NASA marked a critical step on the journey to Mars with its Orion spacecraft
during a roaring liftoff into the dawn sky over eastern Florida on Friday, Dec.
5, 2014, aboard a Delta IV Heavy rocket.
Once on its way, the Orion spacecraft accomplished a series of milestones as
it jettisoned a set of fairing panels around the service module before the
launch abort system tower pulled itself away from the spacecraft as planned.
The spacecraft and second stage of the Delta IV rocket settled into an
initial orbit about 17 minutes after liftoff. Flight controllers put Orion into
a slow roll to keep its temperature controlled while the spacecraft flew through
a 97-minute coast phase.
The cone-shaped spacecraft did not carry anyone inside its cabin but is
designed to take astronauts farther into space than ever before in the
future.
Orion's first flight test is expected to be one for the books: the first
mission since Apollo to carry a spacecraft built for humans to deep space, the
first time NASA's next-generation spacecraft is tested against the challenges of
space, and the first operational test of a heat shield strong enough to protect
against 4,000-degree temperatures.
From today’s launch on a gigantic United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy from
Florida to the expected splashdown under billowing parachutes, the mission will
test many of the riskiest events Orion will see when it sends astronauts to an
asteroid and onward toward Mars in the future.
"Orion is the exploration spacecraft for NASA, and paired with the Space
Launch System, or SLS, rocket it will allow us to explore the solar system,"
said Mark Geyer, program manager of Orion, which is based at Johnson Space
Center in Houston.
While the Delta IV Heavy will send Orion on its flight test, SLS will launch
the spacecraft on future missions.
NASA's Orion program has arrived at a fulcrum point that will tell its
designers and builders how it stacks up technically. It also will show that NASA
is ready to take the next step on its journey into deep space – and ultimately
to Mars.
So even though Orion is poised for a mere 4 1/2-hour, two-orbit mission
without anyone on board, the cone-shaped craft needs to perform its roster of
tasks well, including an all-important descent through Earth's atmosphere and
splashdown.
"Really, we're going to test the riskiest parts of the mission," Geyer said.
"Ascent, entry and things like fairing separations, Launch Abort System
jettison, the parachutes plus the navigation and guidance – all those things are
going to be tested. Plus we’ll fly into deep space and test the radiation
effects on those systems."
The flight test began at Space Launch Complex 37 at Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station.
The second stage will ignite again about two hours into the flight to send
Orion through the Van Allen radiation belts and to a peak altitude of 3,609
miles, some 15 times higher than the International Space Station. This is going
to be a key point in the test flight as instruments inside Orion record the
radiation doses inside the cabin – critical data for mission planners
considering the best way to safely send astronauts into deep space in the
future. Orion's cameras will be turned off during its passes through the belts
to protect them.
Three hours, 23 minutes into flight, the Orion crew module will fly on its
own following separation from its service module and the Delta IV Heavy second
stage. The spacecraft will be aimed at Earth's atmosphere and it will be up to
Orion's onboard computers to set the spacecraft in the right position so its
base heat shield can bear the brunt of the intense reentry heat.
Hitting the atmosphere at 20,000 mph four hours and 13 minutes after launch,
Orion will encounter about 80 percent of the heat it would endure during a
return from lunar orbit with astronauts aboard. Ground controllers will lose
contact with Orion for 2 1/2 minutes during reentry when the spacecraft is
surrounded by plasma. They should regain communications with the craft just
before the forward bay cover is jettisoned in a process that will begin the
parachute deployment. After about four hours, 23 minutes, Orion will be bobbing
in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Baja California as recovery forces move
in.
Teams from NASA's Ground Systems Development and Operations Program based at
Kennedy will work with U.S. Navy and Orion prime contractor Lockheed Martin
personnel to bring the spacecraft into the well deck of the USS Anchorage, an
amphibious ship with a protective enclosure that will allow Orion to basically
float onboard without having to be lifted by a crane. A second ship, the USNS
Salvor, also will be on hand as a backup.
Many aspects of the mission point to a future as ambitious as any time in
NASA's 50-plus-year history.
With lessons learned from Orion’s flight test, NASA can improve the
spacecraft's design while building the first Space Launch System rocket, a heavy
booster with enough power to send the next Orion to a distant retrograde orbit
around the moon for Exploration Mission-1. Following that, astronauts are
gearing up to fly Orion on the second SLS rocket on a mission that will return
astronauts to deep space for the first time in more than 40 years. These
adventures will set NASA up for future human missions to an asteroid and even on
the journey to Mars.
"To be able to even think about going to an asteroid and to be able to think
about this kind of exploration, that's very exciting," Kennedy Space Center
Director Bob Cabana said. "I think there's a genuine, positive atmosphere, and I
don't think it's confined to just Kennedy. You go across all the NASA centers
and I think the team is really excited about the future."
And while all that work is happening on the ground, astronauts on the
International Space Station will continue the groundbreaking research that is
already adding to humanity's understanding of everything from long-duration
spaceflight to the continued experimentation on products and processes that
improve life on Earth.
None of those plans has caused NASA or Lockheed Martin, which is operating
this flight test, to look past the crucial steps needed to make this mission a
success.
Lockheed Martin assembled the spacecraft in the high bay at the Operations
and Checkout Building at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, a facility
recently named for Neil Armstrong, first man to walk on the moon.
While the mission is expected to make a huge impact on the way the next Orion
is built, many lessons from the buildup of this spacecraft are already being
incorporated in the planning for the next one, Geyer said.
"This has shown it’s a good design, it's a good mission and now it's time to
go fly," Geyer said.
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