Effects of the Orion Launch Abort Vehicle Plumes on Aerodynamics and Controllability
Author(s) -
Darby Vicker,
Robert Childs,
Stuart E. Rogers,
Alan Schwing,
Matthew McMullen,
Joseph A. Garcia,
James Greathouse
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
51st aiaa aerospace sciences meeting including the new horizons forum and aerospace exposition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2013-970
Subject(s) - abort , aerodynamics , aerospace engineering , controllability , aeronautics , computer science , launch vehicle , automotive engineering , engineering , operating system , mathematics
Characterization of the launch abort system of the Multi-purpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV) for control design and accurate simulation has provided a significant challenge to aerodynamicists and design engineers. The design space of the launch abort vehicle (LAV) includes operational altitudes from ground level to approximately 300,000 feet, Mach numbers from 0-9, and peak dynamic pressure near 1300psf during transonic flight. Further complicating the characterization of the aerodynamics and the resultant vehicle controllability is the interaction of the vehicle flowfield with the plumes of the two solid propellant motors that provide attitude control and the main propulsive impulse for the LAV. These interactions are a function of flight parameters such as Mach number, altitude, dynamic pressure, vehicle attitude, as well as parameters relating to the operation of the motors themselves - either as a function of time for the AM, or as a result of the flight control system requests for control torque from the ACM. This paper discusses the computational aerodynamic modeling of the aerodynamic interaction caused by main abort motor and the attitude control motor of the MPCV LAV, showing the effects of these interactions on vehicle controllability.
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