Don’t fuck with moon dust. No seriously, do not fuck with moon dust.

Absent any moisture or atmosphere, millennia of asteroid impacts have turned lunar regolith (soil) into a fine powder of razor sharp, glass-like particles. What’s more, the solar wind imparts an electric charge on the dust, causing it to cling to any and every surface it touches through static electricity. On earth, sand tends to get smoother over time as wind and water tumble the grains about, eroding their sharpness. Not so on the moon – lunar dust is sharp and deadly. This is
Not A Good Time if you’re an explorer looking to visit our celestial neighbor.

During Apollo, the astronauts faced a plethora of unexpected issues caused by dust. It clung to spacesuits and darkened them enough that exposure to sunlight overheated the life support systems. Dust got in suit joints and on suit visors, damaging them. It ate away layers of boot lining. It covered cameras. Upon returning to the cabin, astronauts attempting to brush it off damaged their suit fabric and sent the dust airborne, where it remained suspended in the air due to low gravity.

Inhaling moon dust causes mucus membranes to swell; every Apollo astronaut who stepped foot on the moon reported symptoms of “Lunar Hay Fever.” Sneezing, congestion, and a “smell of burnt gunpowder” took days to subside. Later Apollo missions even sent a special dust brush with the team to help clean each other and equipment. We don’t know exactly how dangerous the stuff is, but lunar regolith simulants suggest it might destroy lung and brain cells with long-term exposure.
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In fact the dust is so nasty that it destroyed the vacuum seals of sample return containers. We no longer have any accurate samples of lunar dust, “Every sample brought back from the moon has been contaminated by Earth’s air and humidity […] The chemical and electrostatic properties of the soil no longer match what future astronauts will encounter on the moon.”
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Whats worse, the solar-charged dust gets thrown up off the moon’s surface via electrostatic forces. The moon doesn’t technically have an atmosphere, but it does have a thin cloud of sharp dust itching to cling to anything it can find.

And it probably isn’t just the moon. “A 2005 NASA study listed 20 risks that required further study before humans should commit to a human Mars expedition, and ranked "dust" as the number one challenge.”
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The coolest solution I’ve heard about in next-gen spacesuit design is a mesh of woven wires layered into the suit. When activated, the wire mesh would form an anti-static electric field that repels dust. Quite literally a force field.
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#astronomy #apollo #moon #lunardust

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@AnarchoCatgirlism

For comparison here is moon dust side by side with similar dust/sand particles from various places on earth.

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@AmpBenzScientist

Yes that is what I have heard. It supposedly is similar to asbestos in both its effect and mechanism of action.

@AnarchoCatgirlism

@freemo @AnarchoCatgirlism We should have just stopped at telling the government that there's useful material on the moon.

I would expect it to also be similar to silicosis.

My grandpa died of that, it's a terrible way to go. You end up having your lungs sliced up from the inside and the scar tissue slowly takes away your ability to breathe.

@sj_zero

So very hard to hear that. My grandmother died of COPD (not asbestos related). It is a horrible thing to see or experience suffocating to death :(

@AmpBenzScientist @AnarchoCatgirlism

@freemo @sj_zero @AnarchoCatgirlism I've inhaled silica and asbestos, thankfully I won't have any issues with it. Every man in my family has died from folding ladder related injuries. I did no research on that but I just said it.

Such impulse control issues are very common in my family. Maybe there will be a way to 3D print organs that last in the near future. It should only take 10 or so tries to get a decent print.

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