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Blended wing body prototype in the Langley Full-Scale Tunnel


TECHNICAL EXCELLENCE: TECHNICAL SEMINAR SERIES
Watch Live: The seminars are held in the James L. Webb Auditorium at NASA Headquarters and broadcast live on the NASA TV Education Channel on the date of each seminar.

Watch Later: Video podcast, windows streaming, and downloadable captioned videos are available after each seminar.


Advanced Technology Development for Planetary Entry, Descent, and Landing
November 27, 2006 / 11 a.m. ET

Presented By: Dr. Walt Engelund and Dr. Neil Cheatwood

The current state-of-the-art in planetary entry, decent, and landing (EDL) systems is derived primarily from a 30 year old technology set developed for the Mars Viking Program, including the heritage spherically blunted conical aeroshell geometry, ablative thermal protection system material, and the supersonic disc-gap-band parachute. Optimistic estimates predict that the current Viking derived EDL architecture, which relies primarily on the technologies developed in the 1960s and '70s, may be extensible to allow landed masses up to a maximum of on the order of two metric tons as parachute diameters and ballistic entry masses increase to limiting values.

Recent EDL architecture studies have revealed severe limitations in the ability to soft land large masses on the surface of Mars, consistent with human or large scale robotic precursor missions. An overview of the current suite of EDL technologies is provided, followed by a discussion of a set of candidate technologies that may provide the enabling capabilities required for large mass EDL at Earth, Mars, and other planets with atmospheres. Several of these large mission-class enabling technologies, including inflatable aerodynamic decelerators, are currently being studied in the Fundamental Aeronautics Program, and a brief review of the current status and future plans is provided.

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