NASA, Blue Origin Partner to Bring Lunar Gravity Conditions Closer to Earth
At one-sixth that of Earth, the unique gravity of the lunar surface is one of the many variable conditions that technologies bound for the Moon will need to perform well in. NASA will soon have more options for testing those innovations in lunar gravity thanks to a collaboration with Blue Origin to bring new testing capabilities to the company's New Shepard reusable suborbital rocket system.
Currently, NASA can approximate the Moon's gravity on parabolic flights and in centrifuges on suborbital vehicles – both invaluable options for maturing promising innovations. But these methods provide only seconds of lunar gravity exposure at a time or limit the payload size, compelling NASA to explore longer-duration and larger size options. Blue Origin's new lunar gravity testing capability – projected to be available in late 2022 – is answering that need.
New Shepard's upgrades will allow the vehicle to use its reaction control system to impart a rotation on the capsule. As a result, the entire capsule essentially acts as a large centrifuge to create artificial gravity environments for the payloads inside. Blue Origin's first flight of this capability will target 11 rotations per minute to provide more than two minutes of continuous lunar gravity, exposing the technologies to this challenging but difficult-to-test condition.
Also at Space News and SYFY Wire.
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 13 2021, @06:40AM (2 children)
I know that they've been doing suborbital flights for years, but has anything from Blue Origin actually reached orbit yet?
(Score: 2) by Frosty Piss on Saturday March 13 2021, @08:34AM
No. This is just a way for Bezos to get someone else to pay for his toy.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Saturday March 13 2021, @05:11PM
They are making BE-4 [wikipedia.org] engines for ULA... but none of them have reached orbit yet.
Supposedly, these could be used in flight tests as early as this year, either on their own New Glenn or ULA's Vulcan.
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