Author_Institution :
Marshall Space Flight Center, Nat. Aeronaut. & Space Adm., Marshall, AL, USA
Abstract :
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration´s (NASA´s) Space Launch System (SLS) Program, managed at the Marshall Space Flight Center, is making progress toward delivering a new capability for human spaceflight and scientific missions beyond Earth orbit (BEO). Developed with the goals of safety, affordability, and sustainability in mind, the SLS rocket will launch the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV), equipment, supplies, and major science missions for exploration and discovery. Making its first uncrewed test flight in 2017 and its first crewed flight in 2021, the SLS will evolve into the most powerful launch vehicle ever flown, capable of supporting human missions into deep space and to Mars. This paper will summarize the planned capabilities of the vehicle, the progress the SLS Program has made in the years since the Agency formally announced its architecture in September 2011, and the path the program is following to reach the launch pad in 2017 and then to evolve the 70 metric ton (t) initial lift capability to 130 t lift capability. The paper outlines the milestones the program has already reached, from developmental milestones such as the manufacture of the first flight hardware and record-breaking engine testing, to life-cycle milestones such as the vehicle´s Preliminary Design Review in the summer of 2013. The paper will also discuss the remaining challenges in both delivering the 70 t vehicle and in evolving its capabilities to the 130 t vehicle, and how the program plans to accomplish these goals.
Keywords :
aerospace simulation; space vehicles; MPCV; Marshall Space Flight Center; NASA Space Launch System; National Aeronautics and Space Administration; Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle; SLS rocket; beyond Earth orbit; crewed flight; deep space; engine testing; flight hardware; human missions; human spaceflight; launch vehicle; science missions; scientific missions; uncrewed test flight; Engines; NASA; Rockets; Space missions; Space vehicles; Testing;