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The 2003 Mars Plane Mission
by Andrew Hahn
November 7, 2000
Most people don't know that NASA is actually made
up of several centers, with varying amounts of overlap in terms of responsibility
and capability. When our Administrator, Daniel Goldin, decided that it
would be neat to send a powered airplane to Mars to commemorate the 100th
anniversary of the Wright brothers' first flight, he asked groups at Langley,
Dryden, Glenn, and Ames for proposals. This journal covers the early efforts
of the Ames proposal. Initially, Dave Kinney and I were tapped to do a
feasibility study for Ames. We were told to start at 4:00 p.m. on Friday,
5 February 1999 and needed "something" to support our management in a
meeting at Headquarters the following Thursday. It was a long weekend.
Dave and I had done many conceptual designs before, but nothing like this.
The deadline was very short, the task wasn't well defined, and the vehicle
operated under conditions that were foreign to us. In short, we weren't
quite sure where to begin. On top of that, all of our design tools pretty
much assumed that airplanes flew on earth. Mars has a different gravitational
constant (g), a very different atmosphere, and no oceans. Really fundamental
questions like how much does it weigh, how much lift or drag does it have
and how high up is it couldn't be answered with our existing design codes.
We had to start from scratch, questioning everything we thought we knew
and we had to do it fast.
Right away, we decided to use the metric system for
everything. Normally, we use the English measure system because a great
deal of our basic design data are in English units and over the years,
we have gotten a feel for the scale of answers we get, which alerts us
to really big errors. Unfortunately, this project is particularly sensitive
to keeping mass and force distinct, which English units are less conducive
to doing, and the scale of the plane meant that our wealth of experience
was not going to be applicable. So, there was a potentially bad outcome
if we stayed with English units and no really good reason to stick with
them. As we found out later, mixing units was definitely bad, causing
a probe to crash, but also one of the other groups had sporadic errors
that happened to be off by the ratio of the Earth's and Mars' gravitational
constants, an indication that mass and force were being confused.
We also decided to prototype a new design code for
Extraterrestrial Flyers in a spreadsheet because we didn't have any time
to do really sophisticated analysis, the task didn't require really sophisticated
analysis, we didn't think we could find all the "g's" in our really sophisticated
analysis, and this problem was so uncharted that we needed the flexibility
in calculation flow that spreadsheets are really good at.
We did get some guidance from the space folks that
the maximum mass (not weight) allowable for the Mars Plane was about 24
kg. and that it had to fit into a re-entry shell of about one meter diameter.
They also told us that the gravity was about 3/8 that of Earth's and that
the atmosphere where we wanted to fly was similar to the Earth's at 100,000
feet altitude.
We then had to make a number of assumptions about
speed, airfoils, materials, propulsion, and range to see how easily an
airplane could be made that met even the most basic requirements. What
we found out was that the most important design constraints were the mass
and volume available on the space vehicle that carries the plane to Mars.
Early results indicated that we wanted the biggest plane that we could
fit into the re-entry vehicle, which in turn wanted to be the biggest
we could fit onto the launch vehicle, the Ariane 5. Our initial concept
looked very much like a radio control model airplane that folded up into
a compact re-entry shell and while it looked feasible, we wanted more.
This prompted our looking at some very strange ideas for fitting a flight
vehicle into a re-entry vehicle. We did a qualitative look at a folding
wing with only two hinges, a folding wing with eight hinges, a cable braced
roll up wing, a flexible membrane sailwing (kind of like a bat wing) and
a parafoil (like a square parachute). In the end, we wound up choosing
the folding wing with the fewest hinges for a lot of practical reasons.
Given our assumptions, it appeared that the most
attractive mission from the standpoint of performance feasibility was
the relatively low altitude Canyon Flyer. It turned out that the Mars
scientists liked the same mission because they were very interested in
getting a look at the walls of the huge Valles Marineris over as long
of a stretch as they could. As an added bonus, the primary scientific
instrument, a video camera, would provide really cool pictures for the
public as well as document the really risky deployment from the re-entry
shell. It was beginning to look like things were coming together.
In just five days, Dave and I had concluded that
the Mars Plane mission was difficult, but doable. We had given our management
enough information for them to make important, early decisions, and started
a relationship with the space side of NASA. Over the next nine months,
many more people were called in to flesh out the design and make an integrated
proposal. Specialists in aerodynamics, communications, power systems,
structures, missions, science, fabrication, and contracting turned our
simple study into something quite impressive.
We found that our initial assessment was a little
optimistic, but that as we found problems, our people were able to minimize
the impact through clever, detailed solutions. Even so, there were several
critical areas of uncertainty that could only be managed through very
sophisticated analysis and testing. Cost and schedule would have been
very tight and, in the end, might have required either pulling resources
from other projects to "do it right" or taking on too large of a risk
of failure and so the project was killed.
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