NASA's Marshall HI-TTeMP lab provides key insight to human landing system

Nov. 26, 2024
For safety and mission success, the landers and other equipment in development for NASA’s Artemis campaign must work reliably in the harshest of environments, Lee Mohon writes for NASA.

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. - Engineers at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, are currently testing how well prototype insulation for SpaceX’s Starship HLS will insulate interior environments, including propellant storage tanks and the crew cabin. Starship HLS will land astronauts on the lunar surface during Artemis III and Artemis IV, Lee Mohon writes for NASA. Continue reading original article.

The Military & Aerospace Electronics take:

26 November 2024 - Mohon writes that "Marshall’s Hub for Innovative Thermal Technology Maturation and Prototyping (HI-TTeMP) laboratory provides the resources and tools for an early, quick-check evaluation of insulation materials destined for Artemis deep space missions."

“Marshall’s HI-TTeMP lab gives us a key testing capability to help determine how well the current materials being designed for vehicles like SpaceX’s orbital propellant storage depot and Starship HLS, will insulate the liquid oxygen and methane propellants,” said HLS chief engineer Rene Ortega. “By using this lab and the expertise provided by the thermal engineers at Marshall, we are gaining valuable feedback earlier in the design and development process that will provide additional information before qualifying hardware for deep space missions.”

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Jamie Whitney, Senior Editor
Military + Aerospace Electronics

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