene bay,” Canadian Space Agency astronaut and mission specialist Jeremy Hansen told reporters late Friday. “And when I opened up the hygiene bay, the rest of the crew could smell it pretty much immediately.”

The odor was like “when you turn on a heater that’s been sitting for a while and… you smell that burnt smell that comes from that,” Hansen explained. “And I do think it smells similar to that.”

Ground control suspects the odor was caused by insulation around the door of the toilet heating up.

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