Dec 17 2007
NASA to Begin Testing of Engine That Will Power Ares Rockets
HUNTSVILLE, Ala — Dec 17, `07 — In December, NASA will begin testing core components of a rocket engine from the Apollo era. Data from the tests will help NASA build the next generation engine that will power the nation’s new Ares launch vehicles on voyages that will send humans to the moon.
NASA will test the engine’s powerpack, a gas generator and turbopumps that perform the rocket engine’s major pumping and combustion work. These components originally delivered propellants to the Apollo-era J-2 engine that fueled the second stage of the Saturn V rockets.
NASA is using these heritage parts to develop a new engine, known as the J2-X, to power the upper stages of both the Ares I crew launch vehicle and the Ares V cargo launch vehicle. Results from the tests will help engineers modify the machinery to meet the higher performance requirements of these two next-generation rockets.
The powerpack tests will be conducted at NASA’s Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Miss., where the components were installed in late September 2007.
The Ares rockets support NASA’s goal of providing safe, reliable, affordable transportation to support sustainable, long-term exploration. The Ares I is an in-line, two-stage rocket that will transport the Orion crew vehicle to low Earth orbit.
Orion will accommodate as many as six astronauts on missions to the International Space Station or as many as four crew members on lunar missions. The Ares V, a heavy-lift launch vehicle, will enable NASA to launch a variety of science and exploration payloads and key components needed to go to the moon. More at NASA.



