Reviews Document NASA's Progress on Next Human Spacecraft

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May 24, 2007

Beth Dickey/Melissa Mathews
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-2087/1272

Kelly Humphries/John Ira Petty
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111 

RELEASE: 07-122

REVIEWS DOCUMENT NASA'S PROGRESS ON NEXT HUMAN SPACECRAFT

HOUSTON - NASA this week wrapped up six months of system requirements 
reviews for the Orion spacecraft, the Ares launch vehicles and other 
support systems, bringing together the Constellation Program's list 
of basic capability needs.

The Constellation Program is developing a new space transportation 
system that will take astronauts to Earth orbit, the moon, and 
eventually to Mars.

The basic program architecture for design, development, construction 
and operation of the rockets and spacecraft remains unchanged as a 
result of the reviews, but it now has a firmer foundation built 
through extensive requirements allocation, reconciliation, analyses 
and validation testing.

A "baseline synchronization" on May 23 followed individual systems 
requirements reviews, or SRRs, by the Constellation Program and the 
Orion, Ares, Ground Operations, Mission Operations and Extravehicular 
Activity (spacewalk) projects. The synchronization effort was 
designed to identify any conflicts or gaps between and among the 
projects and the program and to establish a plan for resolving those 
issues.

"This has been an eventful spring, known as the 'season of SRRs,'" 
said Jeff Hanley, Constellation Program manager at NASA's Johnson 
Space Center, Houston. "This summer will bring a new season of 
rolling system definition reviews that will finish our requirements 
for initial mission capability and set us up for our first 
preliminary design reviews."

The Constellation requirements work was completed at the same time the 
program was dealing with other significant challenges, including 
development of an integrated test schedule, a mission manifest and a 
budget profile that will support its next 20 years of work.

The program also closely followed the work of NASA's Lunar 
Architecture Team, which is formulating the requirements for a lunar 
surface outpost development and scientific research activities. A 
lunar architecture system requirements review is expected in spring 
of 2009. "This is an impressive accomplishment in a short period of 
time, and I'm pleased with the dedication and cooperation across 
projects and attention to detail that has gotten us this far," said 
Chris Hardcastle, Constellation Program systems engineering and 
integration manager at Johnson. 

The next series of reviews will begin with the Orion system definition 
review in August and continue through another Constellation Program 
baseline synchronization in March 2008. System definition reviews 
focus on emerging designs for all transportation elements and compare 
the predicted performance of each element against the currently 
baselined requirements.

The next significant milestones for the Constellation Program are a 
preliminary design review series in summer 2008 and a critical design 
review series in early 2010.

For more information about NASA's Constellation Program, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation 

For information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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