NASA's Exploration Systems Progress Report

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March 22, 2006

Dolores Beasley
Headquarters, Washington 
Phone: (202) 358-1600

Kim Newton
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
Phone: (256) 544-0034 

RELEASE: 06-103

NASA'S EXPLORATION SYSTEMS PROGRESS REPORT

NASA's Exploration Systems Mission Directorate in Washington has 
issued a Request for Information. It asks the aerospace industry for 
input regarding the strategy of a key element of a new spacecraft 
intended to lift American explorers toward the moon and Mars.

The component is the second or upper stage of the Crew Launch Vehicle, 
the successor to the space shuttle and the anticipated flagship in 
NASA's next-generation space fleet. 

The upper stage is in development by the Constellation Systems Launch 
Vehicles Project Office at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in 
Huntsville, Ala. The upper stage component is expected to be 
propelled by a J-2X engine fueled with liquid oxygen and liquid 
hydrogen. The J-2X is an evolved and improved version of the powerful 
upper stage engine that propelled the Apollo-era Saturn 1B and Saturn 
V rockets to the moon. 

In the request NASA encourages respondents to offer ideas to 
anticipated technical and business challenges. NASA would like to 
know the possible benefits from combining proposed avionics or 
on-board electrical flight controls and guidance systems into the 
procurement of overall upper-stage production support.

NASA also seeks feedback related to design and specification sharing 
among participants, commonality of design tools and software, methods 
of reducing component life-cycle costs, and seamless transition of 
contractual arrangements.

The request is intended solely to obtain information that will help 
NASA define its upper stage acquisition strategy development effort. 
NASA will not issue any contracts based on this request.

An update to development design and strategy progress followed by a 
question and answer session is scheduled for industry during an open 
house event at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, April 
18-19. Michoud is one of the facilities selected to manufacture and 
assemble the Crew Launch Vehicle upper stage.

The Crew Launch Vehicle is part of NASA's mission to develop a 
cost-effective, next-generation space transportation system. The 
system will, in keeping with the Vision for Space Exploration, safely 
and reliably take human explorers to the moon, Mars and on into the 
solar system. 

In addition to its primary mission - carrying crews of four to six 
astronauts into Earth orbit - the vehicle's 25-ton payload capacity 
also may be used to bring resources and supplies to the International 
Space Station or to exploration teams traveling to and from the moon. 


Crew transportation to the space station is planned for no later than 
2014. The first lunar excursion is scheduled as early as 2020. The 
Crew Launch Vehicle effort is led for NASA's Exploration Systems 
Mission Directorate by the Constellation Systems Launch Vehicles 
Project Office at Marshall.

The request for information is available on the Web, at: 

http://prod.nais.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/eps/synopsis.cgi?acqid=119491 

For information about NASA's exploration programs on the Web, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/exploration 

For information about NASA and agency programs on the Web, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/home 

	
-end-



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