Rocket Boosters Prepared For Orion Spacecraft's First
Flight
Engineers took another step forward in preparations for the first test flight
of NASA’s new Orion spacecraft
in
December. At the United Launch Alliance (ULA) Horizontal Integration Facility
(HIF), at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, the three primary core
elements of the ULA Delta IV Heavy rocket recently were integrated, forming the
first stage of the launch vehicle that will send Orion far from Earth to allow
NASA to evaluate the spacecraft’s performance in space.
The three common booster cores are 134 feet in length and 17 feet in
diameter. Each has an RS-68 engine that uses liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen
propellant producing 656,000 pounds of thrust. All totaled, the three Delta IV
boosters collectively generate 1.96 million pounds of thrust.
The upcoming flight test will use the Delta IV Heavy to launch the Orion and
send it 3,600 miles in altitude beyond the Earth's surface. During the
two-orbit, four-hour mission, engineers will evaluate the systems critical to
crew safety, the launch abort system, the heat shield and the parachute system.
The data gathered during the mission will influence design decisions and
validate existing computer models. The flight also will reduce overall mission
risks and costs for later Orion flights.
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