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  • Spacecraft Propulsion and Power  (184)
  • 2015-2019
  • 1995-1999  (184)
  • 1990-1994
  • 1999  (184)
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  • 2015-2019
  • 1995-1999  (184)
  • 1990-1994
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Propellent injector development at MSFC includes experimental analysis using optical techniques, such as Raman, fluorescence, or Mie scattering. For the application of spontaneous Raman scattering to hydrocarbon-fueled flows a technique needs to be developed to remove the interfering polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon fluorescence from the relatively weak Raman signals. A current application of such a technique is to the analysis of the mixing and combustion performance of multijet, impinging-jet candidate fuel injectors for the baseline Mars ascent engine, which will bum methane and liquid oxygen produced in-situ on Mars to reduce the propellent mass transported to Mars for future manned Mars missions. The present technique takes advantage of the strongly polarized nature of Raman scattering. It is shown to be discernable from unpolarized fluorescence interference by subtracting one polarized image from another. Both of these polarized images are obtained from a single laser pulse by using a polarization-separating calcite rhomb mounted in the imaging spectrograph. A demonstration in a propane-air flame is presented.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: 1999 NASA/ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program; D-48
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: An Inertial-Electrostatic Confinement (IEC) device was assembled at the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) Propulsion Research Center (PRC) to study the possibility of using EEC technology for deep space propulsion and power. Inertial-Electrostatic Confinement is capable of containing a nuclear fusion plasma in a series of virtual potential wells. These wells would substantially increase plasma confinement, possibly leading towards a high-gain, breakthrough fusion device. A one-foot in diameter IEC vessel was borrowed from the Fusion Studies Laboratory at the University of Illinois@Urbana-Champaign for the summer. This device was used in initial parameterization studies in order to design a larger, actively cooled device for permanent use at the PRC.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: 1999 NASA/ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program; D-31
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  • 3
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    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: The Fastrac rocket engine is currently being developed for the X-34 technology demonstrator vehicle. The engine performance model must be calibrated to support accurate performance prediction. Data reduction is the process of estimating hardware characteristics from available test data, and is essential for effective performance model calibration and prediction. A new data reduction procedure was developed, implemented, and tested using data from Fastrac engine tests. The procedure selects hardware and test measurements to use in the reduction process based on examination of the model influence matrix condition number. Predicted hardware characteristics are recovered from the solution of a quadratic programming problem. Computational tests indicate that the new procedure provides a significant improvement in test data reduction capability. Enhancements include improved test data utilization and time history data reduction capability. The new method is generically applicable to other systems.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: 1999 NASA/ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program; D-42
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-08-16
    Description: A status of MEMS-based micropropulsion activities conducted at JPL will be given. These activities include work conducted on the so called Vaporizing Liquid Micro-Thruster (VLM) which recently underwent proof-of-concept testing, demonstrating the ability to vaporize water propellant at 2 W and 2 V. Micro-ion engine technologies, such m field emitter arrays and micro-grids are being studied. Focus in the field emitter area is on arrays able to survive in thruster plumes and micro-ion engine plasmas to serve as neutralizers aW engine cathodes. Integrated, batch-fabricated Ion repeller grid structures are being studied as well as different emitter tip materials are being investigated to meet these goals. A micro-isolation valve is being studied to isolate microspacecraft feed system during long interplanetary cruises, avoiding leakage and prolonging lifetime and reliability of such systems. This concept relies on the melting of a thin silicon barrier. Burst pressure values as high as 2,900 psig were obtained for these valves and power requirements to melt barriers ranging between 10 - 50 microns in thickness, as determined through thermal finite element calculations, varied between 10 - 30 W to be applied over a duration of merely 0.5 ms.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: Integrated Micro/Nanotechnology for Space Applications; Apr 11, 1999 - Apr 15, 1999; Pasadena, CA; United States
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-08-15
    Description: Portable electromagnetic antiproton traps are now in a state of realization. This allows facilities like NASA Marshall Space Flight Center to conduct antimatter research remote to production sites. MSFC is currently developing a trap to store 10(exp 12) antiprotons for a twenty-day half-life period to be used in future experiments including antimatter plasma guns, antimatter-initiated microfusion, and the synthesis of antihydrogen for space propulsion applications. In 1998, issues including design, safety and transportation were considered for the MSFC High Performance Antimatter Trap (HiPAT). Radial diffusion and annihilation losses of antiprotons prompted the use of a 4 Tesla superconducting magnet and a 20 KV electrostatic potential at 10(exp -12) Torr pressure. Cryogenic fluids used to maintain a trap temperature of 4K were sized accordingly to provide twenty days of stand-alone storage time (half-life). Procurement of the superconducting magnet with associated cryostat has been completed. The inner, ultra-high vacuum system with electrode structures has been fabricated, tested and delivered to MSFC along with the magnet and cryostat. Assembly of these systems is currently in progress. Testing under high vacuum conditions, using electrons and hydrogen ions will follow in the months ahead.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: 1999 NASA/ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program; D-45
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  • 6
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    Publication Date: 2019-08-15
    Description: Scientific exploration beyond the confines of our solar system has recently become a near-term goal for NASA. Early robotic probes beyond the Sun's heliopause [a few hundred Astronomical Units (AU) from the Sun] are planned for the first decade of the 21st century. A leading propulsion system for these early interstellar efforts is the solar sail unfurled as close to the Sun as possible. This report discusses the basic physics of the solar sail, the rationale for interstellar exploration, a recent materials breakthrough influencing solar-sail design concepts, and solar sail kinematics (for the case of sail unfurlment at perihelion from an initially parabolic solar orbit and sail orientation normal to the Sun). A number of possible mission scenarios to distances up to 1,000 AU are presented as is a short discussion of what we must learn to extend our exploratory reach to 10,000 AU.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: 1999 NASA/ASEE Summer Faculty Fellowship Program; D-30
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Support of microgravity research on the 89th flight of the Space Transportation System (STS-89) and a continued effort to characterize the acceleration environment of the Space Shuttle Orbiter and the Mir Space Station form the basis for this report. For the STS-89 mission, the Space Shuttle Endeavour was equipped with a Space Acceleration Measurement System (SAMS) unit, which collected more than a week's worth of data. During docked operations with Mir, a second SAMS unit collected approximately a day's worth of data yielding the only set of acceleration measurements recorded simultaneously on the two spacecraft. Based on the data acquired by these SAMS units, this report serves to characterize a number of acceleration events and quantify their impact on the local nature of the accelerations experienced at the Mechanics of Granular Materials (MGM) experiment location. Crew activity was shown to nearly double the median root-mean-square (RMS) acceleration level calculated below 10 Hz, while the Enhanced Orbiter Refrigerator/Freezer operating at about 22 Hz was a strong acceleration source in the vicinity of the MGM location. The MGM science requirement that the acceleration not exceed plus or minus 1 mg was violated numerous times during their experiment runs; however, no correlation with sample instability has been found to this point. Synchronization between the SAMS data from Endeavour and from Mir was shown to be close much of the time, but caution with respect to exact timing should be exercised when comparing these data. When orbiting as a separate vehicle prior to docking, Endeavour had prominent structural modes above 3 Hz, while Mir exhibited a cluster of modes around 1 Hz. When mated, a transition to common modes was apparent in the two SAMS data sets. This report is not a comprehensive analysis of the acceleration data, so those interested in further details should contact the Principal Investigator Microgravity Services team at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's John H. Glenn Research Center.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: WU-101-46-0A-00 , NASA/TM-1999-209084/SUPPL , E-11667
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: This presentation discusses the work towards a second generation reusable launch vehicle (RLV). The goals of the second generation RLV program are reviewed. These include cost, safety, and propulsion advances. The Fluid dynamics technologies under development are discussed. These include the altitude compensating nozzle technology, the Aerospike plume induced base heating, the inducer testing technology. Pictures of altitude compensating nozzles Aerospike Plume Induced Base Heating results and Inducer testing technologies are included. Further goals of the program are to improve the methodology for optimizing design of the injectors, to improve the optimization of the turbopump and improvement of the methodology to analyze the engine performance. This presentation consists of outline view slides
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: 49th Propulsion Meeting; Dec 14, 1999 - Dec 17, 1999; Tucson, AZ; United States
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  • 9
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    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: This volume, the first of three volumes, is a collection of 15 unclassified/unlimited-distribution papers which were presented at the 49,h Joint Army-Navy-NASA-Air Force (JANNAF) Propulsion Meeting, held 14-16 December 1999 at the Sheraton El Conquistador Resort in Tucson, Arizona. Specific subjects discussed include solid propellants; solid propellant ingredients, hazards, and demilitarization/disposal; composite materials used in propulsion applications; and sensors.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: CPIA-Publ-696-Vol-1 , 49th JANNAF Propulsion Meeting; Dec 14, 1999 - Dec 16, 1999; Tucson, AZ; United States
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: A practical design tool for the analysis of flowfields near the injector face has been developed and used to analyze the Fastrac engine. The objective was to produce a computational design tool which was detailed enough to predict the interactive effects of injector element impingement angles and points and the momenta of the individual orifice flows. To obtain a model which could be used to simulate a significant number of individual orifices, a homogeneous computational fluid dynamics model was developed. To describe liquid and vapor sub- and super-critical flows, the model included thermal and caloric equations of state which were valid over a wide range of pressures and temperatures. A homogeneous model was constructed such that the local state of the flow was determined directly, i.e. the quality of the flow was calculated. Such a model does not identify drops or their distribution, but it does allow the flow along the injector face and into the acoustic cavity to be predicted. It also allows the film coolant flow to be accurately described. The initial evaluation of the injector code was made by simulating cold flow from an unlike injector element and from a like-on-like overlapping fan (LOL) injector element. The predicted mass flux distributions of these injector elements compared well to cold flow test results. These are the same cold flow tests which serve as the data base for the JANNAF performance prediction codes. The flux distributions 1 inch downstream of the injector face are very similar; the differences were somewhat larger at further distances from the faceplate. Since the cold flow testing did not achieve good mass balances when integrations across the entire fan were made, the CFD simulation appears to be reasonable alternative to future cold flow testing. To simulate the Fastrac, an RP-1/LOX combustion model must be chosen. This submodel must be relatively simple to accomplish three-dimensional, multiphase flow simulations. Single RP-1 pyrolysis and partial oxidation steps were chosen and the combustion was completed with the wet CO mechanism. Soot was also formed with a single global reaction. To validate the combustion submodel, global data from gas generator tests and from subscale motor test were used to predict qualitatively correct mean molecular weights, temperature, and soot levels. Because such tests do not provide general kinetics rates, the methodology is not necessarily appropriate for other than rocket type flows conditions. Soot predictions were made so that radiation heating to the motor walls can be made. These initial studies of the Fastrac were for a small region close to the injector face and chamber wall which included a segment of the acoustic cavity. The region analyzed includes 11 individual orifice holes to represent the LOL elements and the H2 film coolant holes. Typical results of this simulation are shown in Figure 1. At this point the only available test data to verify the predictions are temperatures measured in the acoustic cavity. These temperatures are in reasonable agreement at about 2000R (1111 K). Future work is expected to include improving the computational efficiency or the CFD model and/or using more computer capacity than the single Pentium PC with which these simulations were made.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Propulsion and Power
    Type: Joint Propulsion; Jul 17, 2000 - Jul 19, 2000; Huntsville, AL; United States
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