Boeing in talks to work with ISRO on moon mission
Se- eking to expand cooperation with the Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO) on its moon mission, the United States is offering
assistance through Boeing, which partners with the National Aeronautics
Space Administration (NASA) on its space exploration program.
Having worked with NASA on the Chandryaan mission, the ISRO is in
talks with Boeing, which has a commercial crew development contract with
NASA, as a key teammate to initiate the design and development
architecture of a commercial transport to and from the International
Space Station.
"We are having an initial conversation with ISRO and attempting to
set up a more formal arrangement as to how we can work together in
space,'' Sam Gunderson, Senior Manager of Boeing Business Development,
told a group of correspondents from India here.
The company's representatives, Roger Krone and Jeff Trauberman, met
ISRO chairman K. Radhakrishnan and Antrix Corporation managing director
K.R. Sridhara Murthi in February, Mr. Gunderson said. Mr. Murthi was
identified as the point of contact for follow-up work.
On his part, Mr. Krone told TheHindu that Boeing had applied for
federal clearance to facilitate its entry into a Technical Assistance
Agreement with ISRO.
The application was made last month and it took a minimum of 90 days
for getting the go-ahead signal, he said.
On commercial crew transportation, the Boeing says it has the
expertise to offer the Launch Escape System (LES), Vehicle Health
Monitoring System and Abort Triggers (VHMSAT), Life Support System, Crew
Accommodations and other areas such as reusable space systems and
composite cryogenic tanks.
Although it has had the LES, aimed at providing a means for the crew
to escape unharmed from a catastrophic failure during ascent, since the
maiden Apollo-11 mission, it has been upgraded. The Pad Abort -1 test
was carried out successfully on May 6.
The five-stage launch abort system has an adaptor cone attached to
the crew module, followed by an abort motor, jettison motor, forward
interstage, attitude control motor (ACM) and the nose cone. The ACM
steers the launch abort system and the crew module away from the launch
vehicle and then orients the crew module for parachute deployment.
The crew module takes about 90 seconds to touch down from the time
when the abort execute command is issued.
In the run-up to the launch, the VHMSAT is designed to constantly
monitor the system and command the escape system in case a failure is
detected while the Life Support System removes the carbon dioxide and
controls humidity.
With India showing more interest in reusable space systems, Boeing is
putting that on offer, while the crew accommodation includes seats,
pressure suits and other control systems.
In August last, ISRO invited Boeing to a technology conference on
robotic space mission. India carried NASA and other international
sensors on the Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter and partners with Russia in
the development of Chandrayaan-II, planned for launch in the 2013-15
time frame.
Courtesy: The Hindu |