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ROCKET SCIENCE
Milestone Work Under Way on B-2 Test Stand
by Staff Writers
New Orleans LA (SPX) May 20, 2015


Another 1 million pounds of structural steel is being added to accommodate the larger SLS stage.

NASA began work May 13 on a major milestone in its preparation for testing the core stage of its new Space Launch System (SLS), beginning lifts of large structural steel sections onto the B-2 Test Stand at Stennis Space Center.

The SLS is being developed to return humans to deep-space missions, to an asteroid and eventually to Mars. The B-2 stand is being modified to test the SLS core stage prior to its first unmanned mission flight. A major step in the modification involves repositioning and extension of the test stand's Main Propulsion Test Article (MPTA) framework, which supports the rocket stage for testing.

The framework was repositioned on the stand late last summer. Now, work has begun to add the large structural steel sections that will extend its height. The existing MPTA framework, built in the late 1970s to support testing of the space shuttle MPTA, stands 61 feet high and contains about 1.2 million pounds of fabricated steel.

Another 1 million pounds of structural steel is being added to accommodate the larger SLS stage. Three levels of structural steel sections will be lifted into place during the upcoming weeks; this photo shows a base section on its way into place.

Once all sections are lifted and anchored in place, the MPTA framework will extend 100 feet higher, providing a decidedly new look to the Stennis skyline. SLS testing will involve installing and anchoring the core stage onto the B-2 stand and simultaneously firing its four RS-25 engines, just as will occur during its mission flight.


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Stennis Space Center
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ROCKET SCIENCE
Engineers Test Hydrogen Burn-off Igniters for Space Launch System
Huntsville AL (SPX) May 15, 2015
NASA has a certain "flare" when it comes to safety on the launch pad. Those flares are called hydrogen burn-off igniters - which resemble celebratory sparklers - and were successfully used to mitigate risk to a launch vehicle for space shuttle missions. A team of engineers is testing hydrogen burn-off igniters for NASA's Space Launch System at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsvi ... read more


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