Scaled Rocket Testing in Hypersonic Flow
Author(s) -
Aaron T. Dufrene,
Matthew MacLean,
Zakery R. Carr,
Ronald A. Parker,
Michael Holden
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
15th aiaa international space planes and hypersonic systems and technologies conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2015-3550
Subject(s) - hypersonic flow , aerospace engineering , rocket (weapon) , hypersonic speed , aeronautics , flow (mathematics) , computer science , engineering , mechanics , physics
NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) uses four clustered liquid rocket engines along with two solid rocket boosters. The interaction between all six rocket exhaust plumes will produce a complex and severe thermal environment in the base of the vehicle. This work focuses on a recent 2% scale, hot-fire SLS base heating test. These base heating tests are short-duration tests executed with chamber pressures near the full-scale values with gaseous hydrogen/oxygen engines and RSRMV analogous solid propellant motors. The LENS II shock tunnel/Ludwieg tube tunnel was used at or near flight duplicated conditions up to Mach 5. Model development was strongly based on the Space Shuttle base heating tests with several improvements including doubling of the maximum chamber pressures and duplication of freestream conditions. Detailed base heating results are outside of the scope of the current work, rather test methodology and techniques are presented along with broader applicability toward scaled rocket testing in supersonic and hypersonic flow.
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