Apollo heat shields to help design NASA’’s next gen exploration vehicles
October 12th, 2008 - 10:57 am ICT by ANI - Send to a friend:Washington, Oct 12 (ANI): The heat shields used on the Apollo missions 35 years ago, are now being analyzed by NASA scientists to help with the development and engineering process of the next generation of exploration vehicles. According to a report in Science Daily, scientists from NASA uncrated the heat shields used on the Apollo missions to help in the design of vehicles for the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle. The Orion teams included members from both NASA’’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California. “We started working together at the end of June to track down any Apollo-era heat shields that they had in storage,” said Elizabeth Pugel of the Detector Systems Branch at NASA Goddard. The Orion team was interested in the archived heat shield material because it included an Apollo heat shield that flew into Low Earth Orbit and returned to Earth on August 26, 1966. “We are examining the design of the carrier structure (the metal structure that connects the heat shield to the vessel that contains the astronauts) and the heat shield material’’s thermal response,” Pugel said. “The Smithsonian has been generous in their providing large pieces of the heat shield that we will be doing destructive and non-destructive testing on during the months before Orion’’s Preliminary Design Review,” said Matthew Gasch, a research scientist at NASA Ames. “This information will further our confidence in our design and materials development,” he added. Orion will be capable of carrying crew and cargo to the space station. It will be able to rendezvous with a lunar landing module and an Earth departure stage in low-Earth orbit to carry crews to the moon and, one day, to Mars-bound vehicles assembled in low-Earth orbit. Orion will be the Earth entry vehicle for lunar and Mars returns. Orion’’s design will borrow its shape from the capsules of the past, but takes advantage of 21st century technology in computers, electronics, life support, propulsion and heat protection systems. Making its first flights early in the next decade, Orion is part of the Constellation Program to send human explorers back to the moon, and then onward to Mars and other destinations in the solar system. (ANI)
Related Stories
- NASA developing nuclear fission to use on moon’s surface - September 11, 2008
- NASA working on unpiloted Orion to rescue astronauts lost in space - December 21, 2007
- NASA restores 42-yr-old image of Earth rising above the lunar surface - November 14, 2008
- Man aims to revisit the Moon, this time to stay - July 22, 2008
- NASA takes step forward for establishing a lunar outpost - June 24, 2008
- Cutting edge trash dryer to take care of rotten space waste - November 19, 2008
- NASA developing navigation system for moon (Lead) - July 22, 2008
- NASA’’s next Moon mission successfully completes thermal vacuum testing - December 23, 2008
- Boot camp on Moon to prepare astronauts for mission to Mars - October 2, 2008
- Chandrayaan’s journey to lunar orbit (To go with India successfully puts spacecraft…) - November 8, 2008
- 1 in 10,000 chance of asteroid striking Mars, say NASA scientists - January 11, 2008
- Chandrayaan camera clicks earth from deep space - October 31, 2008
- W. Bengal teen bags the first position in NASA-sponsored contest - October 11, 2008
- Chandrayaan pushed closer to lunar orbit - October 29, 2008
- Chandrayaan-1 enters lunar orbit - November 8, 2008
- National
- ames research center
- apollo missions
- earth entry vehicle
- exploration vehicles
- goddard space flight
- goddard space flight center
- greenbelt maryland
- heat shields
- low earth orbit
- moffett field california
- nasa ames research
- nasa ames research center
- nasa goddard
- nasa scientists
- orion crew exploration vehicle
- orion team
- preliminary design review
- pugel
- shield material
- space flight center
Posted in National, |

