Ares Progress Report For August
Huntsville AL (SPX) Aug 26, 2008 The Ares Projects continues to achieve major milestones and successes as NASA develops the next generation of launch systems -- the Ares I rocket and Ares V heavy lifter -- which will take us to the moon and beyond. Read the monthly Ares Update to stay informed about the Ares launch vehicle fleet. Find up-to-date information about the hardware being built, the latest testing and a detailed look at the Ares elements as they proceed through the design, review and development process.
Upper Stage Completes Preliminary Design Review This just-completed preliminary design review, conducted at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., looked at current designs for the upper stage to ensure that the planned technical approach will meet NASA's requirements for the vehicle. This review was part of a series of milestones that will occur before the actual flight hardware is built. Each major review provides more detailed requirements for the vehicle design to ensure the overall system can meet all NASA requirements for safe and reliable flight. The review process also identifies technical and management challenges and addresses ways to reduce potential risks as the project goes forward.
Ares Integrated Vehicle Preliminary Design Review Kick-off Detailed design presentations were given which focused on requirements and engineering, internal and external interfaces, integrated performance, avionics and software, crew safety and reliability, operability and supportability, test and verification, and overall project risk. The preliminary design review will conclude on Sept. 10 with an assessment of the Project's readiness to proceed to critical design review for the Ares I launch vehicle.
Ares I-X Critical Design Review Completed Hardware manufacturing continues for the flight vehicle, with individual hardware elements shipping to the Kennedy Space Center beginning in September. Ares I-X -- the first test flight of an Ares I design rocket -will provide the Ares I team with data and analysis on flight controllability, hardware, facilities and ground operations prior to the Ares I critical design review. The Ares I-X launch is planned for 2009.
Friction Stir Welding a Key Technology for Ares Rockets The robotic weld tool uses forging pressure and frictional heating to produce high-strength component bonds virtually free of defects. Friction stir welding transforms the Al-Li alloy from a solid state into a "plastic-like" state, and then methodically stirs the materials together under pressure to form a welded joint. Initial tests using gore panels from the space shuttle began in August with a demonstration weld using external tank hardware. Testing on Ares I components being fabricated on this unique machinery is set to begin later this year.
Y-Ring Delivery for Ares I Production This fixture, or clamp, will hold the y-rings in place while they are being welded to fuel tank domes. All domes have y-rings attached for welding to the barrel panels. The barrel panels comprise the major portion of the liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen tanks. The barrels are capped on either end by the forward and aft domes. The highly reliable and low cost friction stir welding process will be used to assemble different components of the upper stage of the Ares I to a greater degree than is used on the External Tank Program for the space shuttle.
Gore Panel Welds Successful The robotic weld tool will be used to develop the manufacturing techniques required to fabricate the tanks of the Ares I upper stage. This series of tests will lay the ground work for future work on the Ares I upper stage. The tool is critical for manufacturing the main propulsion test article, which will demonstrate the functionality of the upper stage. Back to Top
Thrust Oscillation Status In September they will brief the Exploration System Mission Directorate leadership at NASA Headquarters in Washington on the decision path. NASA managers will evaluate these recommendations and then move forward with the selected design and mitigation plan
2X Nozzle Testing -- Engineers Fine-tune Design Engineers must make the nozzle strong enough to withstand those uneven forces. Yet they must not risk over-designing it, which could add needless weight that detracts from the launch vehicle's overall payload capability. Testing at the Marshall Center's Nozzle Test Facility enables Pratt and Whitney Rocketdyne design engineers to characterize these side loads and apply this test data to computer analyses used to design the nozzle to withstand the side loads. Subscale nozzle test articles were developed to simulate the J-2X nozzle -- both with and without the turbine exhaust gas injection. In the J-2X engine exhaust, gas from the turbines that pump propellants to the combustion chamber will be injected around the nozzle extension to provide a cooling barrier against the hotter combustion chamber exhaust, as well as provide additional engine thrust. This film coolant flow has a noticeable impact on the nozzle side loads. The recent tests simulated rocket exhaust flow, using warm air instead of hot rocket exhaust -- a process termed "cold flow" testing. Since testing began in March, more than 1,000 J-2X nozzle start simulations have been performed. Test results to date have benefited the design by showing that the side loads are actually significantly less than the original analytical predictions, thus enabling designers to reduce the weight of the nozzle and nozzle extension designs. Engineers continue to evaluate the data obtained to further refine the predicted loads for J-2X nozzle and nozzle extension. Follow-on testing is planned through September, with the objective to obtain data on the film coolant's thermal effectiveness. Related Links Ares Launch Vehicles Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News
Going Looney In Space Moffett Field CA (SPX) Aug 25, 2008 As NASA prepares to send humans back to the moon and then on to Mars, psychologists are exploring the challenges astronauts will face on missions that will be much longer and more demanding than previous space flights. |
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