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ROCKET SCIENCE
Simulating SLS Booster Separation
by Staff Writers
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Nov 22, 2015


Image courtesy Stuart Rogers, NASA/Ames; Ryan Rocha, University of California, Davis. For a larger version of this image please go here.

NASA's new heavy-lift launch vehicle, the Space Launch System (SLS), will carry 15% more payload than Saturn V and three times the payload of the space shuttle, requiring innovative rocket design.

The SLS configuration consists of a center core stage with four RS-25 engines and two solid rocket boosters (SRBs), which separate from the core as fuel is exhausted soon after liftoff.

To help SLS design engineers understand how aerodynamic forces will affect the path of the SRBs away from the core stage during separation, researchers at NASA's Ames Research Center and the University of California, Davis, are running high-fidelity simulations of thousands of possible separation scenarios.

In this visualization, a shock wave (colored by pressure) is clearly shown at the front of the vehicle; farther back, booster separation-motor plumes are colored by Mach number.

The simulation was run on the Pleiades supercomputer at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing facility at Ames Research Center. The visualization was part of a NASA showcase of nearly 40 of the agency's exciting computational achievements at SC15, the international supercomputing conference, Nov. 15-20, 2015 in Austin.

For more information about NASA's research presented at the conference, visit here.


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Previous Report
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Next Giant Leap, No Small Steps
Houston TX (SPX) Nov 18, 2015
Our focus at the Space Launch System (SLS) program is on building a new rocket - the most powerful in the world. On its first test flight, Exploration Mission-1, SLS will carry atop it an uncrewed Orion spacecraft, which will someday carry astronauts on a journey to deep space. A similar scene was unfolding at NASA 48 years ago. On Nov. 9, 1967, the Saturn V rocket launched for the first t ... read more


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