NASA astronauts recently experienced what it will be like to launch into
space aboard the new Orion spacecraft during the first ascent simulations since
the space shuttles and their simulators were retired.
Ascent simulations are precise rehearsals of the steps a spacecraft’s crew
will be responsible for – including things that could go wrong – during their
climb into space. They can be generic and apply to any future deep space
mission, or very specific to a launch that’s been planned down to the second.
For now, Orion’s simulations fall into the first category, but practicing now
helps ensure the team will have the systems perfected for the astronauts in any
future mission scenario.
"Simulations like these provide valuable experience by giving astronauts and
our operations team an early look at what going to deep space in Orion will be
like," said Lee Morin, an astronaut and supervisor of Johnson’s rapid
prototyping laboratory, who has been working on the Orion displays. "Rehearsing
launch and ascent--two of the most challenging parts of Orion's mission -- also
gives us an opportunity to work toward optimizing how the crew interacts with
the spacecraft."
Designing a spacecraft’s cockpit for ease of use and efficiency is no easy
task. Each space shuttle had 10 display screens, more than 1,200 switches, dials
and gauges, plus hundreds of pounds of procedures printed on paper. Orion, which
is designed for deep-space exploration and autonomous or piloted rendezvous and
docking, will use new technology to distill all of that down to just three
computer screens, each the size of a sheet of paper.
“It sounds promising and saves a lot of weight, but designing it is
challenging,” said Jeff Fox, the Orion crew systems integration lead. “We don’t
want the crew to have to search through a lot of dropdown menus when they need
to quickly access key systems and information.”
It will take about eight minutes for Orion to get from the launch pad at
Kennedy Space Center to the altitude where the rocket’s main engines will cut
off, the milestone that marks the spacecraft’s arrival in space. In that time,
if everything goes as planned, the commander and pilot will have few actions to
perform; if anything goes wrong, that quickly changes, and the crew must be able
to quickly access all the relevant procedures and displays they need.
The Orion team has been working to develop ideas on how to make that
possible, and has developed a working prototype that’s been installed in a
life-sized Orion mockup at Johnson Space Center. But no one is better able to
judge how well it works than an astronaut.
“No one knows how to fly Orion yet – the hardware doesn’t exist yet in some
cases,” Morin said. “But these crews have a lot of flight experience and a lot
of test flight experience. They can help us design the displays and build a
better product.”
Over the course of two weeks, 10 crews of two astronauts apiece performed two
normal launch simulations and two launch abort simulations inside the Orion
mockup. As they made their way through the various actions they were called on
to perform, engineers took careful notes of every comment they made and question
they asked. That data will be evaluated as engineers continue to fine-tune the
design and build requirements for the displays and controls.
In a few months, the same crews will come back and try a new and improved
version, and the process will repeat itself as Orion’s mission requirements
evolve and the vehicle design is refined. In the end, the engineers and
astronauts will rest assured that the system will work exactly as it should.
Orion’s data and software will be made available to NASA’s commercial partners
for use in vehicles being built to ferry astronauts to and from the
International Space Station. Although the final product will be different
because the vehicles travel to unique destinations, NASA’s partners can choose
to use it and build off of Orion’s foundation.
“It’s very rewarding work, knowing the displays we are creating and testing
now will be what future astronauts will be looking at as they rendezvous with an
asteroid, orbit the moon, and even travel to Mars,” Morin said. “Getting this
right is key to making Orion and other future vehicles safer and easier to
use.”
Orion’s first crewed launch, Exploration Mission-1, is scheduled for 2021,
when NASA plans to send two astronauts to an asteroid in lunar orbit, with the
help of NASA’s new heavy-lift rocket, the Space Launch System. It will be the
farthest humans have traveled in more than 40 years, and Orion will ultimately
allow us to go even farther, including to destinations such as Mars
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