HOUSTON -- NASA completed the latest in a series of parachute tests for
its Orion spacecraft Thursday at the U.S. Army Yuma Proving Ground in
southwestern Arizona, marking another step toward a first flight test in
2014. The test verified Orion can land safely even if one of its two
drogue parachutes does not open during descent.
Orion will
take humans farther into space than ever before, but one of the most
challenging things the multipurpose vehicle will do is bring its crew
home safely. Because it will return from greater distances, Orion will
reenter the Earth's atmosphere at speeds of more than 20,000 mph. After
re-entry, the parachutes are all that will lower the capsule carrying
astronauts back to Earth.
"The mockup vehicle landed safely
in the desert and everything went as planned," said Chris Johnson, a
NASA project manager for Orion's parachute assembly system. "We designed
the parachute system so nothing will go wrong, but plan and test as
though something will so we can make sure Orion is the safest vehicle
ever to take humans to space."
Orion uses five parachutes.
Three are main parachutes measuring 116 feet wide and two are drogue
parachutes measuring 23 feet wide. The 21,000-pound capsule needs only
two main parachutes and one drogue. The extra two provide a backup in
case one of the primary parachutes fails.
To verify Orion
could land safely with only one drogue parachute, engineers dropped a
spacecraft mockup from a plane 25,000 feet above the Arizona desert and
simulated a failure of one of the drogues. About 30 seconds into the
mockup's fall, the second drogue parachute opened and slowed the mockup
down enough for the three main parachutes to take over the descent.
The next Orion parachute test is scheduled for February and will simulate a failure of one of the three main parachutes.
In 2014, an uncrewed Orion spacecraft will launch from Cape Canaveral
Air Force Station in Florida on Exploration Flight Test-1. The
spacecraft will travel 3,600 miles above Earth's surface. This is 15
times farther than the International Space Station's orbit and farther
than any spacecraft designed to carry humans has gone in more than 40
years. The main flight objective is to test Orion's heat shield
performance at speeds generated during a return from deep space.