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External tank PAL ramp foam
loss during STS-114 (Credit: NASA). |
In NASA’s ongoing efforts to reduce potential
debris sources of impact to the space shuttle during take-off, the
elimination of the Protuberance Air Load (PAL) ramps on the external
tank was investigated. Part of this investigation included testing
scaled models of the external tank in NASA Glenn Research Center’s
8x6 foot Supersonic Wind Tunnel (8x6 SWT). To complete this test
effort, Glenn worked with Johnson Space Center, Langley Research
Center and Boeing.
The PAL ramp was made of layers of foam that were shaped to protect
external tank hardware from excessive amounts of force and vibration
during flight. The hardware that was tested included the cable tray,
the pressurization lines (used to pressurize the liquid oxygen and
liquid hydrogen in the external tank) and the liquid oxygen feed
line.
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Liquid hydrogen PAL ramp
location on external tank (Credit: NASA). |
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External tank liquid hydrogen
hardware in Supersonic Wind Tunnel (Credit: NASA). |
Inside Glenn’s 8 x 6 foot SWT, a team from
Glenn’s Research Testing Division tested a simulated portion
of the external tank’s surface along with scaled versions
of the cable tray, pressurization lines and liquid oxygen feed line.
During testing, the simulated external tank and hardware was subjected
to wind speeds between Mach 0.5 and 1.6. (Mach 1.6 is equal to 1.6
times the speed of sound or 1055 mph.) As a result of the testing
performed in spring 2006, the two sections of the PAL ramp have
been removed from the shuttle’s external tank.
Previous testing in the 8x6 SWT in 2003/2004 documented the steady
state pressure environment of the external tank hardware. This project
documented the dynamic pressure environment of the external tank
hardware where pressures change at rates of up to thousands of times
per second. The data resulting from the wind tunnel tests validated
computer simulation models that were generated prior to wind tunnel
testing. |