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Space transfer vehicle concepts and requirements study. Volume 1: Executive summaryA description of the study in terms of background, objectives, and issues is provided. NASA is currently studying new initiatives of space exploration involving both piloted and unpiloted missions to destinations throughout the solar system. Many of these missions require substantial improvements in launch vehicle and upper stage capabilities. This study provides a focused examination of the Space Transfer Vehicles (STV) required to perform these missions using the emerging national launch vehicle definition, the Space Station Freedom (SSF) definition, and the latest mission scenario requirements. The study objectives are to define preferred STV concepts capable of accommodating future exploration missions in a cost-effective manner, determine the technology development (if any) required to perform these missions, and develop a decision database of various programmatic approaches for the development of the STV family of vehicles. Special emphasis was given to examining space basing (stationing reusable vehicles at a space station), examining the piloted lunar mission as a primary design mission, and restricting trade studies to the high-performance, near-term cryogenics (LO2/LH2) as vehicle propellant. The study progressed through three distinct 6-month phases. The first phase concentrated on supporting a NASA 3 month definition of exploration requirements (the '90-day study') and during this phase developed and optimized the space-based point-of-departure (POD) 2.5-stage lunar vehicle. The second phase developed a broad decision database of 95 different vehicle options and transportation architectures. The final phase chose the three most cost-effective architectures and developed point designs to carry to the end of the study. These reference vehicle designs are mutually exclusive and correspond to different national choices about launch vehicles and in-space reusability. There is, however, potential for evolution between concepts.
Document ID
19930016290
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Weber, Gary A.
(Boeing Aerospace and Electronics Co. Seattle, WA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
April 1, 1991
Subject Category
Space Transportation
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:192524
NASA-CR-192524
D180-32040-1-VOL-1
Report Number: NAS 1.26:192524
Report Number: NASA-CR-192524
Report Number: D180-32040-1-VOL-1
Accession Number
93N25479
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS8-37855
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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