Success Continues as NASA's Orion Parachute Tests Get More Difficult

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May 1, 2013

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

Brandi Dean 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 
brandi.k.dean@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 13-129

SUCCESS CONTINUES AS NASA'S ORION PARACHUTE TESTS GET MORE DIFFICULT

WASHINGTON -- A test version of NASA's Orion spacecraft safely landed 
during a simulation of two types of parachute failures Wednesday. 

In the test, conducted in Yuma, Ariz., the mock capsule was traveling 
about 250 mph when the parachutes were deployed. That is the highest 
speed the craft has experienced as part of the test series designed 
to certify Orion's parachute system for carrying humans. 

Engineers rigged one of the test capsule's two drogue parachutes not 
to deploy and one of its three main parachutes to skip its first 
stage of inflation after being extracted from a plane 25,000 feet 
above the Arizona desert. Drogue parachutes are used to slow and 
reorient Orion while the main parachutes inflate in three stages to 
gradually slow the capsule further as it descends. 

The failure scenario, one of the most difficult simulated so far, will 
provide data engineers need for human rating the parachute system. 

"The tests continue to become more challenging, and the parachute 
system is proving the design's redundancy and reliability," said 
Chris Johnson, NASA's project manager for the Orion parachute 
assembly system. "Testing helps us gain confidence and balance risk 
to ensure the safety of our crew." 

Orion has the largest parachute system ever built for a human-rated 
spacecraft. The canopies of the three main parachutes can cover 
almost an entire football field. After reentering Earth's atmosphere, 
astronauts will use the parachutes to slow the spacecraft for a 
splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. 

Testing irregularities allows engineers to verify the parachutes are 
reliable even when something goes wrong. The tests provide 
information to refine models used to build the system and Orion. 
Changes to the design and materials used in Orion's parachute system 
already have been made based on previous tests. Other government or 
commercial spacecraft using a similar parachute system also can 
benefit from the work done to validate Orion. 

"Parachute deployment is inherently chaotic and not easily 
predictable," said Stu McClung, Orion's landing and recovery system 
manager. "Gravity never takes any time off -- there's no timeout. The 
end result can be very unforgiving. That's why we test. If we have 
problems with the system, we want to know about them now." 

Orion's next Earth-based parachute test is scheduled for July, when 
the test capsule will be released from 35,000 feet, a higher altitude 
than ever before. The first test of the parachutes after traveling in 
space will be during Exploration Flight Test-1 in 2014, when an 
uncrewed Orion will be return from 3,600 miles above Earth's surface. 
The spacecraft will be traveling at about 340 mph when the parachutes 
deploy. 

For more information about Orion, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/orion 

	
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