Successful Rocket Motor Test Helps NASA's Shuttle and Ares I

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Nov. 1, 2007

June Malone/Melissa Mathews
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1071/1272
june.e.malone@xxxxxxxx, melissa.mathews-1@xxxxxxxx

Steve Roy
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034
steven.e.roy@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 07-247

SUCCESSFUL ROCKET MOTOR TEST HELPS NASA'S SHUTTLE AND ARES I

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - NASA's Space Shuttle Program successfully fired a 
four-segment reusable solid rocket motor Thursday, Nov. 1, at a Utah 
test facility. The two-minute test provided important information for 
continued launches of the shuttle and for development of the Ares I 
rocket, a key component of NASA's Constellation Program that will 
launch the Orion crew vehicle on missions to the moon. 

The static firing of the full-scale motor was performed at 1 p.m. MDT 
at ATK Launch Systems Group, a Promontory, Utah-based unit of Alliant 
Techsystems Inc., where the shuttle's solid rocket motors are 
manufactured. Preliminary indications are that all test objectives 
for shuttle and Ares I were met.

The test evaluation motor, or TEM-13, burned for approximately 123 
seconds, the same time each reusable solid rocket motor burns during 
a space shuttle launch. The Reusable Solid Rocket Booster Project 
Office at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., 
manages these tests to qualify any proposed changes to the rocket 
motor and to determine whether new materials perform as well as those 
now in use. 

"Full-scale static testing such as this is a key element of the 'test 
before you fly' standard and ensures continued quality and 
performance," said Jody Singer, deputy manager of the Shuttle 
Propulsion Office at Marshall.

One test objective was to demonstrate the thrust vector control system 
operation using only one of two hydraulic power units. The vector 
control, part of the flight control system, directs the thrust of the 
two solid rocket booster nozzles to control shuttle attitude and 
trajectory during liftoff and ascent. During a shuttle launch, both 
hydraulic power units run and provide backup power to thrust vector 
control actuators. The test with only one hydraulic power unit will 
validate the system's redundancy capability and operating performance 
data. 

Another test objective was to measure the external sound or acoustics 
created when the motor ignites. More than 25 microphones were located 
near the motor to record the data from the firing. This information 
will be used to predict the motor's acoustic effects and aid in the 
final design of the launch structure for Ares I. 

After final test data are analyzed, NASA will publish results for each 
objective in a report available later this year.

For more information about the Space Shuttle Program, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle 

Through the Constellation Program, NASA is working to send astronauts 
to the moon, where they will set up a lunar outpost to prepare for 
possible future journeys to Mars and other destinations. The crewed 
launch of the Orion spacecraft aboard an Ares I rocket is set for no 
later than 2015. Humans will return to the moon by 2020. For more 
information about Constellation, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation

	
-end-



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