Title :
Orion crew module landing system simulation and verification
Author :
Vassilakos, Gregory J. ; Stegall, David E. ; Hardy, Robin C. ; Boitnott, Richard L. ; Reaves, Mercedes ; Mark, Stephen D. ; Annett, Martin S.
Author_Institution :
Anal. Services & Mater., Hampton, VA, USA
Abstract :
NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC) has developed a comprehensive test and analysis program to evaluate the ability of LS-DYNA to model the materials and the phenomena involved in soil and water landing impacts of the Orion crew module. 12Elemental, scale boilerplate, and full-scale prototype testing is being conducted in support of the simulation verification and validation approach. Aspects of the simulations evaluated against test data include soil constitutive properties, water equations of state, and contact algorithms. Subsystems tested include airbags, crushable energy absorbing honeycomb materials, and energy absorbing seat support struts. The procedures, instrumentation, and general observations from each test series are presented. Plans for a series of swing tests of a full-scale boilerplate into a purpose-built water basin are described. Further plans for swing tests of flight-like prototypes into the water basin are noted.
Keywords :
aerospace engineering; aerospace materials; aerospace simulation; aerospace testing; finite element analysis; honeycomb structures; impact testing; inflatable structures; mechanical engineering computing; prototypes; LS-DYNA ability; NASA Langley Research Center; Orion crew module landing system; airbags; analysis program; comprehensive test; contact algorithms; crushable energy absorbing honeycomb materials; elemental testing; energy absorbing seat support struts; flight-like prototypes; full-scale boilerplate testing; full-scale prototype testing; purpose built water basin; simulation validation; simulation verification; soil constitutive properties; soil landing impacts; swing testing; water equations of state; water landing impacts; Analytical models; Atmospheric modeling; Computational modeling; Finite element methods; History; Mathematical model; NASA;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2011 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7350-2
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2011.5747623