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Scott Horowitz, former shuttle pilot and astronaut, came to the Naval
Postgraduate school today to teach a lecture to my class of Space Systems Engineers & gave a very convincing argument for the SRB to orbit option. (He works for ATK, but keep reading.) There were quite a few details that I found interesting in his talk, and many of my intial skepticisms about the idea were soundly refuted. Here's a synopsis: The summer of 2003, after OSP was announced and most of the spaceflight office at Johnson was shaking their heads, several of the engineers started looking at this option as an alternative after OSP was inevitably cancelled. What they determined from an overall perspective (much like the SpaceX Futron study) is that maximizing reliability on larger systems means minimizing component integration complexities--something the shuttle is particularly ghastly at, and even EELVs like the Delta-IVH, with 3 cores, are bad about. (witness the first delta IV H failed!). That means best reliability comes with 1 first stage engine, 1 separation event, and 1 second stage engine. The problem is that no liquid engines currently exist that are powerful enough to (with one engine) thrust the first stage of a manned capsule off the pad. Solution--make the first stage an SRB (3 million lbs of thrust). I've heard all this before, and I had some preconceived skepticisms, among them: 1. Didn't an SRB failure cause the Challenger accident? 2. Don't SRB's cost alot? 3. Isn't that too much thrust to handle for a small vehicle? 4. thus Wouldn't extensive modifications to the burn profile be required, costing even more? 5. Does the steerable nozzle have enough control authority? Scott Horowitz was pretty convincing that these are not legitimate concerns, for the following reasons: 1. Yes, but the explosion happened because hot gas burned through the LOX/H2 tank. Solid rockets don't explode. If there wasn't a fuel tank in the way, the Challenger probably still could have made orbit, as most of the thrust was still going out the nozzle. Solid boosters DONT explode like Lox/ H2, they just leak hot gas. A capsule on top of a worst-case failed SRB (case burst, which has never happened in 240 some SRB flights), even on the ground, where propogation is the worst, sees only a 10 psi overpressure. Very survivable. 2. Yes, the shuttle contract costs the govt a fixed amount--but it generally operates at ~15-20% of capability. In other words, if the line is going to stay open through 2010 for shuttle anyway, why not use that extra capacity to built boosters? 3. No, just put a bigger second stage on top of the SRB and voila--thanks to the rocket equation, G loading is as variable as you want to make the second stage. With an RP-1/Lox upperstage, Isp ~340, and 250,000lbs propellant, a 28,000 lb payload (Astronauts) see a max of 3Gs of acceleration, and a max Q about the same as the shuttle. 4. No, all proposed schemes use the exact same burn profile as the shuttle SRB. In fact, it is a shuttle SRB with different GNC software and an interstage instead of a nosecose. 5. Absolutely, in fact, it can launch under worse conditions than the shuttle. Finite element analysis modeling shows that with the ker/lox upperstage, CG, or rather cm is in about the same place as the shuttle, and even under worse case wind conditions, etc, the steerable nozzle has more than enough control authority to handle it, and lots of margin to spare. Some other points he made: 6. the reliability and safety of the SRB is extremely well known--thus the system reliability depends nearly entirely on the reliability of the second stage. For the 'best fit' notional model, he was using a Saturn V J2S, although it works with a J2. That would require re-developing the big ker/lox engine--big deal and much moolah, but it would probably be a popular project. Also, rocketdyne has kept much of the J2 knoweledge in working order, even using the turbopumps on the X-33 linear aerospikes. It could probably be done pretty quickly. 7. One of the first people outside-of-NASA people briefed in on this as a "reality check" was the then-head of APL, Mike Griffen. And he apparently was very impressed by its possibilities for success. So support inside NASA should not be a problem. 8. We should know if this is going forward within the next 2 months, because that's the time limit to complete a people carrying version by 2010. If a decision is not made by then, it's not going to happen. So standby... Tom Cuddihy |
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![]() Apparantly he left out the part where large segmented solids have gone "boom" in the past. See Titan IV failure caused by a design flaw in the propellant grain at the joints. The joints in large segmented solids are definately a problem and can go "boom". Jeff -- Remove icky phrase from email address to get a valid address. |
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Apparantly he left out the part where large segmented solids have
gone "boom" in the past. That has never happened with the Shuttle motors in either flight or groudn test. |
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Tom Cuddihy wrote:
Scott Horowitz, former shuttle pilot and astronaut, came to the Naval Postgraduate school today to teach a lecture to my class of Space Systems Engineers & gave a very convincing argument for the SRB to orbit option. (He works for ATK, but keep reading.) There were quite a few details that I found interesting in his talk, and many of my intial skepticisms about the idea were soundly refuted. Too bad nobody told me it was happening, I would have driven down and offered some useful criticism... Here's a synopsis: The summer of 2003, after OSP was announced and most of the spaceflight office at Johnson was shaking their heads, several of the engineers started looking at this option as an alternative after OSP was inevitably cancelled. What they determined from an overall perspective (much like the SpaceX Futron study) is that maximizing reliability on larger systems means minimizing component integration complexities--something the shuttle is particularly ghastly at, and even EELVs like the Delta-IVH, with 3 cores, are bad about. (witness the first delta IV H failed!). That means best reliability comes with 1 first stage engine, 1 separation event, and 1 second stage engine. The problem is that no liquid engines currently exist that are powerful enough to (with one engine) thrust the first stage of a manned capsule off the pad. This is not true. Both the Atlas V and Delta IV boosterless models have enough weight to orbit a reasonably designed midsized capsule with 4-6 seats. Both are single engine first stage launchers. The other peak in reliability should come around 5 or more engines per stage, as Saturn V's S-IC, S-II, and the upcoming Falcon V first stage all do. But it's harder to engineer and will have more soft failures than single engine stages. Solution--make the first stage an SRB (3 million lbs of thrust). I've heard all this before, and I had some preconceived skepticisms, among them: 1. Didn't an SRB failure cause the Challenger accident? 2. Don't SRB's cost alot? 3. Isn't that too much thrust to handle for a small vehicle? 4. thus Wouldn't extensive modifications to the burn profile be required, costing even more? 5. Does the steerable nozzle have enough control authority? Scott Horowitz was pretty convincing that these are not legitimate concerns, for the following reasons: 1. Yes, but the explosion happened because hot gas burned through the LOX/H2 tank. Solid rockets don't explode. Large solid rockets can catstrophically fail, and have both in ground test and flight recently. Titan IV had a really truly spectacular ground test failure. A Delta II had a GEM let go and blow chunks of the launch vehicle all over the pad, blockhouse, and parking lot (and the Cape's air force museum). If there wasn't a fuel tank in the way, the Challenger probably still could have made orbit, as most of the thrust was still going out the nozzle. Solid boosters DONT explode like Lox/ H2, they just leak hot gas. A capsule on top of a worst-case failed SRB (case burst, which has never happened in 240 some SRB flights), even on the ground, where propogation is the worst, sees only a 10 psi overpressure. Very survivable. 10 psi overpressure is a lot. Well built concrete buildings get knocked down by 10 psi overpressure. It won't kill the people, but it may damage a capsule beyond safe escape or post-escape landing. 2. Yes, the shuttle contract costs the govt a fixed amount--but it generally operates at ~15-20% of capability. In other words, if the line is going to stay open through 2010 for shuttle anyway, why not use that extra capacity to built boosters? 3. No, just put a bigger second stage on top of the SRB and voila--thanks to the rocket equation, G loading is as variable as you want to make the second stage. With an RP-1/Lox upperstage, Isp ~340, and 250,000lbs propellant, a 28,000 lb payload (Astronauts) see a max of 3Gs of acceleration, and a max Q about the same as the shuttle. 4. No, all proposed schemes use the exact same burn profile as the shuttle SRB. In fact, it is a shuttle SRB with different GNC software and an interstage instead of a nosecose. What, no gentler thrust termination system? 5. Absolutely, in fact, it can launch under worse conditions than the shuttle. Finite element analysis modeling shows that with the ker/lox upperstage, CG, or rather cm is in about the same place as the shuttle, and even under worse case wind conditions, etc, the steerable nozzle has more than enough control authority to handle it, and lots of margin to spare. Some other points he made: 6. the reliability and safety of the SRB is extremely well known--thus the system reliability depends nearly entirely on the reliability of the second stage. For the 'best fit' notional model, he was using a Saturn V J2S, although it works with a J2. That would require re-developing the big ker/lox engine--big deal and much moolah, but it would probably be a popular project. Also, rocketdyne has kept much of the J2 knoweledge in working order, even using the turbopumps on the X-33 linear aerospikes. It could probably be done pretty quickly. There has to have been some error there; the J-2s were LOX/LH2 upper stage engines, not lox/kerosene as described elsewhere and partly here. J-2 isn't a bad choice, nor is LOX/LH2 for the upper stage, but clarification would have been nice. 7. One of the first people outside-of-NASA people briefed in on this as a "reality check" was the then-head of APL, Mike Griffen. And he apparently was very impressed by its possibilities for success. So support inside NASA should not be a problem. 8. We should know if this is going forward within the next 2 months, because that's the time limit to complete a people carrying version by 2010. If a decision is not made by then, it's not going to happen. So standby... This launcher may well happen, but I remain unconvinced that it's really a better choice than either of the two EELVs in their boosterless configuration. I do have this crazy idea to see what happens if you stack a Delta IV core on top of a SRB, though... -george william herbert |
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![]() "Tom Cuddihy" wrote in message oups.com... Scott Horowitz, former shuttle pilot and astronaut, came to the Naval Postgraduate school today to teach a lecture to my class of Space Systems Engineers & gave a very convincing argument for the SRB to orbit option. (He works for ATK, but keep reading.) There were quite a few details that I found interesting in his talk, and many of my intial skepticisms about the idea were soundly refuted. Here's a synopsis: The summer of 2003, after OSP was announced and most of the spaceflight office at Johnson was shaking their heads, several of the engineers started looking at this option as an alternative after OSP was inevitably cancelled. What they determined from an overall perspective (much like the SpaceX Futron study) is that maximizing reliability on larger systems means minimizing component integration complexities--something the shuttle is particularly ghastly at, and even EELVs like the Delta-IVH, with 3 cores, are bad about. (witness the first delta IV H failed!). That means best reliability comes with 1 first stage engine, 1 separation event, and 1 second stage engine. The problem is that no liquid engines currently exist that are powerful enough to (with one engine) thrust the first stage of a manned capsule off the pad. Solution--make the first stage an SRB (3 million lbs of thrust). The RD-171 has 740 tons of thrust, so I suppose this means no U.S. engine. A good reason for bringing back the F1. I've heard all this before, and I had some preconceived skepticisms, among them: 1. Didn't an SRB failure cause the Challenger accident? 2. Don't SRB's cost alot? 3. Isn't that too much thrust to handle for a small vehicle? 4. thus Wouldn't extensive modifications to the burn profile be required, costing even more? 5. Does the steerable nozzle have enough control authority? Scott Horowitz was pretty convincing that these are not legitimate concerns, for the following reasons: 1. Yes, but the explosion happened because hot gas burned through the LOX/H2 tank. Solid rockets don't explode. If there wasn't a fuel tank in the way, the Challenger probably still could have made orbit, as most of the thrust was still going out the nozzle. Solid boosters DONT explode like Lox/ H2, they just leak hot gas. A capsule on top of a worst-case failed SRB (case burst, which has never happened in 240 some SRB flights), even on the ground, where propogation is the worst, sees only a 10 psi overpressure. Very survivable. 2. Yes, the shuttle contract costs the govt a fixed amount--but it generally operates at ~15-20% of capability. In other words, if the line is going to stay open through 2010 for shuttle anyway, why not use that extra capacity to built boosters? 3. No, just put a bigger second stage on top of the SRB and voila--thanks to the rocket equation, G loading is as variable as you want to make the second stage. With an RP-1/Lox upperstage, Isp ~340, and 250,000lbs propellant, a 28,000 lb payload (Astronauts) see a max of 3Gs of acceleration, and a max Q about the same as the shuttle. 4. No, all proposed schemes use the exact same burn profile as the shuttle SRB. In fact, it is a shuttle SRB with different GNC software and an interstage instead of a nosecose. Isp of 340 seconds is very high for a gas generator cycle lox-kero engine. You would need an expansion ratio of about 200. A version of the Atlas booster engine with extended nozzle would have the right thrust, but would be about 18 feet wide at the nozzle exit, too large to fit on any reasonably-sized upper stage. It's more likely that the Isp would be around 330 seconds, and you'd be down several thousand lbs of payload. 5. Absolutely, in fact, it can launch under worse conditions than the shuttle. Finite element analysis modeling shows that with the ker/lox upperstage, CG, or rather cm is in about the same place as the shuttle, and even under worse case wind conditions, etc, the steerable nozzle has more than enough control authority to handle it, and lots of margin to spare. This is very sensible. The SRB has plenty of thrust to lift the heavier upper stage. Some other points he made: 6. the reliability and safety of the SRB is extremely well known--thus the system reliability depends nearly entirely on the reliability of the second stage. For the 'best fit' notional model, he was using a Saturn V J2S, although it works with a J2. That would require re-developing the big ker/lox engine--big deal and much moolah, but it would probably be a popular project. Also, rocketdyne has kept much of the J2 knoweledge in working order, even using the turbopumps on the X-33 linear aerospikes. It could probably be done pretty quickly. 7. One of the first people outside-of-NASA people briefed in on this as a "reality check" was the then-head of APL, Mike Griffen. And he apparently was very impressed by its possibilities for success. So support inside NASA should not be a problem. 8. We should know if this is going forward within the next 2 months, because that's the time limit to complete a people carrying version by 2010. If a decision is not made by then, it's not going to happen. So standby... Tom Cuddihy Murray Anderson |
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George William Herbert wrote:
I do have this crazy idea to see what happens if you stack a Delta IV core on top of a SRB, though... Maybe 15 or so metric tons to LEO, assuming you use the RS-68 somehow. At 26-27 tons empty, CBC is a bit on the heavy side for an upper stage. An S-IVB with a J-2 would be almost perfect. S-IVB only weighed 10 tons (or a bit less) at burnout. I get about 18 tons (about 40,000 lbs) to LEO with this configuration. It's kind of strange how this works out. You get a Saturn IB, basically, but without all of the mad plumbing. It's as if the SRBs were designed to provide the same total impulse as an S-IB stage. An RP/LOX second stage, fitted with a notional, throttlable RS-27A would be able to orbit maybe 10 tons (22,000 lbs). Not too bad, and maybe cheaper than an S-IVB type second stage, but an Atlas V Medium could do the same for probably less money. To really cut costs, NASA should abandon the VAB and stack its SRB-based single-stick launcher on a pad. How about recently-vacated Pad 40? - Ed Kyle |
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![]() George William Herbert wrote: There has to have been some error there; the J-2s were LOX/LH2 upper stage engines, not lox/kerosene as described elsewhere and partly here. J-2 isn't a bad choice, nor is LOX/LH2 for the upper stage, but clarification would have been nice. That's my error,not his. We were doing quite a bit of different possibility discussions and I'm not sure how I got that mixed up. His notional case used a J2--yes, LOX/H2, and there was another one he had analyzed that was ker/Lox. I got mixed up somewhere in there & didn't look up which was which. |
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Jake McGuire wrote:
wrote: Apparantly he left out the part where large segmented solids have gone "boom" in the past. That has never happened with the Shuttle motors in either flight or groudn test. True, but "The shuttle RSRMs have never gone BOOM" is a much weaker statement than "solid rocket motors don't go BOOM." I seem to recall a Delta solid going BOOM and raining bits of GPS satellite all over a bunch of parked cars a few years back as well. I recall lots of liquid boosters raining payload all over the landscape. In fact, it's one of my current tasks... working on a historical summary of launch vehicle reliability. A whole fo of rockets going BOOM for a whole lot of reasons. Without hearing Horowitz's defense of the SRBs word-for-word it's hard to be specific, but claiming that "if there wasn't a fuel tank in the way, Challenger would still have probably made orbit, as most of the thrust was still going out the nozzle" strikes me as verging on dishonest. It's true. The analyses showed that Challenger should have made orbit, had the burn-though been outboard. Performance would have been affected, and thrust vectoring systems on both the SRBs and the SSMEs would ahve been nearly maxed out, but Challenger would ahve made orbit. |
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