Friday, August 21, 2009

Inflatable Spacecraft Shield Works, Space Test Shows

NASA launched an inflatable spacecraft heat shield on Monday to test the technology for use on future space missions.

The test flight lofted a vacuum-packed shroud atop a small sounding rocket from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Va. Several minutes after liftoff, the shield inflated to a 10-foot-diameter (3 m) mushroom shape, and fell back down to Earth.

The experiment showed that such a device could be used to slow and protect a space capsule as it enters the atmosphere at hypersonic speeds. The material - several layers of silicone-coated Kevlar - could be used to insulate a crew and cargo from the searing temperatures of re-entry.

"This was a huge success," said Mary Beth Wusk, project manager for the Inflatable Re-entry Vehicle Experiment (IRVE), based at Langley. "IRVE was a small-scale demonstrator. Now that we've proven the concept, we'd like to build more advanced aeroshells capable of handling higher heat rates."

Today's test flight was the first time anyone has successfully flown an inflatable re-entry capsule, according to engineers at NASA's Langley Research Center.

The experiment flew to an altitude of 131 miles atop a Black Brant 9 rocket. After a four-minute climb, the shield was released from its cover and was pumped full of nitrogen in less than 90 seconds.

"Everything performed well even into the subsonic range where we weren't sure what to expect," said Neil Cheatwood, IRVE principal investigator and chief scientist for the Hypersonics Project of NASA's Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate's Fundamental Aeronautics Program. "The telemetry looks good. The inflatable bladder held up well."

Scientists are interested in using similar shields to help land large objects on Mars.

"We'd like to be able to land more mass on Mars," Cheatwood said. "To land more mass you have to have more drag. We need to maximize the drag area of the entry system. We want to make it as big as we can, but the limitation has been the launch vehicle diameter."

via SPACE.com -- Inflatable Spacecraft Shield Works, Space Test Shows.

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