NASA Shuttle Engine Upgrades Improve Safety and Reliability

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June 5, 2007

John Yembrick 
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0602

June Malone
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034 

RELEASE: 07-130

NASA SHUTTLE ENGINE UPGRADES IMPROVE SAFETY AND RELIABILITY

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - A main engine computer upgrade developed by NASA's 
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., will fly on space 
shuttle Atlantis during the STS-117 mission, targeted for launch June 
8. The upgrade is part of NASA's continuing efforts to improve space 
shuttle safety and reliability.

The Advanced Health Management System, or AHMS, will provide new 
monitoring and insight into the performance of the two most critical 
components of the space shuttle main engine: the high-pressure fuel 
turbopump and the high-pressure oxidizer turbopump.

This latest improvement is to the controller, the on-engine computer 
that monitors and controls all main engine operations. The 
improvement allows an engine to shut down during launch if vibration 
levels exceed safe limits. AHMS consists of advanced digital signal 
processors, radiation-hardened memory and new software.

AHMS first flew on Discovery's STS-116 mission in December 2006 with a 
single controller on one engine, but in monitor-only mode, meaning 
AHMS collected and processed vibration data but could not shut down 
the engine. AHMS will operate in active mode - the ability to shut 
down an engine if an anomaly is detected - on a single engine during 
the upcoming STS-117 mission and is scheduled to fly in active mode 
on all three engines during the STS-118 mission later this year.

In the event of an engine shut down, the shuttle has several options 
available to abort the ascent. They include returning to the launch 
site, a transatlantic abort landing, landing at an alternate site in 
the United States or rendezvous with the International Space Station. 
Each scenario would depend on when an engine shuts down during 
flight, the mission trajectory and mission specific requirements, 
such as payloads.

The system uses data from three existing sensors, or accelerometers, 
mounted on each of the high pressure turbopumps. It measures how much 
each pump is vibrating. High-pressure fuel and high-pressure oxidizer 
turbopumps rotate at approximately 34,000 revolutions per minute and 
23,000 revolutions per minute, respectively. To operate at such 
extreme speeds, the turbopumps are equipped with highly specialized 
bearings and precisely balanced components. Output data from the 
accelerometers is routed to the new digital signal processors 
installed in the main engine controller. These processors analyze the 
sensor readings 20 times each second, looking for vibration anomalies 
that are indicative of impending failure of rotating turbopump 
components such as blades, impellers, inducers and bearings. If the 
magnitude of any vibration anomaly exceeds safe limits, the upgraded 
main engine controller would shut down the unhealthy engine 
immediately.

"The Space Shuttle Main Engine Project has, for many years, pursued a 
reliable means to monitor high-pressure turbomachinery health in real 
time," said Tim Kelley, deputy manager of the Space Shuttle Main 
Engine Project Office. "AHMS provides that capability and 
significantly improves shuttle flight safety."

AHMS is the sixth major upgrade to space shuttle main engines since 
the first shuttle flight in 1981. The series of shuttle main engine 
enhancements have increased safety and reliability through such 
improvements as the addition of a two-duct powerhead, a single-coil 
heat exchanger, a new high-pressure oxidizer turbopump, a 
large-throat main combustion chamber and a new high-pressure fuel 
turbopump.

The shuttle's three main engines start approximately 6.5 seconds prior 
to lift-off. Once running, the solid rocket boosters ignite, and 
lift-off occurs. During ascent, the solid rocket boosters burn for 
approximately 120 seconds and are then jettisoned. The shuttle, still 
attached to the external tank with three main engines running, 
continues ascent until main engine cut-off at 510 seconds, or eight 
and one-half minutes after liftoff - long enough to burn more than 
500,000 gallons of fuel. The engines shut down just before the 
shuttle, traveling at about 17,000 mph, reaches orbit. The three main 
engines are never restarted during the mission, re-entry or landing. 
The shuttle returns to Earth as a glider.

Space shuttle main engines operate at greater temperature extremes 
than any mechanical system in common use today. These powerful 
engines are clustered at the aft end of the shuttle and have a 
combined thrust of more than 1.2 million pounds. Each is 14 feet 
long, is seven and one-half feet in diameter at the nozzle exit, 
weighs approximately 7,750 pounds and generates more than 12 million 
horsepower.

For information about the space shuttle program, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle

	
-end-



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