NASA Awards Upper Stage Engine Contract for Ares Rockets

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July 16, 2007

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

Kim Newton
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034 

CONTRACT RELEASE: C07-030

NASA AWARDS UPPER STAGE ENGINE CONTRACT FOR ARES ROCKETS

WASHINGTON - NASA has signed a $1.2 billion contract with Pratt and 
Whitney Rocketdyne Inc., of Canoga Park, Calif., for design, 
development, testing and evaluation of the J-2X engine that will 
power the upper stages of the Ares I and Ares V launch vehicles. 

The contract includes ground and test flight engines. It continues 
work that began on June 2, 2006, under a preliminary letter contract 
with Pratt and Whitney Rocketdyne.

NASA awarded the cost-plus-award fee contract to Pratt and Whitney 
Rocketdyne on a sole-source basis, NASA determined that no other 
existing capability meets its architecture requirements and is able 
to be extended to future exploration missions to the moon and beyond. 


The contract performance period extends through Dec. 31, 2012. Engines 
for operational missions will be purchased through a separate 
contract.

The J-2X is an evolved version of two historic predecessors: the 
powerful J-2 engine that propelled the Apollo-era Saturn IB and 
Saturn V rockets, and the J-2S, a simplified version of the J-2 that 
was developed and tested in the early 1970s. Pratt and Whitney 
Rocketdyne designed and developed both the J-2 and the J-2S and has 
been responsible for producing, refurbishing and improving them. The 
J-2X engine will incorporate significant upgrades to meet higher 
performance and reliability requirements for the Ares vehicles.

Ares I is an in-line, two-stage rocket that will transport the Orion 
crew exploration vehicle to low Earth orbit. Orion will accommodate 
as many as six astronauts. The first stage will consist of a single 
reusable solid propellant rocket booster similar to those used on the 
space shuttle, with an additional fifth segment. The second, or 
upper, stage will consist of a J-2X liquid oxygen- and liquid 
hydrogen-fueled main engine and a new upper stage fuel tank.

Ares V will enable NASA to launch a variety of science and exploration 
payloads, as well as key components needed to go to the moon and 
later to Mars. Ares V, a heavy lift launch vehicle, will use five 
RS-68 liquid oxygen- and liquid hydrogen-fueled engines mounted below 
a larger version of the space shuttle's external tank and two 
five-segment solid propellant rocket boosters for the first stage. 
The upper stage will use the same J-2X engine as the Ares I. 

The J-2X upper stage engine is managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight 
Center in Huntsville, Ala., for NASA's Constellation Program.

For information about NASA's Constellation Program, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation

	
-end-



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