NASA Successfully Tests Parachute for Ares Rocket

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July 24, 2008

Grey Hautaluoma/Stephanie Schierholz 
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0668/4997
grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx, stephanie.schierholz@xxxxxxxx 

Kim Newton
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034
kimberly.d.newton@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-187

NASA SUCCESSFULLY TESTS PARACHUTE FOR ARES ROCKET

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. -- NASA and industry engineers have successfully 
completed the first drop test of a drogue parachute for the Ares I 
rocket. The drogue parachute is designed to slow the rapid descent of 
the spent first-stage motor, cast off by the Ares I rocket during its 
climb to space. 

The successful test is a key early milestone in development and 
production of the Ares I rocket, the first launch vehicle for NASA's 
Constellation Program that will send explorers to the International 
Space Station, the moon and beyond in coming decades. The drogue 
parachute is a vital element of the Ares I deceleration system and 
will permit recovery of the reusable first-stage motor for use on 
future Ares I flights.

Engineers from NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, 
Ala., managed the team that conducted the first Ares I drogue chute 
test on July 24 at the U.S. Army's Yuma Proving Ground near Yuma, 
Ariz. This is the sixth in an ongoing series of tests supporting 
development of the Ares I parachute recovery system, which includes a 
pilot chute, drogue and three main parachutes. The next drogue 
parachute test is scheduled for October, and testing will continue 
through 2010. The drogue parachute also will be used during NASA's 
first test flight for the Ares rocket, the Ares I-X, scheduled to 
take place in 2009.

Researchers dropped the 68-foot-diameter drogue parachute and its 
36,000-pound load -- simulating the first-stage motor -- from a U.S. 
Air Force C-17 aircraft flying at an altitude of 25,000 feet. The 
parachute and all test hardware functioned properly and landed 
safely. 

The parachutes that serve as the Ares I recovery system are similar to 
the four-segment space shuttle boosters, but they have been 
redesigned to accommodate new requirements of the Ares I first stage. 
Dramatically larger and more powerful than the shuttle's boosters, 
the Ares I will have a five-segment solid rocket booster -- causing 
it to fall faster from a much higher altitude after separation from 
the launch vehicle.

During launch, the Ares I first-stage booster will separate from the 
upper stage at an elevation of 189,000 feet, approximately 126 
seconds into flight. After freefalling to approximately 15,740 feet, 
the booster's nose cap will be jettisoned, releasing the pilot 
parachute, which in turn releases the drogue, slowing the stage's 
descent from 402 mph to 210 mph and maneuvering the booster into a 
vertical position. Finally, a cluster of three main parachutes, each 
150 feet in diameter, will be deployed. The main parachutes continue 
to slow the booster to splashdown in the Atlantic Ocean.

Beginning in 2015, the Ares I rocket will launch the Orion crew 
capsule and six astronauts, and small pressurized cargo payloads, to 
the International Space Station. The Ares I rocket, an in-line, 
two-stage rocket configuration, will be powered by the first stage 
solid rocket motor for the first two minutes of launch. 

ATK Launch Systems near Promontory, Utah, is the prime contractor for 
the first stage booster. ATK's subcontractor, United Space Alliance 
of Houston, is responsible for design, development and testing of the 
parachutes at its facilities at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 

NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston manages the Constellation 
Program, which includes the Ares I rocket, the Ares V heavy-lift 
launch vehicle, the Orion crew capsule, the Altair lunar lander. 
Marshall Space Flight Center manages the Ares Projects. The U.S. 
Army's Yuma Proving Ground provides the test range, support 
facilities and equipment to NASA for parachute testing.

Video of the drogue test will be available Monday, July 28, on NASA 
Television's Video File. For NASA TV downlink, schedule and streaming 
video information, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

For information about NASA's Constellation Program, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation

	
-end-



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