CORRECTION -- NASA and ATK Successfully Test Five-Segment Solid Rocket Motor

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Aug. 31, 2010

Michael Braukus 
Headquarters, Washington                           
202-358-1979 
michael.j.braukus@xxxxxxxx 

Jennifer Stanfield 
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. 
256-544-0034 
jennifer.stanfield@xxxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 10-202

CORRECTION -- NASA AND ATK SUCCESSFULLY TEST FIVE-SEGMENT SOLID ROCKET MOTOR

CORRECTION - Number of flights of DM-2 motor cases and specific 
missions flown 
(The number of flights the DM-2 motor cases had flown was erroneously 
reported. The correct number is 59. The earliest mission the cases 
flew was STS-3. Please use the corrected version of this news 
release.) 

PROMONTORY, Utah -- With a loud roar and mighty column of flame, NASA 
and ATK Aerospace Systems successfully completed a two-minute, 
full-scale test of the largest and most powerful solid rocket motor 
designed for flight. The motor is potentially transferable to future 
heavy-lift launch vehicle designs. 

The stationary firing of the first-stage development solid rocket 
motor, dubbed DM-2, was the most heavily instrumented solid rocket 
motor test in NASA history. More than 760 instruments measured 53 
test objectives. 

Prior to the static test, the solid rocket motor was cooled to 40 
degrees Fahrenheit to verify the performance of new materials and 
assess motor performance at low temperatures during the full-duration 
test. Initial test data showed the motor performance met all 
expectations. 

"For every few degrees the temperature rises, solid propellant burns 
slightly faster and only through robust ground testing can we 
understand how material and motor performance is impacted by 
different operating conditions," said Alex Priskos, first stage 
manager for Ares Projects at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in 
Huntsville, Ala. "Ground-testing at temperature extremes pushes this 
system to its limits, which advances our understanding of 
five-segment solid rocket motor performance." 

The first-stage solid rocket motor is designed to generate up to 
3.6-million pounds of thrust at launch. Information collected from 
this test, together with data from the first development motor test 
last year, will be evaluated to better understand the performance and 
reliability of the design. 

Although similar to the solid rocket boosters that help power the 
space shuttle to orbit, the five-segment development motor includes 
several upgrades and technology improvements implemented by NASA and 
ATK engineers. Motor upgrades from a shuttle booster include the 
addition of a fifth segment, a larger nozzle throat, and upgraded 
insulation and liner. The motor cases are flight-proven hardware used 
on shuttle launches for more than three decades. The cases used in 
this ground test have collectively launched 59 previous missions, the 
earliest being STS-3. 

After more testing, the first-stage solid rocket motor will be 
certified to fly at temperature ranges between 40-90 degrees 
Fahrenheit. The solid rocket motor was built as an element of NASA's 
Constellation Program and is managed by the Ares Projects Office at 
Marshall. ATK Aerospace Systems, a division of Alliant Techsystems of 
Brigham City, Utah, is the prime contractor. 

For more information about NASA, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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