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ORION Project-(SPLASH) Structural Passive Landing Attenuation fo

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Summary

ORION Project-(SPLASH) Structural Passive Landing Attenuation for Survivability of Human Crew (BTA) Boiler Plate Test Article Water Impact Test-Pot Phase"0" Test Tested at the Hydro Impact Basin at the Landing and Impact Research Facility (Gantry)

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orion impact test splash test test pot 0 hydro impact basin gantry boiler plate lrc sandra gibbs paul bagby langley research center project orion project splash structural passive structural passive attenuation high resolution nasa
date_range

Date

18/10/2011
place

Location

Langley Research Center ,  37.09672, -76.38312
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Source

NASA
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Link

https://images.nasa.gov/
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Copyright info

Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore Test Pot 0, Hydro Impact Basin, Boiler Plate

Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, Portal Gantry Crane No. 55, Central Industrial Area, Farragut Avenue, Bremerton, Kitsap County, WA

Monthly Progress Photo, Extension West Rail Gantry Track, West of Ways, Looking North, Yard Labor

Aerial stern view of the Nimitz class nuclear-powered aircraft carrier HARRY S. TRUMAN (CVN-75) under construction in dry dock 12 at the Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation. A 900 metric ton gantry crane spans the dry dock. This dry dock is the largest in the western hemisphere

A 40-ton gantry crane lowers a container onto the bed of a truck on the pier at Naval Supply Depot (NSD) freight terminal. The NSD freight terminal processed 1.2 million tons of cargo in 1988

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLA. - A view inside the pilot house of the Liberty Star. The ship is taking part in an undersea expedition to characterize the condition of the deep-sea coral reefs and reef fish populations in the Oculina Banks. The banks are a marine protected area, 20 miles offshore of the east coast of Florida. The equipment includes an underwater robot, a seafloor sampler, and the Passive Acoustic Monitoring System (PAMS), originally developed by NASA to monitor the impact of rocket launches on wildlife refuge lagoons at KSC. The research is sponsored by NOAA Fisheries. The ship departed from Port Canaveral April 29 and will return May 9. KSC-03pd1389

Celebrating the official opening of the new International Space Station (ISS) Center at Kennedy Space Center are, left to right, James Ball, chief, NASA Public Services, KSC; KSC Director Roy D. Bridges Jr.; Hugh Harris, director, NASA Public Affairs, KSC; and Rick Abramson, president and chief operating officer, Delaware North Parks Services of Spaceport Inc. Center Director Bridges cuts the ribbon to the new tour attraction where full-scale mockups of station modules, through which visitors can walk, are on display. These include the Habitation Unit, where station crew members will live, sleep, and work; a Laboratory Module; and the Pressurized Logistics Module, where racks and supplies will be transported back and forth from KSC to space. Guests also can take an elevated walkway to a gallery overlooking the work are where actual ISS hardware is prepared for flight into space. This new tour site, in addition to a new Launch Complex 39 Observation Gantry, are part of a comprehensive effort by NASA and Delaware North to expand and improve the KSC public tour and visitor facilities KSC-98pc156

Crew Module Water Landing Model Assessment

Crew Module Water Landing Model Assessment

Crew Module Water Landing Model Assessment

Crew Module Water Landing Model Assessment

ORION Project-(SPLASH) Structural Passive Landing Attenuation fo

ORION Project-(SPLASH) Structural Passive Landing Attenuation fo

Topics

orion impact test splash test test pot 0 hydro impact basin gantry boiler plate lrc sandra gibbs paul bagby langley research center project orion project splash structural passive structural passive attenuation high resolution nasa