Extra-vehicular activity
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There is more information available on this subject at Extra-vehicular activity on the English Wikipedia. |
Extra-vehicular activity, often abbreviated simply to EVA, is the term applied to external operations by specialist personnel in a vacuum environment outside of a spaceship.
Usage
Human operation
Pressurized suits are a necessity during EVA operations due to the vacuum of space. In addition, thruster packs are needed for maneuvering when not tethered to a spacecraft. Combat EVAs pose a significantly greater risk to those performing it, due to the chance of suit decompression in the vacuum if hit by bullets, shrapnel, etc. Civilian welders and technicians perform EVAs in order to repair ships, such as that performed upon the UNSC Gettysburg in the Eridanus system.[1] The UNSC also employs specialized EVA-equipped engineers on their warships such as the UNSC Spirit of Fire to perform repairs and maintenance work on the outer hull. Specialized zero-G vehicles are also used to perform EVA, such as the Open Frame 92/Extra-Vehicular Activity.[2]
The pilot variant of the UNSC Marine Corps Battle Dress Uniform was generally equipped with extra-vehicular activity integration for any exoatmospheric operations.[3] The Summa Deep Space Incident sparked multiple projects related to research of EVA equipment, including the MJOLNIR EVA variant, designed for better extra-vehicular activity performance.[4]
SPARTAN-II Blue Team has performed several notable combat EVAs: At the Battle of Chi Ceti in 2525, they inserted into a Covenant warship, planted a missile warhead and were extracted by a D77-TC Pelican;[5] At the Fall of Reach, in 2552, they performed another EVA in order to purge a ship's NAV database on an orbital station in accordance with the Cole Protocol.[6] John-117 of Blue Team performed an EVA mission aboard the Ascendant Justice while in an anomalous slipspace dimension,[7] the first known slipspace EVA and another at Earth, clearing hostiles off the outside of the Cairo orbital defense platform and removing and re-purposing a Covenant antimatter bomb.[8]
By 2554, extensive EVA training was common for all Spartans.[9]
Covenant operation
The Covenant also perform extra-vehicular activity. Sangheili Rangers use specialized vacuum-sealed armor to protect themselves from the effects of a vacuum environment, in order to plant antimatter charges and support boarding parties.[6][8] Kig-Yar Rangers in vacuum suits were also used, though their suits were more easily damaged than a Sangheili suit as they were built for external maintenance and lacked personal energy shielding.[10][11] Sangheili, Kig-Yar, and Unggoy Rangers were employed by Jul 'Mdama's reformed Covenant faction for extra-vehicular activity purposes.[12]
Gallery
A non-combat vacuum suit in 2558.
- MarineVacSuit.png
A UNSC Marine during an EVA operation.
- VacMarinesFight.png
UNSC Marines engaged in EVA combat.
- Jackal Rangers.jpg
Kig-Yar Rangers fighting in a vacuum.
List of appearances
- Halo: The Fall of Reach (First appearance)
- Halo: First Strike
- Halo 2
- Halo: Ghosts of Onyx
- Halo: Uprising
- Halo 3
- Halo: The Cole Protocol
- Halo Wars: Genesis
- Halo Wars
- Halo: Legends
- Halo: Reach
- Halo: Fall of Reach
- Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary
- Halo 4
- Halo: Initiation
- Halo: Escalation
- Halo: Mortal Dictata
- Halo 2: Anniversary
- Hunt the Truth
- Halo 5: Guardians
- Halo Mythos
- Halo: Fractures
- Halo: Retribution
- Halo: Bad Blood
- Halo: Fireteam Raven
- Halo: Silent Storm
Sources
- ^ Halo: First Strike, page 90 (2003 edition); page 336 (2010 edition)
- ^ Halo Legends, The Package
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia, page 57 (2011 edition)
- ^ Halo 3, in-game armor permutation description
- ^ Halo: The Fall of Reach, page 152
- ^ a b Halo: The Fall of Reach, page 308
- ^ Halo: First Strike, page 280 (2003 edition); page 114 (2010 edition)
- ^ a b Halo 2, campaign level Cairo Station
- ^ Halo: Fractures, Lessons Learned
- ^ Halo: Contact Harvest, pages 124-125
- ^ Halo Wars: Genesis
- ^ Halo 4 Interactive Guide