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From the [spacewalks] there really is a distinct smell of space when they come back in," It's like...something I haven't ever smelled before, but I'll never forget it. You know how those things stick with you."
In the past, astronauts have described the smell of space as something akin to gunpowder or ozone.
Source.
"It is really a strong smell," radioed Apollo 16 pilot Charlie Duke. "It has that taste -- to me, [of] gunpowder -- and the smell of gunpowder, too." On the next mission, Apollo 17, Gene Cernan remarked, "smells like someone just fired a carbine in here."
Originally posted by Clairaudience
Better leave your lighter on earth
The best description I can come up with is metallic; a rather pleasant sweet metallic sensation.
And it’s a uh, tough — you know, any aroma is tough to describe, but it has a distinct smell, and it’s sort of a burned-out, uh, after-the-fire, the next-morning-in-your-fireplace sort of smell.
Originally posted by Clickfoot
Originally posted by Clairaudience
Better leave your lighter on earth
and thus the question "what caused the big bang" was answered