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Related: About this forumNASA infrared movie of Falcon 9 first stage separation, boost-back, and re-entry.
This is fucking cool.
Commercial Rocket Test Helps Prep for Journey to Mars
NASA.gov Video
Published on Oct 17, 2014
NASA successfully captured thermal images of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on its descent after it launched in September from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The data from these thermal images may provide critical engineering information for future missions to the surface of Mars.
NASA.gov Video
Published on Oct 17, 2014
NASA successfully captured thermal images of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on its descent after it launched in September from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The data from these thermal images may provide critical engineering information for future missions to the surface of Mars.
Via http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=35870.0
More info here: http://www.democraticunderground.com/1016104706
http://aviationweek.com/space/nasa-spacex-share-data-supersonic-retropropulsion
NASA, SpaceX Share Data On Supersonic Retropropulsion
Data-sharing deal will help SpaceX land Falcon 9 on Earth and NASA put humans on Mars
Oct 16, 2014 Frank Morring, Jr. | Aviation Week & Space Technology
An innovative partnership between NASA and SpaceX is giving the U.S. space agency an early look at what it would take to land multi-ton habitats and supply caches on Mars for human explorers, while providing sophisticated infrared (IR) imagery to help the spacecraft company develop a reusable launch vehicle.
<snip>
This is the kind of thing that NASA couldnt have done five years ago, says Braun, who was chief technologist for the agency in 2010-11.
He learned that the hard way. After returning to Georgia Tech, Brauna specialist in entry, descent and landing (EDL)worked with engineers from the university and various NASA centers to develop a proposal for a $50 million sounding-rocket program to flight-test supersonic retropropulsion (AW&ST May 20, 2013, p. 30).
NASAs Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) rejected the plan because of its cost, Braun says. But the agency still needs a way to land payloads weighing more than 20 tons to support a human expedition to Mars, leading Braun and his colleagues to find common cause with SpaceX.
<snip>
NASA, SpaceX Share Data On Supersonic Retropropulsion
Data-sharing deal will help SpaceX land Falcon 9 on Earth and NASA put humans on Mars
Oct 16, 2014 Frank Morring, Jr. | Aviation Week & Space Technology
An innovative partnership between NASA and SpaceX is giving the U.S. space agency an early look at what it would take to land multi-ton habitats and supply caches on Mars for human explorers, while providing sophisticated infrared (IR) imagery to help the spacecraft company develop a reusable launch vehicle.
<snip>
This is the kind of thing that NASA couldnt have done five years ago, says Braun, who was chief technologist for the agency in 2010-11.
He learned that the hard way. After returning to Georgia Tech, Brauna specialist in entry, descent and landing (EDL)worked with engineers from the university and various NASA centers to develop a proposal for a $50 million sounding-rocket program to flight-test supersonic retropropulsion (AW&ST May 20, 2013, p. 30).
NASAs Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) rejected the plan because of its cost, Braun says. But the agency still needs a way to land payloads weighing more than 20 tons to support a human expedition to Mars, leading Braun and his colleagues to find common cause with SpaceX.
<snip>
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NASA infrared movie of Falcon 9 first stage separation, boost-back, and re-entry. (Original Post)
bananas
Oct 2014
OP
Lochloosa
(16,063 posts)1. Fucking cool.
CaptainTruth
(6,589 posts)3. Cool! I love watching them go up, but so far the landing tests have been
... too far out in the ocean to see. I'm looking forward to the day they bring a Falcon back & land it at KSC. I'll be able to watch that.
Also looking forward to the December launch of Orion on a Delta IV heavy, which is three Delta IV first stages bolted together. I'll probably set my glass vases on the floor for that one, so it doesn't rattle them off the shelves. It's gonna shake the house!