NOON UNO HIGH-MOBILITY MARS EXPLORATION SYSTEM DANIEL MCCAFFERY JEFF ROBINSON KYLE SMITH JASON TANG BRAD THOMPSON.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Larry Phillips MAY 13th-17th, 2002 Micro Arcsecond Xray Imaging Mission: Pathfinder (MAXIM-PF) Launch Vehicle Information Final Version.
Advertisements

Stephen Hu Deployment Vehicle Selection Helicopter Design Hours Worked: Team Member Stephen Hu.
Shooting for the Moon Bernard Brown Ashley Richter Will Bullins.
Launch Vehicles. LAUNCH SYSTEM CONCEPTS SHROUD PROTECTS THE SPACECRAFT SHROUD PROTECTS THE SPACECRAFT MAIN VEHICLE PRIMARY LIQUID OR SOLID ROCKET PROPELLANT.
Mission To Mars In Kerbal Space Program, Where distances are 1/9 real world values.
ME 480 Introduction To Aerospace: Chapter 2 Prof. Doug Cairns.
Parts of an Aircraft and Propulsion Systems
Space Shuttle Justin Schultz. Space Shuttle Space Shuttle is the first orbital space craft designed for reuse Delivers payloads and a rotation of crew.
Title: Intro to Water Bottle Rockets
MAE 4262: ROCKETS AND MISSION ANALYSIS Single and Multi-Stage Rockets September 9, 2014 Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department Florida Institute.
Airplane forces. Weight and Lift WEIGHT – directed to the center of earth – airplane parts, fuel, and people, luggage or freight LIFT – generated by the.
CURIOSITY: Big Mars Rover for Big Mars Science! Artist’s Concept. NASA/JPL-Caltech.
Mars EDL CubeSat Mission Jekan Thanga 1, Jim Bell 1 Space and Terrestrial Robotic Exploration Laboratory School of Earth and Space Exploration (SESE) Arizona.
Spacecraft Propulsion Dr Andrew Ketsdever Lesson 13 MAE 5595.
Escape Velocity Must travel about 8 km/s or 18,000 mi/hr Trouble is that at this speed the atmosphere heats up objects and burns them up Image from.
Future Plans for Space Travel Created by Manish Chetty, Connor Handley, Matthew Hansen.
AME 441: Conceptual Design Presentation
The Barn Owls Chris “Mo” Baughman Kate Brennan Christine Izuo Dan Masse Joe “Sal” Salerno Paul Slaboch Michelle Smith.
Parachutes Supersonic portion – Hemisflo Ribbon Most practical for velocities up to Mach 3 Subsonic portion – Ringsail Parachutes Historically proven success.
A Comparison of Nuclear Thermal to Nuclear Electric Propulsion for Interplanetary Missions Mike Osenar Mentor: LtCol Lawrence.
Stephen Hu Deployment Vehicle Selection Helicopter Design Hours Worked: 98 1 Team Member Stephen Hu.
How do most vehicles propel themselves? Tire pushes on ground, ground pushes on tire… Normal Forces and Friction.
Space Travel. Last Night’s Homework 1A. Name three major features of the moon’s surface. Craters, maria, and highlands 1B. How did the moon’s craters.
Launch System Launch Vehicle Launch Complex Orbit Insertion Orbit Maneuvers.
PROPRIETARY James Bearman AJ Brinker Dean Bryson Brian Gershkoff Kuo Guo Joseph Henrich Aaron Smith Daedalus Aviation Conceptual Design Review: “The Daedalus.
Govt. Girls Higher Secondary School , Pattom , Trivandrum.
AE 1350 Lecture #14 Introduction to Astronautics.
Rocket Engine Physics and Design
Uncontrolled copy not subject to amendment Rocketry Revision 1.00.
Rockets Tuesday: Rocketry Wednesday: Meet in my room 601: hydrogen demo and Quiz over rocketry. Thursday: Satellites and Orbital Mechanics Friday: Satellites,
Motion & Newton’s Laws Earth Systems A force is… a push or a pull. Friction, Drag, Gravity, and Weight are forces. Measured in unit N = kg m sec 2.
Propellers. Helicopter Propellers  Helicopters, with their horizontal propeller called a rotor, do not require forward propulsion.  Each of the long,
Journey to the Moon.  384,000 Km away from earth  Diameter of 3,476 Km  Density is 1/80 th of Earth  Temperature range: 130°C to -180°C  No atmosphere.
Chapter 24 Space Vehicular Systems. Objectives After reading the chapter and reviewing the materials presented the students will be able to: Identify.
Ryan Mayes Duarte Ho Jason Laing Bryan Giglio. Requirements  Overall: Launch 10,000 mt of cargo (including crew vehicle) per year Work with a $5M fixed.
THE SPACE SHUTTLE. Shuttle Take Off T-31s ground computer system hands over to shuttle system T-16s sound suppression system soaks the launch pad with.
Stephen Hu Deployment Vehicle Selection Helicopter Design Hours Worked: Team Member Stephen Hu.
Team PM8 Eventus Slide 1. Commercial spaceflight has seen increased activity as more privately owned companies invest in the venture. To avoid a catastrophic.
AAE 450- Propulsion LV Stephen Hanna Critical Design Review 02/27/01.
STRATEGIES FOR MARS NETWORK MISSIONS VIA AN ALTERNATIVE ENTRY, DESCENT, AND LANDING ARCHITECTURE 10 TH INTERNATIONAL PLANETARY PROBE WORKSHOP June,
Rockets. Rocket  A chamber enclosing a gas under pressure  Small opening allows gas to escape providing thrust in the process  Which of Newton’s Laws?
Mars Today 1 An immediate and inexpensive program for manned Mars visitation.
1. Mission Statement Design Requirements Aircraft Concept Selection Advanced Technologies / Concepts Engine / Propulsion Modeling Constraint Analysis.
MAE 4262: ROCKETS AND MISSION ANALYSIS
The Space Shuttle. The Shuttle’s mission  The purpose of the space shuttle is to bring supplies, equipment, and people to the International Space Station.
APOLLO SPACECRAFT Daniel McCaffery Jeff Robinson Kyle Smith Jason Tang Brad Thompson.
ES 100 Micro Aerial Vehicle Group 1 Michelle Helsel, Austin Dickey, Alsia Plybeah, Dylan Carlson, Peter, Lucilla Calderon.
The Space Shuttle. The Shuttle’s mission  The purpose of the space shuttle is to bring supplies, equipment, and people to the International Space Station.
CRICOS No J a university for the world real R ENB443: Launcher Systems Image Credit: ESA Caption: The generic Ariane-5 (Ariane Flight 162) lifting.
Introduction to Aerospace – Historical Perspective Dr. Doug Cairns.
AAE450 Senior Spacecraft Design Goppert, 1 James Goppert Week 8: March 8 th, 2007 Aerodynamics: Reentry Optimization Dynamics and Control: Communication.
Launch Structure Challenge - Background Humans landed on the moon in 1969 – Apollo 11 space flight. In 2003, NASA started a new program (Ares) to send.
The Motion of Planets Kepler’s laws Johannes Kepler.
Newton’s thought experiment: orbital velocity. Surface escape velocities Planet V escape, ft/sec Mercury13,600 Venus33,600 Earth36,700 Moon7,800 Mars16,700.
Vehicle Sizing AAE 451: Team 2 Michael Caldwell Jeff Haddin
Four Forces of Flight Lift Weight Thrust Drag
Rockets Aerospace.
FLIGHT.
Development and Principles of Rocketry
COEUS UAV for Titan Brandon Adams Alex Hart Logan Sailer Ben Veenema.
Unit B Flight.
Bellwork 12/22 What kinds of design differences would there be in planning a mission to Jupiter versus sending a satellite into Earth’s orbit?
Matching of Propulsion Systems for an Aircraft
Analysis of Rocket Propulsion
Development and Principles of Rocketry
Speeding up and slowing down - Answers
Vocabulary in your own words
Parachutes Changed Supersonic portion of descent
Presentation transcript:

NOON UNO HIGH-MOBILITY MARS EXPLORATION SYSTEM DANIEL MCCAFFERY JEFF ROBINSON KYLE SMITH JASON TANG BRAD THOMPSON

 Studying and exploring Mars is an essential part on the road to putting man on the planet  The design makes it an outstanding high-mobility vehicle used for Mars exploration  Very low development, construction, and operation cost IntroductionIntroduction

Our Mission  Leave GTO and travel to Mars  Separate from spacecraft and begin flight  Cruise 35 km at 183 m/s (best range)  Loiter at 143 m/s for 45 minutes (best endurance)  Descend at 7.9 m/s (sink rate) in Gusev Crater

function option 1 option 2 option 3 option 4 lift swept wingunswept wingtapered wingdelta wing propulsion propellerturbopropsolar proprocket stability canardconventional tailvertical wingletsv-tail landing gear skidswheelsparachutedetached front take off rocket assistedsleeve (groundless)explosionmagnetism  Morphological Chart Breakdown system to feature or component level (lift, propulsion, stability, landing gear, take off)

 Rank-Order Objectives Which objectives are more important? ABCDEscore A (weight) ---1½½1 3 B (endurance) C (stability) ½1---½0 2 D (size) ½1½ E (speed)  Order of Importance 1 st – A (weight) 2 nd – D (size) 3 rd – C (stability) 4 th – E (speed) 5 th – B (endurance)

Results of Voting Final Rank of Importance BradJasonDanielJeffKylescore A (weight) B (endurance) C (stability) D (size) E (speed) Weight 40% Endurance 3% Stability 12% Size 27% Speed 18%

 Establish Scoring System Good: 3, Average: 0, Worse: -3 Ground TO Tapered & Swept Canard Rocket Aux. Rockets Ground TO Wheels on Wings Conv. tail Delta Rocket Skids Sleeve TO Rocket Detach. front Canard Tapered Propeller Tapered Conv. tail Ground TO Propeller Swept Aux. Rockets V-Tail Rocket Delta Canard Aux. Rockets Ground TO Weight Endurance Stability Size Speed

Mars Spacecraft

Launch Vehicle Selection  Ariane 4 $60 million launch cost 3465 kg boost capability to GTO 4 meter diameter fairing

Spacecraft Propulsion  TR YN Liquid Bi-propellant* I sp = 330 sec Thrust = 556 N Weight = 6.03 kg * Manufactured by TRW

AstrodynamicsAstrodynamics  185 km altitude about Earth at perigee  35,786 km altitude about Earth at apogee  At perigee, velocity = km/s  1 st burn, velocity increases by km/s   v at end of transfer orbit to match Mars’ velocity  2 nd burn, velocity increases by 2.65 km/s   v required to be captured by Mars’ gravity and enter circular orbit at an altitude of 500 km  3 rd burn, velocity decreases by km/s  For atmospheric entry: 4 th burn, velocity decreases by km/s

EntryEntry  After re-entry into atmosphere, first parachute deploys to reorient spacecraft and takes away heat shield  Main parachute deploys from blunt end of shell and pulls it away  Parachute deploys from the aft end of aircraft and separates it from rest of capsule  Aircraft releases parachute and flies down to cruise altitude

Mars Aircraft

Aircraft Description  Take off mass – 84.5 kg  Wing span – 3.67 m  Fuselage Length – 3.02 m Diameter – 0.25 m  Low, swept, tapered wing  Canards  Skids

AerodynamicsAerodynamics NACA 4415 airfoil  Wings - 3  incidence  Main Wings - 20  sweep  Canards – 22.5  sweep   Drag Cruise – N Loiter – 5.82 N

Aircraft Propulsion  Aircraft engine - nitrogen tetroxide (NTO) / monomethyl hydrazine (MMH) I sp = 290 sec Max Thrust = 22 N Mass = 0.7 kg

Carpet Plot Constraints  Sink rate < 10 m/s  M < 0.8  Cruise velocity > 160 m/s  Minimize take off mass without violating constraints

¿Questions?¿Questions?