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See an Inflatable Astronaut Habitat Blow Up Until It Pops

Lockheed Martin is putting a new habitat design through its paces, and that includes blowing it open.

Amanda Kooser
Freelance writer Amanda C. Kooser covers gadgets and tech news with a twist for CNET. When not wallowing in weird gear and iPad apps for cats, she can be found tinkering with her 1956 DeSoto.
Amanda Kooser
2 min read
An inflatable habitat prototype looks a bit like the top of a microphpone. Its roundish and on a stand with blue sheeting above it.
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An inflatable habitat prototype looks a bit like the top of a microphpone. Its roundish and on a stand with blue sheeting above it.

Lockheed Martin blew this inflatable habitat prototype to smithereens and it went very well.

Lockheed Martin

It's costly to haul materials into space. That's why inflatable habitats are so alluring. They can pack down small and then expand into comfortable living and working spaces. But they need to be tough to stand up to the rigors of life in orbit, on the moon or even on Mars. How tough? Lockheed Martin blew up an inflatable habitat prototype to test its limits.

The company performed a burst test that pushed the prototype structure into oblivion. It finally blew apart at 285 psi, over six times its maximum operating pressure. That means the test was a huge success. Check out the spectacular footage:

The test took place at a Lockheed Martin facility in Colorado. Sensors and cameras monitored the action, giving researchers lots of data to work with.

The International Space Station already has an inflatable room in use. Lockheed Martin wants to take the concept to new places. "This tech demo is the first step in proving out our inflatable habitat design, which we are confident will be one of the key enablers to make human life in space easier and allow humans to explore further into space than ever before," systems engineer Tyler Muma said in a Lockheed Martin statement.

The habitat is part of NASA's NextSTEP program, a public-private partnership aimed at developing deep-space exploration technologies, including habitation systems. The design could be adapted for use in orbit on a space station or put in place as a surface dwelling or storage space on the moon or Mars. Need some elbow room while you're exploring other worlds? No problem. Just inflate it.