NASA, ATK Successfully Test First Orion Launch Abort Motor

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Nov. 20, 2008

Grey Hautaluoma/Ashley Edwards 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0668/1756 
grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx, ashley.edwards-1@xxxxxxxx 

Jennifer Morcone 
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. 
256-544-7199 
jennifer.j.morcone@xxxxxxxx 

Emily Outen 
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. 
757-864-7022 
emily.s.outen@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-306

NASA, ATK SUCCESSFULLY TEST FIRST ORION LAUNCH ABORT MOTOR

WASHINGTON -- Flames shot more than 100 feet high in a successful 
5.5-second ground test firing Thursday, Nov. 20, of a launch abort 
motor for NASA's next generation spacecraft, the Orion crew 
exploration vehicle. NASA and the Orion industry team conducted the 
firing at the Alliant Techsystems, or ATK, facility in Promontory, 
Utah. 

The abort motor will provide a half-million pounds of thrust to lift 
the crew module off the Ares I rocket, pulling the crew away safely 
in the event of an emergency on the launch pad or during the first 
300,000 feet of the rocket's climb to orbit. Thursday's firing was 
the first time a motor with reverse flow propulsion technology at 
this scale has been tested. It also is the first test of its kind 
since the beginning of the Apollo Program. 

"This milestone brings the Constellation Program one step closer to 
completion of the Orion vehicle that will carry astronauts to the 
International Space Station in 2015 and return humans to the moon by 
2020," said Mark Geyer, Orion project manager at NASA's Johnson Space 
Center in Houston. "The launch abort system must be ready to operate 
in many different environmental conditions, and tests such as this 
one are critical to assure this safety feature will protect our 
astronauts." 

Thursday's test firing was the culmination of a series of motor and 
component tests conducted this year in preparation for the next major 
milestone, a test scheduled for the spring of 2009 with a full-size 
mock-up of the Orion crew capsule. 

The abort motor stands more than 17 feet tall and is three feet in 
diameter. During Thursday's ground firing, the motor was fixed in a 
vertical test stand with its four exhaust nozzles pointing skyward at 
ATK's facility. 

On ignition, the abort motor fired for 5.5 seconds. The high impulse 
motor was developed to expend the majority of its propellant in the 
first three seconds, delivering the half million pounds of thrust 
needed to pull the capsule away from its launch vehicle in an 
emergency abort. 

While similar to the Apollo Program's launch abort motor, Orion's 
abort motor incorporates today's technology into a more robust 
design. The launch abort motor uses a composite case and an exhaust 
turn-flow technology instead of a tower, which results in weight 
savings, improved performance and improved success in crew survival 
during an abort. Instead of the rocket plume exiting a rear nozzle, 
the manifold is placed at the forward end of the motor. The rocket 
thrust enters the manifold and is turned 155 degrees and forced out 
the four nozzles, creating a forward-pulling force. 

To prove this new technology, a series of tests were performed leading 
up to the full-scale demonstration. Earlier tests included five 
subscale test firings incorporating reverse flow propulsion; 
full-scale structural integrity testing on the composite case, 
igniter bottle and manifold; and surveillance testing during casting 
to ensure the propellant chemistry met abort motor requirements. 

ATK is the subcontractor responsible for the launch abort motor within 
NASA's Orion Project. Orbital Sciences Corporation in Dulles, Va., is 
responsible for integrating the launch abort system motor into the 
vehicle for Lockheed Martin Corporation of Denver, the prime 
contractor for Orion. The Orion Project Office is located at NASA's 
Johnson Space Center in Houston and receives management and technical 
support for the Launch Abort System from NASA's Langley Research 
Center in Hampton, Va., and NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in 
Huntsville, Ala. 

For images and video of the test firing and more information about 
NASA's Constellation Program, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/constellation 

	
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