Exciting news Groundbreaking research is paving the way for safe human missions to Mars making space exploration a step closer to reality.

Flying cars. Space tourism. Safe reentry for astronauts coming back from Mars.

These technologies are still science fiction, but some won’t be for much longer, according to Charles “Mike” Fremaux, NASA Langley Research Center’s chief engineer for intelligent flight systems.

To test these concepts, particularly in regard to public and military safety, NASA Langley is building its first new wind tunnel in over 40 years. The NASA Flight Dynamic Research Facility, a project Fremaux has been pursuing for 25 years, will replace two smaller wind tunnels that are around 80 years old. The center’s most recent and largest, the National Transonic Facility, was built in 1980.

“These facilities are really kind of tailor-made for doing a lot of that work,” he said at a presentation at the Virginia Air & Space Science Center in Hampton on Tuesday. The talk was part of NASA Langley’s Sigma Series community lectures.

“That’s not our traditional wheelhouse. We haven’t tested anything with a propeller on it in decades.”

That’s because many new craft will depend on electric vertical takeoff and landing, or “eVTOL,” technology. With likely dozens or even hundreds of private vehicles in the airways, research is needed to understand how vehicles will react in real-world conditions.

Fremaux expects some of these technologies will likely be mainstream by 2040 or sooner.

The $43.2 million federal government contract to design and build the 25,000-square-foot facility went to BL Harbert International, a construction company based in Birmingham, Alabama. It is expected to open in early 2025.

The wind tunnel will be 130 feet tall, Fremaux said, comparing its capabilities to those it will replace: The 12-foot, Low-Speed Spin Tunnel built in 1939 and the 20-foot, Vertical Spin Tunnel built in 1940.

One project he worked on using the center’s other wind tunnels—there are currently around 16 operating, Fremaux said—was the Stardust Mission in 2006, the first spacecraft to bring back material from outside the moon’s orbit.

Without parachute technology developed at NASA Langley, it wouldn’t have been possible to recover samples from that mission, Fremaux said.

Now, along with testing the next generation of commercial, earthbound aviation, the Flight Dynamics Research Facility will provide experimental support for entry, descent and landing of missions returning from the moon and Mars, as well as exploration of Venus and тιтan, a moon of Saturn.

The research will support human space exploration, contributing to the possibility of safe landing and reentry on a human mission to Mars.

The research will be similar to some NASA Langley has performed for nearly 100 years as public and private air traffic went from hard-to-imagine to hard-to-imagine-life-without, Fremaux said.

The tunnel will provide safeguards not just to the public, but for the technicians who work there.

“How are the models going to be launched and retrieved?” audience member Ronald Hermansderfer, 89, asked, referring to small, free-flying scale models.

“The plan is to do that just like we do now; a very skilled technician is going to launch the models by hand. That’s not a joke,” Fremaux said to murmurs from the audience. “That’s true, and we have one right here, now retired, who did it for many years. So I know that was a loaded question.”

Fremaux recognized Hermansderfer, who worked at the center as a technician from 1983 to 2002. Hermansderfer’s job was dangerous; if someone opened the wrong door elsewhere in the facility, affecting the pressure differential, a technician could be sucked into the wind tunnel while launching a model.

The new system will have a pressure equalization system, Fremaux said.

After the talk, Hermansderfer said that, as a kid, he used to set paper airplanes on fire and throw them out of windows. He did something remarkably similar in the testing tunnels at Langley. But it never really occurred to him he was in danger.

His son—also named Ronald Hermansderfer and also retired from NASA Langley—laughed.

“Maybe they just didn’t tell you,” he said.

Source: MediaNews Group

Related Posts

Diving into the mysteries of the cosmos Astronomers challenge existing theories with a mindboggling discovery of an unexpected exoplanet.

The discovery of a gaint exoplanet that is far too mᴀssive for its sun is calling into question what was previously understood about the formation of planets…

Mindblowing discovery alert Astronomers have just found a planetforming disk beyond our Milky Way galaxy unlocking new cosmic secrets.

Astronomers have achieved a significant milestone in space exploration by identifying, for the first time, a planet-forming disk around a young star in a galaxy outside our…

Unlocking the mysteries of dark matter through cuttingedge research at the worlds largest particle accelerator. The pursuit of knowledge knows no bounds.

The existence of Dark Matter is a long-standing puzzle in our universe. Dark Matter makes up about a quarter of our universe, yet it does not interact…

Breaking news from the cosmos Astronomers have found an alien star system with six exoplanets orbiting in a rare and harmonious resonance chain. The universe never fails to amaze us

In an extraordinary discovery, astronomers have identified a planetary system, not far from our Solar System, where six exoplanets orbit their star in a rare and harmonious…

Discovering a mesmerizing star system with six planets dancing in harmony to an otherworldly rhythm. Natures symphony continues to astound us.

Scientists have discovered a rare sight in a nearby star system: Six planets orbiting their central star in a rhythmic beat. The planets move in an orbital…

Exciting news as the United States makes plans to return to the moon after over 50 years. A historic moment ahead

More than 50 years after the last Apollo mission, the United States will try once again to land a craft on the moon on January 25, said…