The modern avionics system that will guide the most powerful rocket ever built saw the light -- the "first light," that is.
Hardware, software and operating systems for NASA's Space Launch
System (SLS) recently were integrated and powered up for an inaugural
run -- referred to as "first light."
When completed, SLS will be capable of powering humans and potential
science payloads to deep space. It has the greatest capacity of any
launch system ever built, minimizing cost and risk of deep space
journeys.
"We often compare the avionics system to the body's central nervous
system -- we can't function without one, and neither can the SLS," said
Lisa Blue, stages avionics system manager in the SLS Program Office at
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. "Avionics tell
the rocket where it should go and end up, and how it should pivot the
engines to keep on the right trajectory."
"Now we have that critical system together, and each unit has powered
up successfully," Blue added. "That's a major accomplishment toward
getting ready for the first flight of SLS."
The Integrated Avionics Test Facilities team provided and installed
the structure and simulation capability to model the environments the
vehicle will experience during launch. With the avionics hardware units
arranged in flight configuration on the structure and with the flight
software, the facility will replicate what will actually fly the rocket.
"We are using and testing state-of-the-art technology, including the
most powerful computer processor ever used on a flight system," Blue
said.
NASA and Boeing engineers will test the system in early January at
the Systems Integration and Test Facility at the Marshall Center. They
will run flight simulations to see how SLS will perform during launch.
"Completing the first light milestone establishes a capability to
perform early avionics and software integration and testing to help us
find and fix any problems with the system, and make sure the units
communicate together as they are designed to do," said Dan Mitchell, SLS
Integrated Avionics and Software lead engineer at the Marshall
Center.
Avionics and the flight computer will be housed in the SLS core
stage. When completed, the core stage will be more than 200 feet tall
and store cryogenic liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen that will feed the
vehicle's RS-25 engines. The Boeing Company is the prime contractor for
the SLS core stage, including avionics.
In late January, the team will start working on the entire avionics
system operating together as one unit. In 2015, the avionics will be
shipped to NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, where the
core stage is being manufactured, and integrated onto the actual rocket.
The first flight test of the SLS -- which will feature a
configuration for a 70-metric-ton (77-ton) lift capacity and carry an
uncrewed Orion spacecraft beyond low-Earth orbit to test the performance
of the integrated system -- is scheduled for 2017. As the SLS evolves,
it will provide an unprecedented lift capability of 130-metric-tons
(143-tons) to enable missions even farther into our solar system to
places like Mars.
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