Afterbody Heating Predictions for a Mars Science Laboratory Entry Vehicle
Author(s) -
Karl T. Edquist
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
nasa technical reports server (nasa)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2005-4817
Subject(s) - mars exploration program , astrobiology , aerospace engineering , environmental science , computer science , engineering , physics
*The Mars Science Laboratory mission intends to deliver a large rover to the Martian surface within 10 km of its target site. One candidate entry vehicle aeroshell consists of a 3.75-m diameter, 70-deg sphere-cone forebody and a biconic afterbody similar to that of Viking. This paper presents computational fluid dynamics predictions of laminar afterbody heating rates for this configuration and a 2010 arrival at Mars. Computational solutions at flight conditions used an 8-species Mars gas model in chemical and thermal non-equilibrium. A grid resolution study examined the effects of mesh spacing on afterbody heating rates and resulted in grids used for heating predictions on a reference entry trajectory. Afterbody heating rate reaches its maximum value near 0.6 W/cm 2 on the first windward afterbody cone at the time of peak freestream dynamic pressure. Predicted afterbody heating rates generally are below 3% of the forebody laminar nose cap heating rate throughout the design trajectory. The heating rates integrated over time provide total heat load during entry, which drives thermal protection material thickness. Nomenclature
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