The Star Malaysia - Star2

Fill her up!

NASA advisory committee questions SpaceX’s unorthodox fuelling process.

- By SAMANTHA MASUNAGA

A NASA advisory committee has twice questioned SpaceX’s fuelling process – a procedure that came under closer scrutiny after one of the company’s rockets exploded on a launch pad in September while being fuelled.

The group’s concerns – expressed before and after the explosion – show ongoing doubt with the Hawthorne company’s unorthodox fuelling practice as it plans to transport astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Those worries, analysts say, aren’t likely to affect the company’s return to flight, though they could delay SpaceX’s timeline for manned space station trips.

A member of the Internatio­nal Space Station advisory committee asked recently how NASA will evaluate the safety of SpaceX’s fuelling procedure when astronauts are on board as part of the commercial crew programme.

This question was first raised in a letter in December 2015, according to the Wall Street Journal, 10 months before the explosion that destroyed one of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rockets and a commercial communicat­ions satellite.

The advisory committee provides recommenda­tions to NASA on issues related to the Internatio­nal Space Station, including spacefligh­t safety, readiness of missions to the space station and crew health.

Its recommenda­tions are not binding. SpaceX’s investigat­ion of the cause of the explosion has narrowed to one of three composite overwrappe­d pressure vessels, which store helium that helps pressurize the liquid oxygen tank in the rocket’s second stage.

The Hawthorne company said it was able to re-create a failure in one of those pressure vessels “entirely through helium loading conditions”, which are primarily affected by the temperatur­e and pressure of the helium being loaded.

SpaceX said that it was focused on confirming a root cause of the explosion and “developing improved helium loading conditions that allow SpaceX to reliably load Falcon 9”.

The company loads fuel into its rockets differentl­y than other aerospace companies. SpaceX uses superchill­ed liquid oxygen so it can pack more fuel into the tank and increase its power at liftoff to hoist heavy payloads.

But to keep the fuel at that low temperatur­e and maximize the efficiency, the company has to fuel up the rocket right before launch.

When SpaceX eventually takes astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station, the company said crew will be on board the spacecraft while propellant is being loaded into the rocket. During that time, the Crew Dragon spacecraft launch abort system will be enabled.

“I’m not aware that in any other US human spacefligh­t launch, the booster is fuelled after the crew is aboard,” said John Logsdon, professor emeritus of the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University. “It’s a deviation from the norm, and that’s bound to raise concerns.”

In a December 2015 letter to NASA headquarte­rs, Internatio­nal Space Station advisory committee Chairman Lt Gen Thomas Stafford said that fuelling a rocket with the crew on board was counter to decades of internatio­nal space launch policies, according to the Wall Street Journal.

NASA supervises the commercial crew programme, in which SpaceX and Boeing Co are building spacecraft to ferry astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Since the space shuttle programme ended in 2011, NASA has relied on the Russian Federal Space Agency to take US astronauts to the station.

SpaceX said it has worked with NASA for a year and a half on a “detailed analysis of all potential hazards with this process”. A report documentin­g safeguards against these hazards was approved by NASA’s safety technical review board in July, SpaceX said.

“There will be continued work ahead to show that all of these controls are in place for crewed operations and that the verificati­ons meet NASA requiremen­ts,” SpaceX said. “These analyses and controls will be carefully evaluated in light of all data and corrective actions resulting from the anomaly investigat­ion.”

In a statement recently, NASA said the

I’m not aware that in any other US human spacefligh­t launch, the booster is fuelled after the crew is aboard. It’s a deviation from the norm, and that’s bound to raise concerns. John Logsdon, professor emeritus of the Space Policy Institute, George Washington University

spacecraft and rockets set to transport astronauts must meet NASA’s safety and technical requiremen­ts before the agency will certify them to carry humans.

NASA said it is working through a “rigorous review process” with both companies and will continue to evaluate SpaceX’s process for fuelling the Falcon 9 rocket for commercial crew launches.

The results of the explosion investigat­ion will also be incorporat­ed into NASA’s evaluation, the agency said.

Analysts said the committee’s concerns about the fuel-loading process could mean a delay in the timeline of the commercial crew program.

“The safety standard for carrying humans is much higher than for carrying satellites,” Bill Ostrove, aerospace and defence analyst at Forecast Internatio­nal, said in an email.

SpaceX has said it plans to launch its first crewed mission to the space station in late 2017, though a NASA Office of Inspector General’s report released in September said a crewed flight was more likely to occur in late 2018.

“They’ve got to start playing it safe,” said Marco Caceres, senior space analyst at Teal Group. “They are more of an establishm­ent player and they’ve got a relatively good reputation. They have something to lose now.” — Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service

 ?? TNS ?? SpaceX uses superchill­ed liquid oxygen so it can pack more fuel into the tank and increase its power at lif toff to hoist heavy payloads. —
TNS SpaceX uses superchill­ed liquid oxygen so it can pack more fuel into the tank and increase its power at lif toff to hoist heavy payloads. —

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