Title: Space Exploration Merit Badge April 2000
1Space Exploration Merit BadgeApril 2000
- Vincent Needham
- Physics Department
- Kansas State University
- http//www.phys.ksu.edu/area/jrm/vince.html
2Summary of Course
- Describe the purpose and operation of a space
transportation system, including - Main components
- Typical flight profiles
- Payloads and their missions
- How to learn more...
- Discuss careers in space exploration
- Launch and recover model rockets
3Basic Rocketry
- Traditional Bell Nozzle
- Linear Aerospike
4Propulsion
SSME
Linear Aerospike
5The Space Shuttle (First Launch 12 April 1981)
- Manned spacecraft
- Orbiter
- LH/LOX Main Engines (SSME)
- Solid Rocket Boosters (SRB)
6Space Shuttle Views
7Solid Rocket Boosters(SRB)
8Space Shuttle Main Engines(SSME)
9External Tank(ET)
10Orbiter
11Russkiu Sistema Russian Systems
- SL-4 Launcher
- Soyuz Spacecraft
- Progress Ferry
- Mir Space Station
12SL-4/Soyuz Launcher
- Old (1963), but
- Reliable
- Rugged
- Cheap
13Soyuz Progress
- Soyuz
- 3 Cosmonauts
- Station Rescue
- Progress
- Modified, Unmanned Soyuz
- Supply Ferry for Mir Station
14X-33The Next Generation
- Lockheed
- Skunk Works Design
- McDonnel-Douglas
- Delta Clipper
- Rockwell
- Shuttle Derived
15RLV/X-33 Program (Flight Tests Start Mid-2002)
- Vertical Liftoff
- Horizontal Landing
- Low Maintenance
- Rapid Turnaround
- Low Cost
16Shuttle Flight Profile
17Shuttle Launch
18Delta II Launch Cam
19Inside the Shuttle
20Flight Deck
21Atlantis Avionics Upgrade
22Mid-Deck
- Crew quarters
- Experiments
- Supplies
- Extended by
- SpaceHab Module
- SpaceLab
23Payloads
- Satellites (Delivered Repaired!)
24Io Jupiter
Hubble Space Telescope
- Launched on 24 April 1990
- Shuttle service calls in
- December 1993
- February 1997
- October 1999
25Hubbles Greatest Hits
26Hubble 10th Anniversary
27Planetary Exploration
28Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous
29SpaceLab
- US/European cooperative venture
- Similar to Space Station modules
- NeuroLab, in April 1998, was the last SpaceLab
mission
30ISS-02A.2a Flight Crew(Launch after 18 May 2000)
STS-101/Atlantis
- James S. Voss (Colonel, USA, Ret.)
- MS3, Aerospace Engineering
- Mary Ellen Weber, Ph.D.
- MS4, Chem Eng Phys Chemistry
- Jeffrey N. Williams (Lt Colonel, USA)
- MS5, Aeronautical Engineering
- James D. Halsell, Jr., (Colonel, USAF)
- -Cdr, Engineering Management
- Scott J. Horowitz, Ph.D. (Colonel, USAF)
- Pilot, Aerospace Engineering
- Susan J. Helms (Colonel, USAF)
- MS1, Aeronautical Engineering
- Yuri Vladimirovich Usachev (RSA)
- MS2, Engineering
31STS-101 Overview
Mission ISS Assembly Flight 2A.2a Shuttle
Atlantis Launch After 18 May 2000 Docking
Flight Day 3 Undocking Flight Day 9 Landing
Late May 2000
32International Space Station
- USA
- Russia
- Europe
- Japan
- Canada
33Mir
- Core module launched in 1986
- Phase 1 of the International Space Station
- Last visiting U.S. astronaut was Andy Thomas
- Final Shuttle-Mir mission was by Discovery on 28
May 1998.
34Mir 28 Flight Crew
- Mir EO-28 docked 06 April 2000
- Progress M1-2 docked 28 April
- Repair mission is 55 days long
- First mission since August 1999
- Sergei Zaletin Commander, Russian
- Alexander Kaleri
- Flight Engineer, Russian
35Station Assembly in 2000
- May Atlantis/2A.2a Maintenance and Repair
July Russians Launch Zvezda Service Module
? August Atlantis/2A.2b Delivers More Internal
Gear
36Station Assembly in 2000
- Sept Discovery /3A Truss Module Z1, PMA-3
Oct ISS Expedition 1 crew delivers Russian
Soyuz Nov Endeavour/4A Z1 Solar Arrays
?
37Space Station Tour
38At Home on the Station
- Astronauts must be safe, happy productive
39STS-96 Discovery
- First crew to enter ISS in April 1999
40TransHab (and Mars)
An Inflatable Home in Space or on Mars
The Space Station Habitat...
...Leads to a Mars Habitat
41Re-entry Approach
- Thermal tiles absorb extreme heat
- Dead-stick landing
- Energy management is critical
42Landing
- KSC is preferred spaceport
- Edwards AFB is backup
- White Sands, NM used once
43Pilots Eye View
44X-33/Venture Star
45The Future
- Private Launch Ventures
- Boeing SeaLaunch
- Rotary Rocket
- Kistler K-1
- Bristol Spaceplane/Skylon
- Pioneer Rocketplane/BlackHorse
- Commercial Satellite Payloads
- Iridium (66/66) RIP
- Teledesic (0/288)
- Orbcomm (28/28)
- Globalstar (20/52)
- And more to come!
46New Launchers
First Boeing/Energia/Kvaerner SeaLaunch, 27 March
1999
Rotary Rockets Roton Roll-Out, 01 March 1999
First Launch in 2001-02?
47Roton Test Flight
48Astronaut Qualifications
- How can I become an astronaut?
- Any adult man or woman in excellent physical
condition who meets the basic qualifications can
be selected to enter astronaut training. - For mission specialists and pilot astronauts,
the minimum requirements include a bachelor's
degree in engineering, science or mathematics
from an accredited institution. Three years of
related experience must follow the degree, and an
advanced degree is desirable. Pilot astronauts
must have at least 1,000 hours of experience in
jet aircraft, and they need better vision than
mission specialists. Competition is extremely
keen, with an average of over 4,000 applicants
for about 20 openings every 2 years. - Astronaut recruiting occurs periodically. For
more information, write to the Astronaut
Selection Office, NASA Johnson Space Center,
Houston, TX 77058.
49Where to get more information
- Your local library
- The World Wide Web
- Most of this presentation was prepared from WWW
resources! - http//www.phys.ksu.edu/area/jrm/vince.html
- http//spacelink.nasa.gov/
- http//www.yahoo.com/Science/Space/ (1248
listings!)