Title :
Aerocapture Technology Development Overview
Author :
Munk, Michelle M. ; Moon, Steven A.
Author_Institution :
NASA-Langley Res. Center Hampton, Hampton, VA
Abstract :
This paper will explain the investment strategy, the role of detailed systems analysis, and the hardware and modeling developments that have resulted from the past 5 years of work under NASA\´s In-Space Propulsion Program (ISPT) Aerocapture investment area. The organizations that have been funded by ISPT over that time period received awards from a 2002 NASA Research Announcement. They are: Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Applied Research Associates, Inc., Ball Aerospace, NASA\´s Ames Research Center, and NASA\´s Langley Research Center. Their accomplishments include improved understanding of entry aerothermal environments, particularly at Titan, demonstration of aerocapture guidance algorithm robustness at multiple bodies, manufacture and test of a 2-meter Carbon-Carbon "hot structure," development and test of evolutionary, high-temperature structural systems with efficient ablative materials, and development of aerothermal sensors that will fly on the Mars Science Laboratory in 2009. Due in large part to this sustained ISPT support for Aerocapture, the technology is ready to be validated in flight.
Keywords :
aerospace propulsion; investment; space vehicles; NASA; Titan; aerocapture guidance algorithm; aerothermal environments; aerothermal sensor; arocapture technology; crbon-carbon hot structure; detailed systems analysis; high-temperature structural systems; in-space propulsion program; investment strategy; Aerospace testing; Hardware; IEEE news; Investments; Manufacturing; Materials testing; NASA; Propulsion; Robustness; System testing;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2008 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1487-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1095-323X
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2008.4526545