New spacecraft for NASA
NASA prepares hardware for astronaut escape system test.
Provided by NASA
A NASA employee inspects Orion's crew module mock-up after many of the panels were temporarily fastened to the exsisting hardware for a fit check. NASA [View Larger Image] Returning humans to the Moon by 2020 may seem like a distant goal, but NASA's Constellation Program already has scheduled the first test flight toward that goal to take place in less than 12 months. The Constellation Program is developing a new space transportation system to travel beyond low Earth orbit, expanding human exploration of the solar system and extending human reach to the moon and Mars. The 90-second flight will not leave Earth's atmosphere, but it will be an important first step toward demonstrating how NASA intends to build safety into its next generation of spacecraft, including the Ares I and V rockets and the Orion crew capsule. The first in a series of unmanned abort tests, known as Pad Abort-1 or PA-1, is scheduled for late 2008 at the U.S. Army's White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. |
Langley engineers and technicians work on the "Pad Abort-1 flight test article." The mock-up started to take shape once vertical beams were fabricated and attached to the existing hardware. NASA [View Larger Image] Orion is the Constellation Program's new crew exploration vehicle, set to carry as many as four crew members to lunar orbit and return its crew safely to Earth after missions to the moon's surface. The 16.5-foot (5-meter) wide, cone-shaped capsule also will provide transport services to the International Space Station for as many as six crewmembers. But before launching to the Moon or to the International Space Station, system tests on Earth have to prove the technologies work. The pad abort test will simulate an emergency on the launch pad. Upon command from a nearby control center, a dummy Orion crew module, which would sit on top of a rocket for an actual launch, will be ejected directly from the launch pad by its rocket-propelled launch abort system to about one mile in altitude and nearly one mile downrange. |
A side panel is bent into the proper shape to be attached to the side of the simulated crew module. NASA [View Larger Image] Engineers and technicians at Langley designed and fabricated the structural shell of the simulated crew module for the first pad abort test and now are conducting a series of ground checks on the structure. The crew module simulator, as it is called, accurately replicates the size, outer shape and mass characteristics of the Orion crew module. "The next step is to ship the completed crew module simulator to Dryden, where they will outfit it with the smarts, the computers, the electronics, the instrumentation, all the systems that need to work in conjunction with the structure," says Phil Brown, manager of the Langley Orion Flight Test Article Project. |
A NASA employee inspects the crew module mock-up after many of the panels were temporarily fastened to the existing hardware for a fit check. NASA [View Larger Image] During the pad abort test sequence, the escape system's main abort motor will fire for several seconds, rapidly lifting the simulated crew module from the test launch pad, after which the escape system will detach, and three 116-foot-diameter parachutes will deploy to slow the module for landing. The test will provide early data for design reviews to follow and will be followed by an ascent abort test in 2009 and a second pad abort test scheduled for 2010, both at White Sands. A parallel series of higher-altitude launch tests will commence at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida in 2009. |
Langley engineering technicians continue work on the simulated Orion crew module. Mounted to the top of the mock-up is the PA-1 Forward Bay Structure, the component that will hold parachutes used in the abort test to slow the crew module for landing. NASA [View Larger Image] In addition to Langley, Dryden and Kennedy, the Orion Project launch abort system team and the abort flight test team includes members from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston and NASA's Glenn Research Center near Cleveland, as well as Orion Project prime contractor, Lockheed Martin of Denver; and its subcontractor, Orbital Sciences Inc. of Dulles, Virginia. |
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