NASA Awards Final Space Launch System Advanced Booster Contract

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Feb. 14, 2013

Rachel Kraft 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1100 
rachel.h.kraft@xxxxxxxx 

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


CONTRACT RELEASE: 13-054

NASA AWARDS FINAL SPACE LAUNCH SYSTEM ADVANCED BOOSTER CONTRACT

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected Aerojet of Sacramento, Calif., for a 
$23.3 million contract to develop engineering demonstrations and risk 
reduction concepts for future advanced boosters for the agency's 
Space Launch System (SLS). 

Aerojet is one of four companies contracted under a NASA Research 
Announcement (NRA) to improve the affordability, reliability and 
performance of an advanced booster for a future version of the SLS 
heavy-lift rocket. 

The SLS vehicle will take the agency's Orion spacecraft and other 
payloads farther than ever before. The initial 70-metric-ton (77-ton) 
configuration will use two five-segment solid rocket boosters similar 
to the boosters that helped power the space shuttle to orbit. An 
evolved 130-metric-ton (143-ton) rocket will require an advanced 
booster with more thrust than any existing U.S. liquid- or 
solid-fueled boosters. 

Aerojet will work to reduce the risk and improve technical maturation 
of a liquid oxygen and kerosene oxidizer-rich staged-combustion 
engine. The company will fabricate a representative full-scale 
550,000-pound thrust class main injector and thrust chamber, and 
prepare to conduct a number of tests measuring performance and 
demonstrating combustion stability. 

In addition to Aerojet, three other companies are under contract to 
develop SLS advanced booster contracts including ATK Launch Systems 
Inc. of Brigham City, Utah; Dynetics Inc. of Huntsville, Ala.; and 
Northrop Grumman Corporation Aerospace Systems of Redondo Beach, 
Calif. These new initiatives will perform and examine advanced 
booster concepts and hardware demonstrations during an approximate 
30-month period. 

While commercial partners seek to fly astronauts and payloads to the 
International Space Station, NASA's SLS, with an uncrewed Orion 
spacecraft, will begin the first step towards deep space on a flight 
test in 2017. 

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the 
SLS Program for the agency. NASA's Johnson Space Flight Center in 
Houston manages Orion. SLS will launch 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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