Make text bigger  Make text smaller  Toggle background color  Bookmark/Share

Apollo Heat Shield Uncrated After 35 Years, Will Help with Orion CEV

apollo-test-vehicle-heat-shield-2

NASA scientists developing the next generation of exploration vehicles and heat shields for NASA’s Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle experienced “Christmas in July” when they uncrated the heat shields used on the Apollo missions some 35 years ago. These shields now are being analyzed to help with the development and engineering process.

Teams of NASA scientists and engineers working on the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle Thermal Protection System Advanced Development Project went to the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum Garber Facility in Suitland, Md. The Garber Facility curators and conservators collect, preserve and restore all things air and space. This includes airplanes, spacecraft, and spacesuits.

The Orion teams included members from both NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.

“We started working together at the end of June to track down any Apollo-era heat shields that they had in storage,” said Elizabeth (Betsy) Pugel of the Detector Systems Branch at NASA Goddard. “We located one and opened it. It was like a nerd Christmas for us!”

apollo-test-vehicle-heat-shield-1

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.”

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-cev

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.


SPACE WALLPAPER: STS-121 Discovery TPS Inspection

sts-121-discovery-rpm-wallpaper-550

Space Shuttle Discovery (STS-121) approaches the International Space Station for docking but before the link-up occurred, the orbiter “posed” for a series of Thermal Protection System  (TPS)  inspection photos.

The Leonardo Multipurpose Logistics Module can be seen in the shuttle’s cargo bay.

DOWNLOAD FULL SIZE WALLPAPER


Looking up at a Shuttle Landing

columbia-sts-2-looking-up

(Above) Columbia STS-2 lands at Edwards Air Force Base, California. This view provides an amazing view of the high temperature protection materials that are exposed to friction on atmospheric entry. Note the trails of smoke from wing tips.


FAST FACTS: STS-27 TPS Damage

sts-27_small

sts-27_side-1

sts-27_side-2

Space Shuttle Atlantis’ Thermal Protection System (TPS) tiles sustained severe damage during the STS-27 flight. Upon landing, over 700 damaged tiles were noted, and one tile was missing.  Luckily for the crew the missing tile was located over a dense aluminum mounting plate for the L-band antenna.

This was the worst case of TPS damage ever incurred on a shuttle flight until the tragic loss of Columbia in 2003.

STS-27 was only the second flight after the 1986 Challenger Disaster.


Space Shuttle Thermal Protection System Image Collection

Space Shuttle Discovery’s underside thermal protection tiles are featured in this image collection. It’s all about the tiles.

sts-114_tps_1

sts-114_tps_2

sts-114_tps_3

sts-114_tps_4

sts-114_tps_5

sts-114_tps_6

sts-114_tps_7

sts-114_tps_8


GalaxyWire

The Space News Aggregator
Home

Top Space News

Astro Log

Blogging the Final Frontier

Launch Alerts

Never Miss a Launch

Knowledge Base

Space History at the Speed of Light

Galaxy Wire TV

Watch the Universe