Orlando Sentinel

SpaceX now knows why astronaut capsule exploded

- By Chabeli Herrera

After nearly three months of investigat­ion into what SpaceX at first only called an “anomaly,” the company on Monday announced the likely culprit of an explosion that blew apart its Crew Dragon astronaut capsule during a test on the Space Coast in April.

A leaking component in the vehicle’s propulsion system began the chain of events that ended in destructio­n, said Hans Koenigsman­n, SpaceX’s vice president of build and flight reliabilit­y, during a press conference call Monday afternoon.

Because of delays caused by the accident, Koenigsman­n said it’s going to be “increasing­ly difficult” to get astronauts aboard a Crew Dragon capsule and into space by the end of 2019, though not impossible.

The April 20 accident happened when the Elon Muskowned rocket company was conducting static fire tests of the vehicle’s engines. The capsule on the test stand that afternoon had already successful­ly flown to space one month earlier, completing the first major test of SpaceX’s partnershi­p program with NASA, which will carry astronauts back to space from U.S. soil for the first time since 2011 on vehicles built by SpaceX and Boeing.

The test was being conducted to prepare SpaceX for an in-flight abort test that would prove the

capsule’s thrusters could safely move the vehicle and its astronauts away from the rocket in the case of an emergency midflight. A static fire of a set of thrusters that help the vehicle maneuver in space went by without incident.

But just about 100 millisecon­ds before SpaceX ignited the abort thrusters on the craft, the vehicle exploded.

At the time, SpaceX offered few details on the extent of the damage to the vehicle. A leaked video from the test started making the rounds online, showing that the craft, in fact, blew apart. SpaceX confirmed the spacecraft was lost 12 days after the explosion.

Following the accident, SpaceX and NASA, along with help from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and the National Transporta­tion Safety Board, put together an accident investigat­ion team to discover the root cause of the explosion.

With about 80% of that work now done, SpaceX offered its first breakdown of what went wrong.

The leak caused liquid oxidizer — a key component in the vehicle’s propellant — to cross over into the wrong set of pipes, the pressuriza­tion system. That’s when the high-pressure oxidizer reacted with a titanium valve leading to an explosion that “destroyed” the Crew Dragon capsule at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s Landing Zone 1, sending plumes of smoke over Cocoa Beach.

No one was hurt. Burn marks found on the valve, as well as data and debris collected at the site confirmed the company’s suspicions. SpaceX also performed a series of tests of the flammabili­ty of the valve’s titanium components at the company’s rocket developmen­t facility in McGregor, Texas. The investigat­ion, however, is ongoing.

“We didn’t quite expect that [liquid oxidizer] driving into a titanium component could cause such a violent reaction,” Koenigsman­n said. Titanium has been used safely on spacecraft for decades.

“Overall it’s something the components should not have done,” he said. “[We learned] a very valuable lesson on something going forward that makes the Crew Dragon a safer vehicle.”

The abort thrusters, SpaceX said, were recovered from the test site intact, supporting the company’s belief that the abort system is not faulty. Koenigsman­n said at a prior press conference that the safety thrusters have been tested more than 600 times with no issue.

Looking ahead, SpaceX has already replaced the valves, which allow liquid to flow in one direction, with burst disks that completely seal until opened by high pressure. Testing and analysis of the new system is underway, as well as testing of existing systems to make sure other versions of the Crew Dragon also in production don’t have the same vulnerabil­ity.

That means it will be unlikely that SpaceX will perform a test flight with astronauts aboard Crew Dragon by the end of the year, as previously planned. Boeing, meanwhile, is still moving toward a flight with humans aboard by year’s end.

Both programs have been plagued by delays. In 2018, Boeing, too, had a fuel leak that was discovered during a test of its abort system.

For SpaceX, the explosion means it won’t be able to use the spacecraft as planned for its in-flight abort test. Now, the craft that was meant to perform the first test with crew will be used for the abort test, and the Crew Dragon that was going to be assigned to the first operationa­l mission will fly the test mission instead.

Kathy Lueders, manager of NASA’s Commercial Crew program, said NASA was at the console when the accident happened and has been working hand-inhand with SpaceX since.

That means it will be unlikely that SpaceX will perform a test flight with astronauts aboard Crew Dragon by the end of the year, as previously planned. Boeing, meanwhile, is still moving toward a flight with people aboard by year’s end.

Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley, the NASA astronauts who will go on SpaceX’s first crewed test flight, “really appreciate­d SpaceX’s openness, SpaceX’s inclusion of NASA on the investigat­ion team and the continued interchang­e that we’ve had over the past few months,” Lueders said. “This will help us fly safer.”

While the communicat­ion with NASA was good, NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e has spoken to the company about improving transparen­cy with the media and the public in the case of future incidents within the program.

The Commercial Crew program is a taxpayerfu­nded undertakin­g. SpaceX got $2.6 billion from NASA to build its Crew Dragon, while Boeing was awarded $4.2 billion to build its CST-100 Starliner astronaut capsule.

Moving forward, SpaceX has agreed to be more transparen­t with the public after accidents, Bridenstin­e said in an interview with SpaceNews and The Washington Post last week.

“Within a couple of hours, we’re going to do a press conference,” he said, “and get as much informatio­n out to the public as soon as possible.”

 ?? CRAIG BAILEY/FLORIDA TODAY ?? A cloud of smoke rises over nearby Cape Canaveral Air Force Station as seen from Cocoa Beach on April 20. SpaceX reported an anomaly during test firing of its Dragon 2 capsule at its LZ-1 landing site.
CRAIG BAILEY/FLORIDA TODAY A cloud of smoke rises over nearby Cape Canaveral Air Force Station as seen from Cocoa Beach on April 20. SpaceX reported an anomaly during test firing of its Dragon 2 capsule at its LZ-1 landing site.

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