Are We There Yet?

Assembling NASA’s Deep Spacecraft & Heavy Metal Asteroids


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NASA’s Orion spacecraft is the next deep-space vehicle designed to take humans to the moon. We’ll talk with NASA’s Amy Marasia about the process and what it will take to get humans back to the moon in the 2020s.

Then, scientists have their eyes set on a metallic asteroid called Psyche. NASA is moving forward with plans to send a probe to the intriguing asteroid. So what can we learn from a metal asteroid? We’ll ask our panel of expert physicists on this week’s I’d Like to Know segment.

Assembling NASA's Next Deep Space Vehicle
Nelly Ontiveros, WMFE

NASA’s Orion spacecraft is scheduled to launch next year from the Kennedy Space Center on an uncrewed test flight around the moon. Work on NASA’s next deep-space vehicle reached a critical milestone with the addition of an adapter that attaches it to NASA’s SLS rocket.

In a conversation with NASA's Amy Marasia, Orion Spacecraft Assembly Branch Manager, we explore the assembly of a vehicle that takes us one step closer to putting humans back on the moon.
LISTEN: A conversation with NASA's Amy Marasia, Orion Spacecraft Assembly Branch Manager
https://wmfeimages.s3.amazonaws.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/26120114/Amy-Marasia-WEB.mp3

The planning behind the assembly of the Orion Spacecraft is supported by NASA's contractor Lockheed Martin. “Installation drawings are translated into production orders for the engineers and technicians that are on the floor actually performing the hands-on work,” said Marasia. “Then using those production orders with all the intricate steps down to the bolt and the washer level -- that is how they essentially assemble the spacecraft."

Assembly also includes adding metallic pieces and thermal protection system tiles that will protect the spacecraft during the mission.

"It is a lot of detail. Every step is carefully planned [and] we do the best we can to cover all contingencies [in the process]," Marasia added.

This vehicle is slated for NASA’s Artemis I mission, which will carry no humans on its first trip to the moon. The Artemis I spacecraft assembly process differs from future vehicles that will carry astronauts, as there are no seats nor console displays.

"We don't have some of the life support systems installed on this vehicle for a crew but everything else is fairly common," Marasia said, explaining that small differences are part of a strategy that will help NASA's future missions.

The next Orion spacecraft will carry a crew of astronauts on a mission called Artemis II around the moon. The next mission called Artemis III plans to land humans on the lunar surface. Each Orion vehicle will be assembled at Kennedy Space Center.

NASA's Orion is essential in proving that a vehicle like this can support a longer mission around the moon and providing space for improvements that will guarantee a safe journey to the moon in the next 10 years.

"This vehicle is our opportunity to really prove out the current system before we actually put a crew on board," Marasia said.

 
Heavy Metal Asteroids
Nelly Ontiveros, WMFE

Most of the asteroids orbiting between Mars and Jupiter catch the eye of scientists because of their location and their rocky materials, but asteroid Psyche has a unique feature -- it’s metallic.

Psyche’s metallic composition may reveal new details about other asteroids and the history of our solar system.

University of Central Florida's scientists and hosts of the podcast Walkabout the Galaxy Addie Dove, Jim Cooney, and Josh Colwell talked on the peculiarity of the asteroid Psyche and the NASA mission that will explore the metallic iron and nickel-composed body.
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Are We There Yet?By Central Florida Public Media

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