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Orion Test Article on the Move
by Staff Writers
Sandusky OH (SPX) Sep 18, 2019

See a time-lapse video showing the move of Orion's service module from the vibration table to the assembly high bay area in Plum Brook's Space Power Facility.

Engineers recently lifted and moved a full-scale test version of the 13-ton Orion service module in preparation for upcoming pyroshock tests at NASA Glenn's Plum Brook Station in Sandusky, Ohio. During the tests, engineers will fire pyrotechnics to simulate the shocks the service module will experience as Orion separates from the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket.

The service module is an essential part of the spacecraft. It will propel, power and cool Orion in addition to providing air and water for the crew.

In this time-lapse video, the Plum Brook team removes the test article from the world's most powerful spacecraft vibration table and transports it into the assembly high bay area in Plum Brook's Space Environments Complex. Prior to the move, the test article passed a series of vibration tests to verify that it can withstand the vibrations as it launches and travels into space. A thousand sensors collected data on Orion's service module as it was shaken on a vibration table. This testing simulated how Orion's structure flexed and will stand up to 35 tons of spacecraft weight during a launch.

Orion's first flight atop SLS, known as Artemis 1, is targeted to launch in 2020. It will venture tens of thousands of miles beyond the moon.

The test article was provided by ESA (European Space Agency) and built by Airbus Defence and Space.


Related Links
Orion at NASA
Space Tourism, Space Transport and Space Exploration News


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Natalie Portman joins Hollywood space race with 'Lucy in the Sky'
Toronto, Canada (AFP) Sept 12, 2019
NASA may have grounded its space shuttles, but more Hollywood A-listers than ever are exploring the final frontier, with Natalie Portman launching one of two astronaut movie premieres at Toronto's film festival. "Lucy in the Sky" opens with Portman drifting through space in her astronaut suit, begging her bosses for a few more moments to gaze at the cosmos before returning to the humdrum reality of life on Earth. Eva Green's character in French movie "Proxima" also portrays the immense challenge ... read more

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