NASA tests abort system on astronaut
capsule built for moon missions
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[July 03, 2019]
By Joey Roulette
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - An
unmanned full-scale NASA crew capsule blasted off from a Florida
launchpad on Tuesday in a successful test of the spacecraft's abort
thrusters, an astronaut safety device that will be key as the agency
works to return humans to the moon by 2024.
The Orion crew capsule, nearly identical to the model slated to carry
astronauts as soon as 2022 atop NASA's Space Launch System, was lofted
more than eight miles (13 km) atop a ballistic missile test booster from
an Air Force station in Florida at 7 a.m. EDT (1100 GMT) before firing
its three abort thrusters, which would be used to jettison astronauts to
safety in the event of a rocket failure.
"It looked like a complete mission success to me," said Blake Watters, a
launch-abort-system propulsion engineer at Lockheed Martin Corp <LMT.N>,
Orion's manufacturer. "This is the big check in the box on putting
astronauts on board."
Using Orion and NASA's Space Launch System, which is being built for a
debut flight in late 2020, the U.S. space agency is aiming to return
humans to the moon by 2024 in an accelerated timeline set in March by
the Trump administration. No humans have launched from U.S. soil since
the space shuttle was retired in 2011.
The 22,000-pound (9,979-kg) Orion test vehicle used in Tuesday's abort
simulation plunged into the ocean at speeds of 300 miles per hour (483
km per hour) after separating from the booster, without using the
parachutes that would be deployed to ensure a crew landed safely.
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The Ascent Abort-2 flight test of NASA's Orion spacecraft's
emergency launch abort system lifts off from the Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., July 2, 2019.
REUTERS/Thom Baur
Engineers intend for launch abort thrusters to be rarely needed, as
they would be used only during a rocket failure in flight.
A two-person crew inside Russia's Soyuz capsule, used by the United
States to carry its astronauts to the International Space Station,
last year used its abort system 31 miles (50 km) above the surface
of the Earth when the rocket malfunctioned. That was the first such
mishap in over 30 years for the launch system.
NASA has contracted Elon Musk's SpaceX and Boeing Co <BA.N> to build
separate crew capsule systems capable of carrying astronauts to the
space station. SpaceX's Crew Dragon capsule exploded on a test stand
in April just before engineers test-fired its abort engines,
triggering an investigation that could delay the pod's first crewed
flight by several months.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Scott Malone and Jonathan
Oatis)
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