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Space Exploration Boy Scout Presentation November 17, 2003 Amanda Kelly Shara Walenta Brad Steinfeldt
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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
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Rocket Pioneers: Space Exploration from Dream to Reality
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Rocket Pioneers Inspiration –Jules Verne Fathers of Rocketry –Tsiolkovsky –Goddard –Oberth Rocket Engineer –Von Braun
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Jules Verne 1828 - 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
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K.E. Tsiolkovsky “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 its satellite 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
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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 the hope of today and reality of tomorrow.” - Goddard Father of American modern rocket propulsion 1882-1945
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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 Travel Romania, 1894-1989
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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 Engineer 1912-1977 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
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Apollo 11 Video
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Career Opportunities in the Space Industry
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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
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Case Study: Mars Exploration Rovers: Spirit and Opportunity
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Fields in Aerospace Engineering Manned Missions Un-Manned Missions - Science Research and Exploration - Communications and National Defense Private Industry Competition
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Humans in Space Space Shuttle International Space Station Orbital Space Plane Humans Establish a Presence in Space
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Un-Manned Missions Kepler Stardust Deep Space Science Communications
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Private Industry Space Flight X Prize: Civilian Race to Space
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Student Aerospace Projects at The University of Texas
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What are UT Students 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
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“The Weightless Wonder” KC-135 Projects –Satellite Orientation Control –Satellite Separation –Flame Studies KC-135 Projects Allow Students to feel “weightless”
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Questions?
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