NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Eleven Countries, an Integrated Spacecraft: the Story of International Collaboration that Built the Orion Spacecraft and Powered the Success of the Artemis I MissionThe quest to return humans to the Moon in the next step towards humanity's exploration of space is more alive than ever. After a great deal of achievements, failures, and lessons learned, the Artemis I mission set o to the Moon on November 16, 2022, with the goal of testing a new rocket, the Space Launch System, and a new spacecraft, Orion: designed, assembled, and tested across two continents, and 11 countries. Behind this mission, decades of experience with the International Space Station, Autonomous Transfer Vehicle operations, and many other program collaborations built the know-how on how to succeed together in the toughest environment | deep space. The Artemis I mission proved to be an incredible success, meeting 161 total mission objectives, including 21 developed during the flight based on outperforming spacecraft. It was also a case-study in international collaboration, given that ESA, NASA, and industry partners Airbus and Lockheed Martin for the first time had to design, build, test, and fly a fully integrated human-rated spacecraft, with most critical functions dependent and interconnected across U.S. and European systems. The U.S.-built Orion Crew Module and Crew Module Adapter and European-built European Service Module (ESM) shared critical interfaces and commodities, from propulsion, avionics, active/passive thermal, electrical power generation, storage and distribution to the software that managed it all. In this paper, we will describe relevant aspects of the integrated spacecraft design, providing context for the challenges that the team faced in all phases required to get Orion ready to fly, and provide a direct account of how the joint team formed, trained, and supported the operations of the successful Artemis I mission. We will also explore the evolution of the partnerships, given that these allow a multi-national e ort to sustain the program production, share costs, leverage a broader base of engineering expertise, and build more diverse capabilities over the long haul to support the Artemis goals and objectives. Lastly, we will cover critical lessons learned and how the Orion Program has implemented these in preparation of the next Artemis missions to repeat the success of Artemis I. The purpose of this paper is to document knowledge we gained and lessons we learned through the development of an integrated Orion spacecraft, since it is imperative we build on this now, at the dawn of the Artemis Program, an international endeavor to push human space exploration.
Document ID
20240006663
Acquisition Source
Glenn Research Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Carlos Garcia-Galan
(Glenn Research Center Cleveland, United States)
Howard Hu
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
Date Acquired
May 22, 2024
Subject Category
Engineering (General)
Spacecraft Design, Testing and Performance
Report/Patent Number
81262
Meeting Information
Meeting: International Astronautical Conference
Location: Milan
Country: IT
Start Date: October 14, 2024
End Date: October 18, 2024
Sponsors: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 374409.02.90.03
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Deep Space Exploration
European Service Module (ESM)
Space Launch System (SLS)
Orion Spacecraft
International Collaboration
Artemis Orion ESM

Available Downloads

NameType IAC-24_cgg.pdf Abstract
No Preview Available