City
Epaper

Boeing Starliner finishes parachute tests ahead of crewed flight

By IANS | Updated: December 9, 2020 19:43 IST

Washington, Dec 9 NASA and Boeing have completed Starliners last parachute balloon drop test ahead of crewed flights to ...

Open in App

Washington, Dec 9 NASA and Boeing have completed Starliners last parachute balloon drop test ahead of crewed flights to and from the International Space Station beginning in 2021.

The tests mark an end to a reliability campaign that will help strengthen the spacecraft's landing system, NASA said on Tuesday.

The campaign, developed by both Boeing and NASA, used six balloon drop tests of a Starliner test article to gather supplemental performance data on the spacecraft's parachutes and landing system.

Each drop test focused on a different set of adverse conditions and used pre-flown parachutes to evaluate reusability margins for future missions.

Starliner is the first American-made orbital crew capsule to land on land.

"Our philosophy has always been testing the system hardware together to see how all the elements interact," Starliner landing system lead at Boeing Mike McCarley said in a statement.

"Our vehicle can't fit in an airplane, so the only way we can lift a test article high enough to simulate an entire landing system sequence is with very a large balloon."

The spacecraft uses a series of parachutes and airbags that deploy at specific altitudes allowing Starliner to touch down gently in the desert of the western United States.

NASA said it also will use the data gathered from the parachute testing to model Starliner parachute performance in different mission scenarios.

During nominal landings, Starliner uses two small parachutes to carry off the spacecraft's forward heat shield and expose critical hardware needed for the rest of the landing system sequence.

Starliner then deploys two drogue parachutes to slow and stabilise the capsule before three small pilot parachutes pull out the spacecraft's three mains.

The three main parachutes continue slowing Starliner's descent for a safe and soft touchdown supported by the vehicle's landing airbags.

Boeing had signed a contract with NASA's Commercial Crew Program to fly operational missions to and from the space station with Starliner in 2014.

Its debut uncrewed orbital flight mission in 2019 did not go exactly as planned, requiring it to make another try before putting astronauts on board for the crewed flight test.

Boeing and NASA will continue collecting data on Starliner's parachutes through the spacecraft's second Orbital Flight Test ahead of crewed flights beginning in 2021, but the test phase utilising high-altitude balloons is now complete.

( With inputs from IANS )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiBombay HC Orders DNA Test of Seafarer Dixit Solanki Killed in Oman Drone Attack

BusinessMassive Youth Turnout at Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha Mumbai’s Bhajan Jamming Concert, Blending Culture with Spiritual Vibes

NationalState BJP chief meets former minister Narottam Mishra, discusses BJP's strategy for MP bypoll

BusinessCanara HSBC Life Insurance Launches Promise4Wealth -- A Market-Linked Savings Plan Integrating Wealth Creation, Investment Flexibility, and Life Cover up to Age 100

NationalBengal polls: BJP candidate rides bulldozer to file his nomination

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyPre-bid conference for Rs 7,280-crore rare earth manufacturing scheme conducted, 25 firms join

TechnologyBank of Baroda rolls out multilingual AI platform ‘bob SAMVAD’ across 22 languages

TechnologyLG Energy Solution turns to operating loss in Q1 amid Mideast crisis

TechnologySouth Africa sees upcoming summit as platform to bolster economic ties with India

TechnologyFood PLI scheme attracts Rs 9,207 crore investment, creates 3.29 lakh jobs