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Launch Pad in a BoxNASA Kennedy Space Center (KSC) is developing a new deployable launch system capability to support a small class of launch vehicles for NASA and commercial space companies to test and launch their vehicles. The deployable launch pad concept was first demonstrated on a smaller scale at KSC in 2012 in support of NASA Johnson Space Center's Morpheus Lander Project. The main objective of the Morpheus Project was to test a prototype planetary lander as a vertical takeoff and landing test-bed for advanced spacecraft technologies using a hazard field that KSC had constructed at the Shuttle Landing Facility (SLF). A steel pad for launch or landing was constructed using a modular design that allowed it to be reconfigurable and expandable. A steel flame trench was designed as an optional module that could be easily inserted in place of any modular steel plate component. The concept of a transportable modular launch and landing pad may also be applicable to planetary surfaces where the effects of rocket exhaust plume on surface regolith is problematic for hardware on the surface that may either be damaged by direct impact of high speed dust particles, or impaired by the accumulation of dust (e.g., solar array panels and thermal radiators). During the Morpheus free flight campaign in 2013-14, KSC performed two studies related to rocket plume effects. One study compared four different thermal ablatives that were applied to the interior of a steel flame trench that KSC had designed and built. The second study monitored the erosion of a concrete landing pad following each landing of the Morpheus vehicle on the same pad located in the hazard field. All surfaces of a portable flame trench that could be directly exposed to hot gas during launch of the Morpheus vehicle were coated with four types of ablatives. All ablative products had been tested by NASA KSC and/or the manufacturer. The ablative thicknesses were measured periodically following the twelve Morpheus free flight tests. The thermal energy from the Morpheus rocket exhaust plume was only found to be sufficient to cause appreciable ablation of one of the four ablatives that were tested. The rocket exhaust plume did cause spalling of concrete during each descent and landing on a landing pad in the hazard field. The Extended Abstract ASE Earth and Space Conference April, 2016 - Orlando, FL concrete surface was laser scanned following each Morpheus landing, and the total volume of spalled concrete that eroded between the first and final landings of the Morpheus Project's test campaign was estimated. This paper will also describe a new deployable launch system (DLS) capability that is being developed at KSC and was publicly announced in May 2015 (KSC Partnerships, 2015). The DLS is a set of multi-user Ground Support Equipment that will be used to test and launch small class launch vehicles. The system is comprised of four main elements: the Launch Stand, the Flame Deflector, the Pad Apron and the KAMAG transporter. The system elements are designed to be deployed at launch or test sites within the KSC/CCAFS boundaries. The DLS is intended to be used together with the Fluid and Electrical System of the Universal Propellant Servicing Systems and Mobile Power Data and Communications Unit.
Document ID
20160005189
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
James Mantovani
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, United States)
Gabor Tamasy
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, United States)
Rob Mueller ORCID
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, United States)
Van Townsend
(Craig Technologies (United States) Cape Canaveral, United States)
Jeff Sampson
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, United States)
Mike Lane
(Kennedy Space Center Merritt Island, United States)
Date Acquired
April 19, 2016
Publication Date
April 11, 2016
Publication Information
Publication: Earth and Space 2016: Engineering for Extreme Environments
Publisher: American Society of Civil Engineers
ISBN: 9780784479971
Subject Category
Launch Vehicles and Launch Operations
Report/Patent Number
KSC-E-DAA-TN31224
Meeting Information
Meeting: 15th Biennial ASCE Conference on Engineering, Science, Construction, and Operations in Challenging Environment
Location: Orlando, FL
Country: US
Start Date: April 11, 2016
End Date: April 15, 2016
Sponsors: American Society of Civil Engineers
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNK11EA08C
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Mobile Launch Pad Development
Shuttle Landing Facility
Ablatives Testing
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