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The Space Shuttle

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Chapter 4 The Space Shuttle Components The Orbiter The main components of the shuttle are the orbiter, the external tank, and the solid rocket boosters. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Space Shuttle


1
Chapter 4
  • The Space Shuttle

2
Components The Orbiter
  • The main components of the shuttle are the
    orbiter, the external tank, and the solid rocket
    boosters.
  • The Orbiter is 112 feet long, 56 feet high, and
    78 feet wide from wingtip to wingtip. It serves
    as the crewmembers headquarters and to transport
    large payloads to space. The orbiter is designed
    to carry from two to eight crewmembers on a ten
    to fourteen day mission.

3
Components The Orbiter
  • In the front of the orbiter is a three level crew
    compartment. The upper level, called the flight
    deck, houses maneuvering controls, mission
    monitors, six windshields, two overhead windows.
    The second level, the mid-deck, is where the crew
    eats, sleeps, exercises and conducts some
    experiments. The mid-deck also features an
    outside hatch and airlock leading to the cargo
    bay. The lower level serves to store equipment.

4
Components The Orbiter
  • Behind the crew compartment is the payload bay.
    It measures 60 feet long, 17 feet wide, and 13
    feet deep and can carry up to 51,600 pounds.
  • The wings, also known as delta wings, are
    D-shaped which are the most efficient for
    traveling at speeds well beyond the speed of
    sound.

5
Components The Orbiter
  • The orbiter also contains the space shuttles
    main engines. These three engines, located on the
    rear of the orbiter, burn a propellant of liquid
    hydrogen and liquid oxygen. They are essential in
    getting the orbiter into orbit burning up to
    45,300 gallons per minute. They can be throttled
    from as low as 65 of rated thrust up to 109
    which allows the shuttle to provide a much
    smoother ride.
  • The orbiter is covered by 32,000 heat tiles that
    protect the shuttle upon reentry.

6
Components The External Tank
  • Orange in color, this tank provides the fuel for
    the shuttles main engines. Thus, once the
    external tank is discarded, the main engines are
    no longer of use.
  • The external tank is covered by a foam slightly
    stiffer than the material in a Styrofoam cooler.
    This serves as insulation for the liquid hydrogen
    and oxygen held inside which needs to remain at
    temperatures as cold as 420 degrees below zero.
  • This is the only non-reusable part of the
    shuttle.

7
Components The Solid Rocket Boosters (SRBs)
  • Twin boosters attached to the external tank serve
    to help to lift the shuttle in the initial stage
    of launch. They are the largest solid rockets
    ever made.
  • The solid propellant contains by weight, 16
    aluminum powder fuel, 70 ammonium perchlorate
    oxidizer, 12 polybutadiene acrylic acid
    acrylonitrile which is a binding agent, 2 epoxy
    used for curing, and iron oxide to help control
    the burning rate.

8
Components The Solid Rocket Boosters (SRBs)
  • The mixture of these materials looks like a dense
    viscous plaster which is poured into a mold where
    it is dried (cured) for several days resulting in
    a material that looks and feels like a rubber
    eraser or hard putty.
  • The SRBs are for one time use only and can burn
    at a 100 rate until all the fuel is exhausted.

9
Configuration
  • Total Configuration is 184 feet tall, 79 feet
    wide from either side, and weighs 4.4 million
    pounds. When the launch finally occurs 6.425
    million pounds of thrust lift the entire ship
    into the air very quickly because of the excess
    power.

10
Shuttles
  • Each orbiter is named for a famous
    American/British sailing ship of exploration.
    Challenger (OV-99) was supposed to be the
    original test vehicle, but during construction,
    NASA decided to make this orbiter into an
    operational spacecraft.
  • The first shuttle to launch into space was the
    Columbia (OV-102) on March 12, 1981. Since then
    the Challenger, Discovery (OV-103), Atlantis
    (OV-104) and replacing the Challenger Endeavor
    (OV-105) have become part of the fleet.

11
Shuttles
Shuttle Flight Days Flights MIR/ISS dockings Satellites Deployed
Atlantis 220 26 7/6 14
Challenger 62 10 0/0 10
Columbia 301 28 0/0 8
Discovery 242 30 1/4 26
Endeavour 207 19 1/4 3
Totals 1,032 113 9/16 61
12
Launch Preparation
  • Each space shuttle flight requires years of
    mission planning and months of getting the
    shuttle prepared or processed to go into orbit.
  • Over a month is spent inspecting every system on
    the orbiter and repair or replace items failing
    the rigorous exams. Every one of the 32,000 heat
    tiles must be inspected and replaced if they are
    damaged or missing.

13
Launch Preparation
  • The shuttle engines and their respective fuel
    pumps must be removed, inspected, and
    refurbished. The engineers may install the same
    engines, new engines, or previously refurbished
    engines.
  • The process of integrating the major shuttle
    parts is called stacking and takes about four to
    six weeks.

14
Launch Preparation
  • A specific vehicle, called the crawler, is used
    to move the completed shuttle assembly to the
    launch pad. It is described as the biggest,
    slowest, strongest, strangest and noisiest land
    vehicle ever created by mankind, it is unlike any
    other moving vehicle on earth.
  • Built in the 1960s, the crawler typically rolls
    at around 2 mph. (Video) It takes several hours
    for the crawler to take the completed shuttle on
    the 4 mile journey to the launch pad.

15
The Launch
  • All shuttle launches take place at the Kennedy
    Space Center in Florida. Once the tower is
    cleared, the control of the shuttle flight goes
    to Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas.
  • At two minutes into the launch both SRBs begin to
    burn out at an altitude of 29 miles. After the
    boosters burn completely out, they fall into the
    Atlantic Ocean beneath large parachutes where
    they are recovered by two NASA ships.
  • Video of launch of Atlantis (10/02) Parts 1, 2,
    3.

16
The Launch
  • The main shuttle engines completely shut down at
    eight minutes and thirty seconds into flight.
    Soon after the external tank is released.
  • At 45 minutes after launch the orbiter reaches
    apogee and two thrusters located in the blisters
    at the left and right of the craft's vertical
    stabilizer begin to fire to raise the shuttle's
    orbit. This rocket system is called the orbital
    maneuvering system (OMS) and it increases the
    spacecraft's velocity by 150 miles per hour.

17
In Orbit
  • Once arriving at this orbit, the payload bay
    doors must be opened to allow the orbiter to cool
    by removing the excess heat caused by electrical
    equipment and life support systems operations.
  • Now the space shuttle may begin serving its
    purpose. This typically is one of the following

18
In Orbit
  • Dock with another spacecraft ( ie. International
    Space Station, Mir)
  • Carry out experiments (usually a laboratory such
    as Spacelab has been then included in the payload
    bay)
  • Release a satellite in the payload bay. This is
    sometimes done using the robotic arm.
  • Trap another spacecraft. This was done for
    example with the Hubble Space Telescope so that
    it could be serviced.

19
In Orbit
  • The OMS continues to control the orbit of the
    shuttle, however, attitude is controlled by the
    reaction control system (RCS). These are a series
    of small rockets which burn hydrazine and
    nitrogen tetroxide. There is one RCS pod in the
    shuttle's nose and two RCS pods in the tail that
    contain different rocket nozzles that thrust up,
    down, left, and right. Once an RCS thruster is
    activated and a movement starts an equal and
    opposite RCS thruster must be activated to stop
    the motion (Newton's third law is paramount in
    zero g).

20
The Return Flight
  • The space shuttle cannot land in rainy weather.
    The weather resisting coating burns off during
    launch and re-entry. Thus while the preferred
    landing site is back in Kennedy Space Center, the
    shuttle sometimes needs to be diverted to White
    Sands, New Mexico or Edwards Air Force Base in
    California. A specially redesigned Boeing 747
    would then piggyback the shuttle to Florida.
    (Video)

21
The Return Flight
  • A number of checklist items must be performed
    before the space shuttle can return to Earth.
    Among these the astronauts must put back on the
    pressure suits which they wore during ascent and
    close the payload bay doors.
  • The RCS then places the shuttle in the proper
    attitude and the OMS slows the shuttle into a
    decaying orbit. (Video of go-for de-orbit
    burn). From a point halfway around the world the
    shuttle begins its entry.

22
The Return Flight
  • As the shuttle enters the atmosphere, the RCS
    maneuvers the nose at an attitude of about 30º
    nose up. This insures that the thermal energy is
    concentrated on the heat tiles underneath the
    orbiter. Upon reentering the atmosphere
    temperatures as high as 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit
    may occur outside the shuttle as it races at
    speeds in excess of 17,000 miles an hour.
  • Its a controlled glider as it does its landing
    (Video). The whole maneuver from de-orbit burn to
    touchdown takes about an hour.

23
The Tragedies
  • Two shuttles have been destroyed, both with the
    loss of all astronauts on board
  • Challenger - lost 73 seconds after lift-off,
    January 28, 1986. Due to unusually cold weather,
    one of the O-rings in the SRBs became brittle.
    One minute after lift-off the ring failed
    allowing hot gas to escape the SRB and pierce the
    external tank. Some 73 seconds after the launch
    began, a colossal explosion ensued that destroyed
    the shuttle.

24
The Tragedies
  • Columbia - lost during re-entry, February 1,
    2003. Eighty-one seconds after lift-off a
    briefcase-sized piece of insulation foam from the
    external tank possibly containing ice detached
    and impacted the left wing of the orbiter. It is
    believed that this damaged tiles vital in
    protecting the shuttle during re-entry. As the
    shuttle returned, data indicates that the left
    wing suffered severe damage that eventually led
    to the loss of control and destruction of the
    orbiter.

25
The Tragedies
  • Missions are hopeful to restart around May of
    this year with the shuttle Discovery making a
    trip to the International Space Station.
    Designated, mission STS-114, the crewmembers will
    deliver supplies to the station, but the major
    focus of their mission will be testing and
    evaluating new Space Shuttle flight safety, which
    includes new inspection and repair techniques.
    The first spacewalk is set to demonstrate repair
    techniques of the shuttles Thermal Protection
    System.
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