"Tan Lines on Procyon IV Really Suck"
Astro-geologist Dr. Janet Carter will eventually admit that the first time she did a planet-walk without her BioSuit outside Forward Observation, Research, and Terraforming Station (FORTS) Aurora, it was done on a dare and she was slightly drunk at the time. However, the atmosphere on the planetoid Procyon IV (nicknamed "Artemis" by its inhabitants) was predominantly Argon gas: too inert to support any kind of life, while blocking most harmful UV radiation and preventing surface impacts of asteroids or meteors. She had long theorized that it would be perfectly safe to work on the surface without a standard-issue BioSuit, although she definitely didn't expect to prove her own theories with only a makeshift swimsuit, her CG09 breathing and life-support apparatus, and a stiff buzz.
(How it was shot: orange filter in front of an LED light on the left side, and one extra, undiffused light source from above, which you can see reflected in her helmet. Dr. Carter's right hand was angled until it blocked most of the glare coming from the left. This turned into my submission.)
"Tan Lines on Procyon IV Really Suck"
Astro-geologist Dr. Janet Carter will eventually admit that the first time she did a planet-walk without her BioSuit outside Forward Observation, Research, and Terraforming Station (FORTS) Aurora, it was done on a dare and she was slightly drunk at the time. However, the atmosphere on the planetoid Procyon IV (nicknamed "Artemis" by its inhabitants) was predominantly Argon gas: too inert to support any kind of life, while blocking most harmful UV radiation and preventing surface impacts of asteroids or meteors. She had long theorized that it would be perfectly safe to work on the surface without a standard-issue BioSuit, although she definitely didn't expect to prove her own theories with only a makeshift swimsuit, her CG09 breathing and life-support apparatus, and a stiff buzz.
(How it was shot: orange filter in front of an LED light on the left side, and one extra, undiffused light source from above, which you can see reflected in her helmet. Dr. Carter's right hand was angled until it blocked most of the glare coming from the left. This turned into my submission.)