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NASA's Space Launch System: A Transformative Capability for Exploration Currently making rapid progress toward first launch in 2018, NASA's exploration-class Space Launch System (SLS) represents a game-changing new spaceflight capability, enabling mission profiles that are currently impossible. Designed to launch human deep-space missions farther into space than ever before, the initial configuration of SLS will be able to deliver more than 70 metric tons of payload to low Earth orbit (LEO), and will send NASA's new Orion crew vehicle into lunar orbit. Plans call for the rocket to evolve on its second flight, via a new upper stage, to a more powerful configuration capable of lofting 105 tons to LEO or co-manifesting additional systems with Orion on launches to the lunar vicinity. Ultimately, SLS will evolve to a configuration capable of delivering more than 130 tons to LEO. SLS is a foundational asset for NASA's Journey to Mars, and has been recognized by the International Space Exploration Coordination Group as a key element for cooperative missions beyond LEO. In order to enable human deep-space exploration, SLS provides unrivaled mass, volume, and departure energy for payloads, offering numerous benefits for a variety of other missions. For robotic science probes to the outer solar system, for example, SLS can cut transit times to less than half that of currently available vehicles, producing earlier data return, enhancing iterative exploration, and reducing mission cost and risk. In the field of astrophysics, SLS' high payload volume, in the form of payload fairings with a diameter of up to 10 meters, creates the opportunity for launch of large-aperture telescopes providing an unprecedented look at our universe, and offers the ability to conduct crewed servicing missions to observatories stationed at locations beyond low Earth orbit. At the other end of the spectrum, SLS opens access to deep space for low-cost missions in the form of smallsats. The first launch of SLS will deliver beyond LEO 13 6-unit smallsat payloads, representing multiple disciplines, including three spacecraft competitively chosen through NASA's Centennial Challenges competition. Private organizations have also identified benefits of SLS for unique public-private partnerships. This paper will give an overview of SLS' capabilities and its current status, and discuss the vehicle's potential for human exploration of deep space and other game-changing utilization opportunities.
Document ID
20160013366
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Robinson, Kimberly F.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Cook, Jerry
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Hitt, David
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Date Acquired
November 10, 2016
Publication Date
October 24, 2016
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Launch Vehicles And Launch Operations
Report/Patent Number
BIS-RS-2016-1
M17-5597
Report Number: BIS-RS-2016-1
Report Number: M17-5597
Meeting Information
Meeting: Reinventing Space Conference
Location: London
Country: United Kingdom
Start Date: October 24, 2016
End Date: October 27, 2016
Sponsors: British Interplanetary Society, United Kingdom Space Agency
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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