Publication | Closed Access
A Rigid Mid Lift-to-Drag Ratio Approach to Human Mars Entry, Descent, and Landing
22
Citations
6
References
2017
Year
Space VehicleEngineeringMechanical EngineeringAerospace SystemSpace TransportationKinesiologyAerospace RoboticsSpace VehiclesProposed Vehicle TypeMartian ExplorationMetric TonsKinematicsAircraft Design ProcessAstronauticsDesignMechatronicsAerospace EngineeringHuman Mars EntryMechanical SystemsRoboticsSingle Landing
Current NASA Human Mars architectures require delivery of approximately 20 metric tons of cargo to the surface in a single landing. A proposed vehicle type for performing the entry, descent, and landing at Mars associated with this architecture is a rigid, enclosed, elongated lifting body shape that provides a higher lift-to-drag ratio (L/D) than a typical entry capsule, but lower than a typical winged entry vehicle (such as the Space Shuttle Orbiter). A rigid Mid-L/D shape has advantages for large mass Mars EDL, including loads management, range capability during entry, and human spaceflight heritage. Previous large mass Mars studies have focused more on symmetric and/or circular cross-section Mid-L/D shapes such as the ellipsled. More recent work has shown performance advantages for non-circular cross section shapes. This paper will describe efforts to design a rigid Mid-L/D entry vehicle for Mars which shows mass and performance improvements over previous Mid-L/D studies. The proposed concept, work to date and evolution, forward path, and suggested future strategy are described.
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