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Home Science & Technology Science

NASA explores inflatable heat shield on Mars to help humans settle on Red Planet

byCustoms Today Report
05/01/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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NEW YORK: NASA Working on Inflatable Heat Shield to Help Spacecraft Land on Mars. An inflatable heat shield for spacecraft headed to Mars may, one day, help humans settle on the Red Planet. Such a device is being designed at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia.
The atmosphere on Mars is much thinner than that of the Earth, and NASA engineers are studying ways to land massive payloads on the Martian surface. Rockets, like parachutes, cannot currently be used to slow large vehicles enough for a safe landing on Mars.
One idea currently under consideration involves the construction of an inflatable heat shield, resembling the stacking doughnut toy used by infants. Each segment of the shield, covered in a thermal blanket, would be inflated with nitrogen during entry into the Martian atmosphere. This revolutionary heat shield is designed to sit on top of the lander, resembling a giant mushroom.
“We try to not use propulsion if we don’t have to. We make use of that atmosphere as much as we can, because it means we don’t have to carry all that fuel with us,” Neil Cheatwood, senior engineer at Langley for advanced entry, descent and landing systems, said.
An Antares rocket, designed by Orbital Science Corporation, exploded seconds after takeoff on October 28, 2014. A second-generation inflatable rocket was scheduled to be placed aboard that flight for testing, but delays caused the experiment to be bumped from the doomed mission. The next flight of Antares is scheduled for 2016, carrying the craft, designed to test inflatable technologies.
Astronauts traveling to Mars will journey aboard the Orion spacecraft, which recently successfully passed its first flight test. The heat shield on that vehicle is constructed of a titanium skeleton, underlying a carbon fiber skin. Inside the shield, a fiberglass-phenolic honeycomb structure, containing more than 330,000 individual cells, fill out the structure. This insulation is similar to the material used during the Apollo project, with great success.

Tags: inflatable spacecraft technologyLangley Research Center in HamptonMars landMartian surfaceNASA exploresNeil Cheatwood

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