When NASA's Orion capsule made its maiden flight in 2014, it was easy to forget that only half of the spacecraft actually went into orbit. A dummy version of the European Service Module (ESM), which is still undergoing development, sat behind the the unmanned capsule as it lifted off from Cape Canaveral. That development has just passed a major milestone according to the main contractor, Airbus Defence and Space, with a model of the ESM's solar array performing "flawlessly" in a deployment test this week... Continue Reading Orion's solar panels readied for Moon mission
Category: Space
Tags:
Airbus
Orion Spacecraft
Solar Powered
ESA
NASARelated Articles:
First high speed laser communication satellite set for launch
LISA Pathfinder gravity probe moves to testing
ESA shortlists landing sites for ExoMars rover
Quantum satellite reconfigures itself in orbit
Zephyr UAV continues to break records on first authorized civil flight
ESA successfully tests 3D printed thruster
Visit Website
No comments:
Post a Comment
Rules for submitting comments:
1. No profanity. I maintain the pretense that this is a family-friendly site.
2. Stay on topic. A bit of straying and off-hand commenting is okay, but hijacking the discussion is right out.
3. No ad hominem attacks. Attack the subject, not the other person on the thread and keep the discussion civil.
4. No spamming or commercial endorsements. These get deleted immediately.
Tip: Beware of putting hyperlinks in your comments–especially at the end. For some reason, Blogger interprets these as spam.
Note: Due to the recent spate of anonymous spamming, registration for comments is now required.