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The journey to space starts and concludes with a passage through the Earth’s atmosphere, and NASA’s Orion spacecraft follows this rule.
Scheduled for launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Thursday, Orion’s inaugural flight aims to confirm years of research and evaluations carried out in NASA’s wind tunnels and aeronautical laboratories situated across the country.
Throughout its four-and-a-half-hour mission, the uncrewed Orion capsule is projected to accomplish two orbits around the Earth – achieving a maximum elevation of 3,600 miles – before re-entering and landing in the Pacific Ocean, where it will be retrieved.
Orion’s ascent and descent should proceed more effortlessly, thanks to NASA’s aviation innovators.
Each of NASA’s four conventional aeronautical research facilities – Langley Research Center in Virginia, Glenn Research Center in Ohio, and Ames Research Center as well as Armstrong Flight Research Center in California – have played a role in Orion’s evolution, applying expertise and testing resources routinely employed for testing aircraft structures and parts.
Among the numerous contributions from these NASA facilities:
Aeronautical contributions to space exploration can actually be traced back to an organization that was established nearly a century ago.
NASA’s capacity to create vehicles that journey to space and return to Earth has its roots in the personnel and aeronautical expertise of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, or NACA, which was formed on March 3, 1915. When the NACA transitioned to NASA in 1958, many of its brightest individuals took on significant roles in the nation’s mission to land a human on the moon.
Among them was NACA staff member Robert F. Thompson, who became the head of recovery operations in the early 1960s, overseeing recovery efforts for Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo capsules. The legacy and essence of that work will be prominently displayed during Orion’s splashdown and recovery phase.
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