Actual flight-based test and evaluation of vertical take-off reusable launch vehicles (RLVs) has been dormant in the U.S. since the end of the SDIO/NASA/McDonnell Douglas Delta Clipper - Experimental Advanced (DC-X/XA) project in 1996. A joint industry-academic team working under sponsorship from the Air Force Research Laboratory's Propulsion Directorate took a small step in 2005 towards reinvigorating such RLV test and evaluation activities, using an early, low-fidelity prototype of the first stage for a proposed nanosat launch vehicle (NLV) that is sized to deliver up to 10 kg into low Earth orbit. This team developed the LOX/ethanol Prospector 7 (P-7) in only six months and then flew it twice in a period of 3.5 hours after just eighteen hours of field site preparations. This compares to the twenty-six hour turn-around benchmark achieved with the DC-XA at the White Sands Missile Range. The P-7 has since been employed on a third flight test and is now undergoing preparation for its fourth mission later this year. In addition to supporting NLV development, it is anticipated that the results and lessons learned from these demonstrations of responsive, rapid RLV turn-around operations could also prove to be of relevance to the Air Force's ongoing investigations into hybrid launch vehicle concepts.
RLV Flight Operations Demonstration with a Prototype Nanosat Launch Vehicle (PREPRINT)
2006
17 pages
Report
Keine Angabe
Englisch
Rocket Engines & Motors , Reusable equipment , Launch vehicles , Flight testing , Miniaturization , Symposia , Sbir(Small business innovation research) , Sbir phase 1 , Sbir reports , Calvein(California launch vehicle education initiative) , Nlv(Nanosat launch vehicle) , Rlv(Reusable launch vehicles)
RLV Flight Operations Demonstration with a Prototype Nanosat Launch Vehicle
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2006
|British Library Conference Proceedings | 2006
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