• NASA clears Dream Chaser spaceplane for full production

    From Larry Dighera@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 29 09:00:08 2019
    Dream Chaser® Space Vehicle
    The Dream Chaser spacecraft is a multi-mission space utility vehicle
    designed for transporting crew and cargo to low-Earth orbit (LEO)
    destinations such as the International Space Station scheduled for
    first launch in 2021.



    https://newatlas.com/nasa-dream-chaser-plane-production/57823/

    NASA clears Dream Chaser spaceplane for full production

    Nick Lavars

    December 30th, 2018

    NASA has given the Dream Chaser spaceplane the all clear for
    full-scale production(Credit: NASA)

    VIEW GALLERY - 2 IMAGES
    Sierra Nevada Corporation is picking up the pace in its mission to
    carry cargo to and from the International Space Station using a
    next-generation spaceplane, with NASA giving its Dream Chaser vehicle
    the all clear following a design and performance review. This means
    the vehicle will now move into full production, with the developers
    hopeful of using it to ship goods to the orbiting laboratory within
    two years.

    The development of the Dream Chaser space plane has been pretty
    eventful so far, with its first ever glide and test flight leaving the spacecraft upside down https://newatlas.com/first-glide-test-dream-chaser-spacecraft/29566/
    on the airstrip after its landing gear failed to deploy correctly.
    This led to a total refurbishment of the unmanned, reusable orbital
    vehicle, and then its first successful glide flight and landing in
    November 2017, some four years later.

    NASA awarded
    https://newatlas.com/nasa-iss-cargo-contracts-dream-chaser/41344/
    Sierra Nevada's Dream Chaser one of three private contracts to deliver
    cargo to the ISS in 2016, with SpaceX's Dragon
    https://newatlas.com/tag/dragon/ and Orbital ATK's Cygnus https://newatlas.com/tag/cygnus/ the other two recipients. Under
    NASA's CRS-2 contract the Dream Chaser will carry out at least six
    missions to the ISS, but it will work a little differently to its two
    fellow awardees.

    The Dream Chaser is the only spacecraft of the three that is capable
    of runway landings, and is, at least theoretically, able to land at
    any large-scale commercial airport in the world. This particular
    capability has seen the Dream Chaser project draw strong interest from
    other space organizations, along with the UN. https://newatlas.com/un-dream-chaser-mission/45691/

    Designed to be optionally piloted with autonomous launch, flight and
    landing capabilities, each Dream Chaser spaceplane is expected to be
    reused at least 15 times and be able to carry 5,500 kg (12,100 lb) of
    cargo to the space station each time. This could be basic but
    essential supplies like food and water, along with more delicate loads
    such as scientific samples. It can also retrieve up to 3,400 kg (
    around 7,400 lb) of waste from the space station each time it departs
    before disposing of it by burning it up in the atmosphere.

    Artist's concept of the Dream Chaser cargo module docked with the ISS
    As part of its preparation for these journeys, NASA's Integration
    Review 4 (IR4) had experts from the space agency and Sierra Nevada
    take a comprehensive look at the Dream Chaser design and how it
    performs with various components integrated into the vehicle. This led
    them to conclude that the space plane was ready to move into
    full-scale production.

    "We are one step closer to the Dream Chaser spacecraft's first orbital
    flight," says Sierra Nevada CEO Fatih Ozmen. "This comprehensive
    review approved moving the Dream Chaser program into the production
    phase so we can get Dream Chaser to market as a critical space station
    resupply spacecraft as soon as possible. IR4 was a series of reviews, documentation, and data deliverables that are the culmination of many
    years of design work, analysis and development testing."

    According to Sierra Nevada, a lot of the various components of the
    orbital vehicle have already been built, such as the thermal
    protection system tiles and avionics hardware, and the NASA approval
    now clears the way for these to be integrated into the vehicle at the
    company's facility in Louisville. Now moving onto full-scale
    production of the uncrewed Dream Chaser Plane and its cargo module,
    the company expects the spacecraft to start servicing the ISS in late
    2020.

    Source: Sierra Nevada: https://www.sncorp.com/press-releases/snc-dream-chaser-nasa-milestone-4/ --------------------------------------------------------------------

    https://www.sncorp.com/press-releases/snc-dream-chaser-nasa-milestone-5/

    DREAM CHASER® SPACECRAFT PASSES ANOTHER NASA MILESTONE
    Ground and Flight Operations Enabled, First Flight in 2021

    SPARKS, Nev., March 21, 2019 – Sierra Nevada Corporation’s (SNC) Dream
    Chaser spacecraft passed NASA’s Integrated Review Milestone 5 (IR5), a
    key status check on SNC’s performance of a variety of ground and
    flight operations.

    IR5 demonstrates that the Dream Chaser team is on track to operate the
    space vehicle in advance of the first mission to the International
    Space Station under the Commercial Resupply Services Contract 2
    (CRS-2).

    “This milestone is a great accomplishment for the team focused on
    operations development and demonstration. It shows we can operate the
    Dream Chaser from the ground, including getting critical science in
    and out of the vehicle,” said John Curry, CRS-2 program director
    within SNC’s Space Systems business area.

    The review included development of the vehicle’s flight computers and
    software, mission simulator and Mission Control Center. SNC also
    performed cargo demonstrations using high fidelity mock-ups of the
    vehicle and its cargo module, showing loading and unloading time and efficiency.

    Milestone testing took place at SNC’s Louisville, Colorado and NASA
    Kennedy Space Center facilities. Data was also used from the Dream
    Chaser 2017 free-flight test at Edwards Air Force Base, California,
    with the help of NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center.

    “Our Dream Chaser team continues to successfully execute milestones as
    we move closer to getting this spacecraft into space,” said Fatih
    Ozmen, SNC’s owner and CEO. “The orbital spacecraft is being built
    and this milestone demonstrates the vehicle keeps passing key reviews
    and is making great strides.”

    Dream Chaser continues to meet technical and scheduled milestones on
    its way to first flight in spring 2021. The Dream Chaser will conduct
    at least six orbiting flights to the space station, delivering
    equipment and supplies to advance space exploration and then safely
    return life science and other time-critical items on a conventional
    runway.

    About Dream Chaser Spacecraft
    Owned and operated by SNC, the Dream Chaser spacecraft is a reusable, multi-mission space utility vehicle. It is capable of transportation
    services to and from low-Earth orbit and is the only commercial,
    lifting-body vehicle capable of a runway landing. The Dream Chaser
    Cargo System was selected by NASA to provide cargo delivery and
    disposal services to the International Space Station under the
    Commercial Resupply Services 2 (CRS-2) contract. All Dream Chaser
    CRS-2 cargo missions are planned to land at Kennedy Space Center’s
    Shuttle Landing Facility.

    About Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Sierra Nevada Corporation (SNC) is a trusted leader in solving the
    world’s toughest challenges through advanced engineering technologies
    in Space Systems, Commercial Solutions, and National Security and
    Defense. Honored as one of the most innovative U.S. companies in
    space, SNC’s Space Systems business area designs and manufactures
    advanced spacecraft and satellite solutions, space habitats and
    environmental systems, propulsion systems, precision space mechanisms
    and subsystems, and SNC’s celebrated Dream Chaser® spacecraft. With
    decades of space heritage working with the U.S. government, commercial customers, and the international market, SNC has participated in more
    than 450 successful space missions and delivered 4,000+ systems,
    subsystems and components around the world. For more information,
    visit www.sncorp.com.

    ###

    SNC Dream Chaser passes NASA Milestone 5
    Dream Chaser engineer Liz Antognoli works on the payload mock-up
    demonstration. Click to open full-resolution image in new window. -------------------------------------------------------------

    https://www.sncorp.com/what-we-do/dream-chaser-space-vehicle/

    Video: https://vimeo.com/199209876

    About Dream Chaser
    SNC's Dream Chaser® spacecraft is a multi-mission space utility
    vehicle designed for transporting crew and cargo to low-Earth orbit
    (LEO) destinations such as the International Space Station.

    Our Dream Chaser spacecraft was selected by NASA to provide cargo
    delivery, return and disposal service for the space station under the Commercial Resupply Service 2 (CRS-2) contract. Dream Chaser will
    carry critical supplies like food, water, and science experiments and
    returns to Earth with a gentle runway landing. The spacecraft will
    provide a minimum of six cargo missions to and from the space station
    starting in late 2020.

    DREAM CHASER FEATURES
    LIFTING-BODY SPACECRAFT
    AUTONOMOUS LAUNCH, FLIGHT AND LANDING CAPABILITIES (DOES NOT REQUIRE A
    PILOT)
    HIGH REUSABILITY, 15+ TIMES
    LOW 1.5 G ATMOSPHERIC ENTRY
    GENTLE, COMMERCIAL RUNWAY LANDING COMPATIBLE WITH RUNWAYS WORLDWIDE
    IMMEDIATE ACCESS TO CREW OR CARGO UPON LANDING
    5,500 KG PRESSURIZED AND UNPRESSURIZED CARGO TO THE SPACE STATION
    VIEW MEDIA GALLERY

    Dream Chaser 5 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 6 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 1 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 2 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 3 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 4 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 5 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 6 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 1 | Sierra Nevada Corporation
    Dream Chaser 2 | Sierra Nevada Corporation

    Variants
    CARGO SYSTEM (UNCREWED)
    SPACE SYSTEM (CREWED)
    MULTI-MISSION SOLUTIONS
    Cargo System (Uncrewed)
    Dream Chaser Spacecraft Cargo System

    NASA selected our Dream Chaser spacecraft to provide cargo delivery,
    return and disposal services for the International Space Station.
    Under the Commercial Resupply Services 2 (CRS-2) contract, Dream
    Chaser will provide a minimum of six cargo service missions to and
    from the space station starting in late 2020.

    The Dream Chaser cargo system is designed to deliver up to 5,500 kg of pressurized and unpressurized cargo to the space station, including
    food, water, supplies and science experiments. The Dream Chaser can
    gently return critical cargo with a runway landing at less than 1.5
    g’s. After leaving the space station, the Dream Chaser can also
    dispose of trash. The vehicle is designed for high reusability,
    reducing overall cost and a quick turnaround between missions. The
    ability to launch on top of multiple launch vehicles and land at a
    wide variety of runways makes Dream Chaser a flexible option for
    reliable transportation.

    Dream Chaser Cargo System Specific Features Include:
    Disposable cargo module that attaches to the Dream Chaser vehicle,
    greatly increasing the amount pressurized and unpressurized cargo that
    can be carried
    Ability to do both disposal and pressurized cargo return on every
    mission
    Innovative folding-wing design allowing the uncrewed Dream Chaser
    spacecraft to fit inside existing standard launch vehicle fairings,
    making it compatible with a suite of current and future launch
    vehicles
    Solar arrays on the cargo module increase flight time in space and
    support powered payloads
    Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
    Who manufactures the Dream Chaser spacecraft and where is it built?
    What does it mean to say Dream Chaser is a “lifting-body” spacecraft
    and how is that advantageous?
    What are the benefits of landing the Dream Chaser spacecraft on
    suitable runways?
    How many G’s will Dream Chaser encounter upon atmospheric return?
    How many times can Dream Chaser be reused?
    Will Dream Chaser be capable of going farther than low-Earth orbit?
    How does Dream Chaser compare with the Space Shuttle?
    Associated Business Areas & Subsidiaries
    Business Area Space Systems

    PDF Downloads
    SNC DREAM CHASER SPACECRAFT BROCHURE 2018 (.PDF)

    SNC SPACE SYSTEMS BROCHURE 2018 (.PDF)

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