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Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

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Page 1: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Space ExplorationBoy Scout Presentation

November 17, 2003

Amanda KellyShara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Page 2: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Agenda

I. Rocket Pioneers

II. Opportunities in the Space Industry

- The parts of a space mission

- A Mars Mission Case Study

- Various Fields in Aerospace Engineering

III. UT Aerospace Engineering Student Projects

- Launching small satellites

- Floating in weightlessness!

IV. Questions

Page 3: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Rocket Pioneers:

Space Exploration from Dream to Reality

Page 4: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Rocket Pioneers

• Inspiration– Jules Verne

• Fathers of Rocketry– Tsiolkovsky

– Goddard

– Oberth

• Rocket Engineer– Von Braun

Page 5: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Jules Verne1828 - 1904

– Long distance travel in balloon– Very long range cannon– Helicopter– Apollo project that led the first men to the Moon in 1969 – Interplanetary travels – Electrical engine

– 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea– Around the World in 80 Days– A Journey to the Center of the Earth– From the Earth to the Moon

•Wrote various poems, novels, and short stories

•Predictions from his writing

Page 6: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

K.E. Tsiolkovsky

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“To set foot on the soil of the asteroids, to lift by hand a rock from the Moon,to observe Mars from a distance of several tens of kilometers, to land on itssatellite or even on its surface, what can be more fantastic?” - Tsiolkovsky

Father of Russian Astronautics (1857 – 1935)

• Specialized in liquid fuel propellants, multistage rockets, and space travel

• Theoretical Scientist but never made a rocket himself

• Famous Rocket Equation:

•Predictions:- Orbital space station- Settlements outside of Earth

Page 7: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Robert Goddard

• Some Historical Firsts for Goddard

– First proved that a rocket will work in a vacuum, that it needs no air to push against

– First received U.S. patent in idea of multi-stage rocket, 1914

– First developed and shot a liquid fuel rocket, March 16,1926

– First developed gyro control apparatus for rocket flight

Robert H. Goddard besides 1926 liquid- fueled rocket.Flew 41 ft. in the air.

“It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is thehope of today and reality of tomorrow.” - Goddard

Father of American modern rocket propulsion1882-1945

Page 8: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Hermann Oberth

• Inspired by Jules Verne’s famous novel:“From Earth to the Moon”

• 1923, he became the first to prove that rockets could put a man into space

• He originated the idea of a multi-stage rocket

• V-2 (Vengeance) rocket, World War II

• He was the first person to suggest an manned orbiting laboratory similar to what is now the International Space Station (ISS)

Father of Space TravelRomania, 1894-1989

Page 9: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Werner Von Braun

• Assistant to Hermann Oberth for V-2 rocket

• Taken to the US after the war• Director of Marshall Space Flight

Center, Alabama

German Rocket Engineer1912-1977

Programs at NASA:

• Redstone Rocket - launched first satellite for western hemisphere

• Saturn V and 1B- Used to carry astronauts to the Moon on Apollo missions- Used to launch Skylab, worlds first space station

Page 10: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Apollo 11 Video

Page 11: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Career Opportunities in the Space Industry

Page 12: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Behind the Scenes of a Mission•To accomplish a mission, engineers are broken down into teams:

- airframe/structure

- propulsion system

- guidance, navigation, and control

- thermal systems

- power systems

- human living environment systems

- science payloads to orbit

- microgravity science experiments

•These teams are further broken down into sub-teams

A successful mission requires thousands of engineers and scientists working together across the country

Page 13: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Case Study:

Mars Exploration Rovers:

Spirit and Opportunity

Page 14: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Fields in Aerospace Engineering

• Manned Missions

• Un-Manned Missions

- Science Research and Exploration

- Communications and National Defense

• Private Industry Competition

Page 15: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Humans in Space

Space Shuttle

International Space Station

Orbital Space Plane

Humans Establish a Presence in Space

Page 16: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Un-Manned Missions

KeplerStardust

Deep Space Science

Communications

Page 17: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Private Industry Space Flight

X Prize: Civilian Race to Space

Page 18: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Student Aerospace Projects at The University of Texas

Page 19: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

What are UTStudents Doing?

• CanSat

– Small Coke can sized satellite

– Launched to 12,000 feet in 2002

• FASTRAC

– Automatically performs navigation maneuvers between 2 satellites

• Tracking Station

– Able to send/receive information about satellites and their orbits

Exciting Projects Break New Ground

Page 20: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

“The Weightless Wonder”

• KC-135 Projects

– Satellite Orientation Control

– Satellite Separation

– Flame Studies

KC-135 Projects Allow Students to feel “weightless”

Page 21: Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt

Questions?