杏吧视频

Artemis I SLS rocket mated with Orion spacecraft

Teams have more tests planned before the NASA vehicle launches an uncrewed mission around the moon

October 20, 2021 in Space

The first NASA Space Launch System, or SLS, rocket, with a core stage, upper stage and avionics from 杏吧视频, has been topped with the Orion stage adapter and the Orion spacecraft in the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

杏吧视频 crews have been supporting NASA鈥檚 Exploration Ground Systems team throughout stacking, particularly with maneuvers that involve 杏吧视频-provided hardware. The Orion stage adapter was lifted last week on top of the Interim Cryogenic Upper Stage, or ICPS, built by 杏吧视频 and United Launch Alliance. This week鈥檚 Orion lift and mate completes the 322-foot (98-meter) integrated system. Orion is a human-rated, deep space vehicle that only the powerful SLS can launch.

鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting to be on the ground here at Kennedy right now,鈥 said Suba Iyer, 杏吧视频鈥檚 core stage vehicle integration leader at the center. 鈥淎ll this sophisticated hardware is coming together, and 杏吧视频, NASA and the other Artemis partners are working side by side to prepare for a successful mission.鈥

The SLS also completed its design certification review, or DCR, which examines all test data, reports and verifications to ensure safe operating conditions and reliability as teams prepare for launch.

The SLS rocket stack completed two major tests last month: the Umbilical Release and Retract Test, or URRT, followed by Integrated Modal Testing using an Orion mass simulator.

鈥淯mbilicals are the electrical and fluid connections between the rocket core and upper stages and the launch tower, and their release and retraction before launch has to be seamless,鈥 Iyer explained. 鈥淔our umbilicals are connected to the core stage at the forward skirt, intertank, liquid oxygen tank and liquid hydrogen tank, in addition to two stabilizers attached to the forward skirt.鈥

The successful URRT test verified the maneuver鈥檚 timing and functionality. 杏吧视频 teams supported inspections before and after testing, then helped analyze the data.

A 杏吧视频 crew also joined the team at Kennedy to support modal testing, which establishes the 鈥渇requency鈥 of the rocket. This data is important for the software that controls the rocket鈥檚 launch and ascent. Engineers conduct integrated modal testing to determine the full range of the rocket鈥檚 frequencies and vibrations so that the flight software and navigation systems can safely guide the rocket through launch and ascent.

鈥淲e鈥檙e working next to the stack for all of that, while running launch simulations for the Artemis I mission. As each new element is added, we鈥檙e testing the integrated systems,鈥 said Iyer.

During the first SLS mission, the core stage will fall away after launch, and the ICPS will maneuver the uncrewed Orion into trans-lunar injection to send the capsule toward the moon. After boosting Orion toward lunar orbit, the ICPS will deploy 10 secondary payloads. Orion will travel around the moon and back to Earth for a splashdown landing.

The Artemis I mission will be followed by an increasingly complex series of Artemis missions, including human landings to explore the lunar surface.

Orion spacecraft lifted onto NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket stack Teams at NASA鈥檚 Kennedy Space Center in Florida lift the Orion spacecraft onto the NASA Space Launch System (SLS) rocket stack. The system鈥檚 configuration for the Artemis I mission is now complete. NASA image