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MARSDAILY
Supersonic decelerator gets a lift to prepare for launch
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) May 27, 2015


NASA's Low Density Supersonic Decelerator project is designed to investigate and test breakthrough technologies for landing future robotic and human Mars missions, and safely returning large payloads to Earth. For a larger version of this image please go here.

NASA teams are continuing preparations for the Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator (LDSD) test off the coast of Hawaii June 2-12. This week the team completed a number of key pre-test procedures, including a successful mate between the test vehicle and balloon support systems.

So, you may be wondering what this LDSD technology is - and why it's important to future missions to Mars. Put simply, it's about mass, speed and safety. NASA is planning ambitious robotic and human missions to Mars, which will require larger, more complex spacecraft than we've ever flown before.

They'll need to haul sizeable payloads to accommodate long stays on the Martian surface, and must fly back and forth more quickly to minimize human exposure to space radiation. That means finding new ways to slow down when our spacecraft reach their destinations, effectively countering those faster flights and payloads of greater mass.

Current deceleration technologies date back to NASA's Viking Program, which put two landers on Mars in 1976. The basic Viking parachute design has been used ever since, such as during the 2012 delivery of the Curiosity rover to Mars.

Now NASA seeks to use atmospheric drag as a solution. NASA's LDSD project, led by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and sponsored by NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate in Washington, is conducting this full-scale flight test of two breakthrough technologies: a supersonic inflatable aerodynamic decelerator, or SIAD, and an innovative new parachute. These devices potentially will help us deliver double the current amount of payload - 1.5 metric tons - to the surface of Mars.

They also will greatly increase the accessible surface area we can explore, and will improve landing accuracy from a margin of approximately 6.5 miles to a little more than 1 mile.

All these factors will dramatically increase the success of future missions on Mars.


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Related Links
Low-Density Supersonic Decelerator
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MARSDAILY
UAE eyes "first Arab unmanned probe" to Mars by 2021
Abu Dhabi (XNA) May 26, 2015
The United Arab Emirates on Monday kicked off a strategic framework for its newly founded space agency that aims to launch satellite missions and the "first Arab unmanned probe" to Mars by 2021. The launch of the strategy comes ahead of a two-day Gulf Space and Satellite Forum, which starts here on Monday. The UAE agency has scheduled total direct investments of 20 billion dirham (5. ... read more


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