• DocumentCode
    3201373
  • Title

    Mars Lander Engine plume impingement environment of the Mars Science Laboratory

  • Author

    Sengupta, Anita ; Kulleck, James ; Sell, Steve ; Van Norman, John ; Mehta, Manish ; Pokora, Mark

  • Author_Institution
    Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    7-14 March 2009
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    10
  • Abstract
    The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) Mission will land a 900-kg rover on the surface of Mars in 2010. Four Mars Lander Engines (MLE´s) will be fired during the final propulsive descent to maintain a 0.75 m/s vertical rate of descent, in support of a tethered landing approach referred to as the ldquoSky-Cranerdquo. At 20 m above the surface the rover will be lowered on a bridle as it continues to descend. At touch-down, a minimum of 6.5 m of vertical separation are provided between the engines nozzle exit plane and the ground-surface below. This maneuver was chosen in part to minimize the ground/soil interaction that occurs when rocket engine plumes are fired into a soil media. In spite of the 6.5 m altitude above the surface, surface impingement pressures are expected to reach in excess of 2000 Pa, a metric previously established by the Viking program to mitigate soil bearing capacity failure. Plume-ground interaction has been a concern of Lunar and Mars propulsive landings for some time, but was not an issue for the Mars Pathfinder and Mars Explorer Rover era due to their use of airbag landing systems.This was also a concern of the Phoenix lander program, which fired twelve pulsed hydrazine monopropellant thrusters for its final descent and touch-down. Phoenix was concerned with plume impingement soil interaction due to its high surface impingement pressure and potential for diffused gas eruptions. Phoenix was also concerned with landing site alteration due to its lack of mobility as well as instrument and solar array contamination issues. As MSL will operate in a regime that will result in ground-soil erosion a plume-ground interaction program has been undertaken to quantify the amount of soil erosion, namely the trajectory and number flux of particulates and the contamination and erosion this can impart to sensitive instruments and thermal surface coatings.
  • Keywords
    Mars; aerospace engines; rocket engines; space research; space tethers; space vehicles; Mars explorer rover; Mars lander engine plume impingement; Mars pathfinder; Mars propulsive landings; Mars science laboratory mission; airbag landing systems; engines nozzle; rocket engine plumes; sky crane; soil bearing capacity failure; surface impingement pressures; tethered landing approach; thermal surface coatings; Engines; Instruments; Laboratories; Land surface; Mars; Moon; Propellants; Rockets; Soil; Surface contamination;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Aerospace conference, 2009 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Big Sky, MT
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-2621-8
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4244-2622-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/AERO.2009.4839345
  • Filename
    4839345