NASA Awards Space Launch System Advanced Development Grants

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Jan. 14, 2013

Joshua Buck 
Headquarters, Washington    
202-358-1100 
jbuck@xxxxxxxx 

Kim Henry 
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. 
256-544-0034 
kimberly.m.henry@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 13-020

NASA AWARDS SPACE LAUNCH SYSTEM ADVANCED DEVELOPMENT GRANTS

WASHINGTON -- NASA has awarded grants to nine universities for 
advanced development activities for the nation's next heavy-lift 
rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS). 

The agency is providing approximately $2.25 million that will be 
shared by all the proposals under this NASA Research Announcement to 
seek innovative and affordable solutions to evolve the launch vehicle 
from its initial lift capability to a larger, future version of the 
rocket, which will carry humans farther into deep space than ever 
before. NASA sought proposals in a variety of areas, including 
concept development, trades and analyses, propulsion, structures, 
materials, manufacturing, avionics and software. 

"Partnering with academia on SLS advanced concepts brings new ideas 
and vitality to NASA and expands the SLS team of rocket scientists 
beyond just the agency," said William Gerstenmaier, associate 
administrator for Human Exploration and Operations at NASA 
Headquarters in Washington. 

The selected universities and their proposals are: 
-- "High Electric Density Device for Aerospace Applications," Auburn 
University 
-- "Challenges Towards Improved Friction Stir Welds Using On-line 
Sensing of Weld Quality," Louisiana State University 
-- "A New Modeling Approach for Rotating Cavitation Instabilities in 
Rocket Engine Turbopumps," Massachusetts Institute of Technology 
-- "Algorithmic Enhancements for High-Resolution Hybrid RANS-LES Using 
Loci-CHEM," Mississippi State University 
-- "Characterization of Aluminum/Alumina/Carbon Interactions under 
Simulated Rocket Motor Conditions," Pennsylvania State University 
-- "Development of Subcritical Atomization Models in the Loci 
Framework for Liquid Rocket Injectors," University of Florida 
-- "Validation of Supersonic Film Cooling Numerical Simulations Using 
Detailed Measurements and Novel Diagnostics," University of Maryland 
-- "Advanced LES and Laser Diagnostics to Model Transient 
Combustion-Dynamical Processes in Rocket Engines: Prediction of Flame 
Stabilization and Combustion-Instabilities," University of Michigan 
-- "Acoustic Emission-Based Health Monitoring of Space Launch System 
Structures," University of Utah 

For a description of each of the proposals, visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/ULC5iT 

"As we make tangible progress on the initial launch vehicle, our 
advanced development team is formulating concepts for an evolved 
version of the rocket," said Todd May, SLS Program manager at NASA's 
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. "The work being done 
today on SLS is a national and collaborative effort. With faculties 
and students engaged now, we look forward to creative, innovative and 
more affordable strategies to guide development of the 
next-generation heavy-lift launch vehicle." 

The SLS is designed to be flexible for launching payloads and 
spacecraft, including NASA's Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle, which 
will take humans beyond low-Earth orbit. The rocket will enable the 
agency to achieve its deep-space exploration goals and create new 
possibilities for scientific discovery. 

The period of performance for these grants will be one year with as 
many as two one-year options. 

The first flight test of NASA's SLS, which will feature a 
configuration for a 70-metric-ton (77-ton) lift capacity, is 
scheduled for 2017 from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. 

For information about NASA's Space Launch System, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/sls 

	
-end-



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