Ad Astra Rocket Company Completes PDR for New Engine
Hello reader!
It
follows a note published on the day (06/29) in the website “Parabolic Arc” highlighting
that the Ad Astra Rocket Company completed the PDR of the new rocket engine.
Duda Falcão
News
Ad Astra
Rocket Company
Completes PDR for New Engine
By Douglas Messier
June 29, 2013, 7:31 pm
HOUSTON, TX (Ad Astra PR) – After more than a year of planning and preparation, a team of Ad Astra
engineers and physicists, along with NASA engineers participating as part of a
technical interchange, completed the company’s first formal preliminary design
review (PDR) of the VF-200 engine. The 200 kW “proto-flight” is the company’s
first engine planned to be tested in space. The review was conducted on
Wednesday, June 26, 2013 at Ad Astra’s research facility near Houston, TX.
The PDR incorporates the collective
engineering knowledge gained over several years from the VX-200 experimental
program as well as multiple conceptual design studies carried out by the Ad
Astra team. All major VF-200 subsystems were reviewed, with special focus being
placed on the thermal steady-state rocket core design. The thermal steady state
— the capability of the rocket to maintain a stable temperature for extended
periods of time — is to be initially tested in early 2014 with long-duration
plasma firings, using Ad Astra’s existing facilities and the VX-200SS (steady
state) device. The VX-200SS is a modified version of the VX-200, and it is
currently under construction at Ad Astra’s Texas facility.
The PDR is the first of a sequence of
established design milestones and design reviews of the “proto-flight” hardware
at increasing levels of detail. Successful completion of the design and test
plans developed in this process will lead to the next, critical design process
beginning in mid-2014. During Wednesday’s review, all of the key subsystems of
the VF-200 engine and their respective interfaces were presented, defined and
integrated in a revision-tracking documentation tree, which will become the
formal repository of all the design data for the system. The documentation tree
has been developed to capture the design specifications, program management,
safety, and reliability aspects of the system. Ad Astra has been working
closely with the NASA team on safety and reliability with respect to general
spaceflight design as well as testing on the International Space Station (ISS).
“The team has worked relentlessly for many
months to achieve this important milestone. We are proud of their performance
and commitment to excellence” said Dr. Mark D. Carter, Ad Astra’s Senior Vice
President for Technology Development and Chairman of the review team.
“It is an important step forward in our
journey to a space demonstration” said Dr. Franklin Chang Díaz, Ad Astra’s
President and Chief Executive Officer. “I congratulate the team on this
achievement,” he added.
About Ad Astra
Ad Astra Rocket Compa ny , a US, Delaware
Corporation, established in 2005 and domiciled in Texas, is the developer of
the VASIMR ® engine, an advanced plasma space propulsion system aimed at the
emerging in – space transportation market. Ad Astra also owns and operates Ad
Astra Servicios Energ éticos y Ambientales (AASEA) and Ad Ast ra Rocket
Company, Costa Rica, respectively supporting research and development
subsidiaries in the US and Guanacaste, Costa Rica. Through its subsidiaries,
the company also develops earthbound high technology applications in renewable
energy, advanced manufacturing and applied physics. Ad Astra has its main
laboratory and corporate headquarters at 141 W. Bay Area Boulevard in Webster,
Texas, USA, about two miles from the NASA Johnson Space Center.
Source:
Website Parabolic Arc - http://www.parabolicarc.com/
Comentário: Pois é leitor, essa é a maior aposta da NASA
na área de Propulsão Iônica para missões robóticas e tripuladas além da órbita
da lua. A tecnologia de propulsão é de fundamental importância para qualquer
país do mundo que visa atividades no espaço, sendo a Propulsão Iônica uma das
mais promissoras para a humanidade. No Brasil, estamos desenvolvendo (mesmo com
grandes dificuldades) tecnologias de propulsão em diversas frentes, seja na
área de Propulsão Iônica no Laboratório Associado de Combustão
e Propulsão (LCP/INPE) e na UnB, ou nas áreas de Propulsão Química (Sólida
e Líquida) no Instituto de Aeronáutica e Espaço (IAE), na área de Propulsão
Nuclear, a Laser e Hipersônica a Ar Aspirado no Instituto de Estudos Avançados
(IEAv) e a Propulsão Hibrida na UnB. Entretanto,
apesar da importância de todas elas, pois todas serão uteis em dado momento,
não resta dúvida que no caso das viagens no espaço interplanetário (além da
órbita da Lua) as duas mais indicadas são a Propulsão Iônica e Nuclear, isto é,
se não levarmos em conta a futurista Propulsão de Antimatéria, esta em nossa
opinião ainda no campo da ficção científica.
Só a título de curiosidade, fica aqui o vídeo desse propulsor ionico de 5 Newtons.
ResponderExcluir