22
GSFC/Wallops Flight Facility 1 49 th Robert H. Goddard Memorial Symposium March 30, 2011 Bill Wrobel Director, Wallops Flight Facility Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

2011 American Astronautical Society Robert H. Goddard Memorial Symposium--Bill Wrobel, NASA

Citation preview

Page 1: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

1

49th Robert H. Goddard Memorial Symposium

March 30, 2011

Bill WrobelDirector, Wallops Flight Facility

Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

Page 2: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

2

Wallops 6000 Acre CampusMain Base

Wallops Island

Page 3: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

3

Wallops History

• Founded by NACA in 1945

• Over 16,000 rocket launches conducted over 65+ years

• Wallops’ first satellite, Explorer 9, launched 50 years ago on February 16, 1961

Page 4: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

4

The Wallops Role

Manage & implement – frequent, – quick-response, – low-cost, – risk-tolerant

missions supporting NASA science & technology research

• Major mission elements– Suborbital & small orbital research carriers– Research Range operations– Carrier & operations technology development

Page 5: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

5

Sounding Rockets

• 20+ missions flown annually

• 10 vehicle configurations

• 9 worldwide launch sites + mobile campaigns

• Supporting– Heliophysics– Astrophysics– Planetary physics– Technology development– Education

Page 6: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

6

Exoplanet Finding using Sounding Rockets

• The Planet Imaging Concept Testbed Using Sounding Rocket (PICTURE) uses nulling interferometers.

• PICTURE will flight qualify several key technologies – Extremely light-weight mirror

– Visible nulling coronograph

– Deformable mirror

– 0.5 milli arc-sec pointing

• PICTURE is a collaboration between – Boston University

– Jet Propulsion Laboratory

– Goddard Space Flight Center

– Charles Stark Draper Laboratory

Page 7: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

7

Scientific Balloons• ~14 missions annually

• Features– Balloon volumes up to 60M cubic ft.– Suspended loads up to 8000 lbs.– Float altitudes of up to 160K feet

• Balloon Classes– Conventional: 2-36 hour duration– Long Duration: 40+ days– Super Pressure: Up to 100 days

• Worldwide launch sites

• Support to– Astrophysics– Technology development– Education

Page 8: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

8

The Balloon Program Legacy

• Over 4 decades, 30 spacecraft missions have been evolved from balloon missions

TRACER BOOMERANG

TIGER / ANITA

CREAMInFOCuS

FIREBall

AESOP

SunriseBLAST

Page 9: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

9

New Balloon Technologies

• Super Pressure Balloons– Will provide mission durations of 60-100 days– Recent successful 14MCF test flight from

Antarctica, with 4000 lbs. payload

• Wallops Arc Second Pointer– Providing accuracies of 0.75 arcseconds– Test flight scheduled for Fall 2011– Proposed in recent NASA Explorer Mission of

Opportunity

• Future plans include trajectory control

Page 10: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

10

Super Pressure Balloon Test Flight (1/2011)

Page 11: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

11

Airborne Science

• Wallops P-3 currently in Greenland supporting Operation Ice Bridge

• Airborne Topographic LIDAR (ATM) provides precision ice-thickness maps, repeated on an annual basis

• More than 250 science flight hours planned

Page 12: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

12

Unmanned Aerial Systems - Big & Small

• Wallops will serve as base of operations for NASA’s Hurricane and Severe Storm Sentinel (HS-3)– Global Hawk flights studying formation of

severe storms– 5-year program beginning in Summer 2012

• Wallops UAS Technology Initiative– 3-year program to demonstrate capabilities

of small UAVs for Earth Science– Standardized instrument support interface

architecture– Miniaturized instrument (e.g., ATM)– Demos using L-3 Viking 300 UAS

Page 13: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

13

Small Satellites

• Wallops developing proto-flight “6U” small sat design, based on Cubesat standard

• 6U spacecraft provides standardized architecture supporting multiple instrument concepts

• ~2/3 of volume available for instruments

• Initial unit & deployer will complete qualification testing by end of FY11

Page 14: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

14

Supersonic Inflatable Aeroshell Demonstrator (SIAD)

• Office of Chief Technologist sponsoring program to demonstrate high-speed inflatable decelerator concept for planetary or Earth reentry– JPL-led project team

• Flight tests proposed between 2012-2014

• Wallops providing balloons, avionics, and operations support– High-speed parachute demos– High-altitude rocket accelerated reentry

tests

Page 15: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

15

Supersonic Inflatable Aeroshell Demonstrator (SIAD)

Page 16: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

16

ORS-1

• 1st operational spacecraft launch for DoD’s Operationally Responsive Space office– Provides quick-reaction satellites

supporting urgent military needs

• Electro-optical & infrared imaging spacecraft to be launched on a Minotaur 1

• Launch Date: May 2011?

Page 17: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

17

Lunar Atmosphere Dust Experiment Explorer (LADEE)

• NASA Ames & Goddard built Lunar orbiting spacecraft. Instruments:– Neutral Mass Spectrometer (GSFC)– Ultra-Violet Spectrometer (ARC)– Dust Detector (LASP)– Lunar Laser Comm (Lincoln Labs)

• Wallops providing end-to-end launch service support– USAF-provided Minotaur V– Launch site I&T– Launch range services from WFF’s Pad 0B

• Highlights– 1st flight of Minotaur V– 1st NASA flight on USAF Minotaur vehicle– 1st planetary mission from WFF

Page 18: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

18

Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Explorer (LADEE)

Page 19: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

19

Taurus II

• Taurus II expands Wallops capabilities to medium-class ELVs

• Initial missions are 9 launches supporting NASA’s COTS & CRS programs for commercial resupply of the ISS• Future Science & non-NASA

missions expected

• >$100M in new launch infrastructure underway

• Initial flight in late 2011

Page 20: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

20

Taurus II & ISS Resupply

Page 21: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

21

Horizontal Integration Facility

Page 22: Activities at Wallops Flight Facility

GSFC/WallopsFlight Facility

22

Pad 0A Medium-Class ELV Launch Complex