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NASA Testing Heat Shield Samples For CEV

Arc jet test of potential CEV heat shield material. Image credit: NASA/AMES
by Staff Writers
Moffett Field CA (SPX) May 12, 2006
NASA engineers have begun conducting tests of materials that could be used in the heat shield for its Crew Exploration Vehicle. The tests are being conducted at NASA's Ames Research Center, inside an apparatus engineers describe as a "room-size blowtorch."

The testing is part of the advanced development activity needed to create an effective heat shield for the CEV crew capsule.

NASA is working to create and test the Frisbee-shaped heat shield � which is envisioned to be 16.5 feet (5 meters) in diameter � so it can be attached to the base of the cone-shaped CEV crew capsule. The shield must protect the capsule and its astronaut crew from heat reaching thousands of degrees that would develop during re-entry through the atmosphere, from either low-Earth orbit or the Moon.

The Ames tests are among the first steps NASA Ames is taking to design and test a new space exploration system that will return human beings to the moon and support later missions to Mars. Several other NASA facilities also are taking part in the development effort.

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NASA Awards Boeing S-3B Viking Modification Contract
St Louis MO (SPX) May 11, 2006
NASA has awarded Boeing a competitively bid contract to modify the communication, navigation and electrical systems of an S-3B Viking aircraft. NASA obtained the S-3B from the U.S. Navy to facilitate research requirements for the NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio.







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