Dictionary Definition
reentry n : the act of entering again
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- The act of reentering.
- The return of a spacecraft into the atmosphere.
Extensive Definition
Atmospheric reentry refers to the movement of
human-made or natural objects as they enter the atmosphere of a planet from outer space, in the
case of Earth from an altitude above the "edge of
space." This article primarily addresses the process of
controlled reentry of vehicles which are intended to reach the
planetary surface intact, but the topic also includes uncontrolled
(or minimally controlled) cases, such as the intentionally or
circumstantially occurring, destructive deorbiting of satellites
and the falling back to the planet of "space junk"
due to orbital
decay.
Vehicles that typically undergo this process
include ones returning from orbit (spacecraft) and ones on
exo-orbital (suborbital)
trajectories (ICBM reentry vehicles,
some spacecraft.) Typically this process requires special methods
to protect against aerodynamic
heating. Various advanced technologies have been developed to
enable atmospheric reentry and flight at extreme velocities.
History
The technology of atmospheric reentry was a consequence of the Cold War. Ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons were legacies of World War II left to both the Soviet Union and the United States. Both nations initiated massive research and development programs to further the military capability of those technologies. However before a missile-delivered nuclear weapon could be practical they lacked an essential ingredient: an atmospheric reentry technology. In theory, the nation first developing reentry technology had a decisive military advantage, yet it was unclear whether the technology was physically possible. Basic calculations showed the kinetic energy of a nuclear warhead returning from orbit was sufficient to completely vaporize the warhead. Despite these calculations, the military stakes were so high that simply assuming atmospheric reentry's impossibility was unacceptable, and it was known that meteorites were able to successfully reach ground level. Consequently a high-priority program was initiated to develop reentry technology. Atmospheric reentry was successfully developed, which made possible nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles.The technology was further pushed forward for
human use by another consequence of the Cold War. The Soviet Union
saw a propaganda and
military advantage in pursuing space
exploration. To the embarrassment of the United States, the
Soviet Union orbited an artificial
satellite, followed by a series of other technological firsts
that culminated with
a Soviet
cosmonaut orbiting the Earth and returning safely to Earth.
Many of these achievements were enabled through atmospheric reentry
technology. The United States saw the Soviet Union's achievements
as a challenge to its national pride as well as a threat to
national security. Consequently, the United States followed the
Soviet Union's initiative and increased its nascent Space Program,
thus beginning the Space
Race.
Terminology, definitions and jargon
Over the decades since the 1950s, a rich technical jargon has grown around the engineering of vehicles designed to enter planetary atmospheres. It is recommended that the reader review the jargon glossary before continuing with this article on atmospheric reentry.Blunt body entry vehicles
These four shadowgraph images represent early reentry-vehicle concepts. A shadowgraph is a process that makes visible the disturbances that occur in a fluid flow at high velocity, in which light passing through a flowing fluid is refracted by the density gradients in the fluid resulting in bright and dark areas on a screen placed behind the fluid.H. Julian
Allen and A. J.
Eggers, Jr. of the
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) made the
counterintuitive discovery in 1951 that a blunt shape (high drag)
made the most effective heat shield. From simple engineering
principles, Allen and Eggers showed that the heat load experienced
by an entry vehicle was inversely proportional to the drag
coefficient, i.e. the greater the drag, the less the heat load.
Through making the reentry vehicle blunt, air can't "get out of the
way" quickly enough, and acts as an air cushion to push the shock
wave and heated shock layer forward (away from the vehicle). Since
most of the hot gases are no longer in direct contact with the
vehicle, the heat energy would stay in the shocked gas and simply
move around the vehicle to later dissipate into the
atmosphere.
The Allen and Eggers discovery, though initially
treated as a military secret, was eventually published in 1958. The
Blunt Body Theory made possible the heat shield designs that were
embodied in the Mercury,
Gemini and
Apollo
space capsules, enabling astronauts to survive the fiery reentry
into Earth's atmosphere.
Entry vehicle shapes
There are several basic shapes used in designing
entry vehicles:
Sphere or spherical section
The simplest axisymmetric shape is the sphere or spherical section. This can either be a complete sphere or a spherical section forebody with a converging conical afterbody. The sphere or spherical section's aerodynamics are easy to model analytically using Newtonian impact theory. Likewise, the spherical section's heat flux can be accurately modeled with the Fay-Riddell equation. The static stability of a spherical section is assured if the vehicle's center of mass is upstream from the center of curvature (dynamic stability is more problematic). Pure spheres have no lift. However by flying at an angle of attack, a spherical section has modest aerodynamic lift thus providing some cross-range capability and widening its entry corridor. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, high-speed computers were not yet available and CFD was still embryonic. Because the spherical section was amenable to closed-form analysis, that geometry became the default for conservative design. Consequently, manned capsules of that era were based upon the spherical section. Pure spherical entry vehicles were used in the early Soviet Vostok. The most famous example of a spherical section entry vehicle was the Apollo Command Module (Apollo-CM), using a spherical section forebody heatshield with a converging conical afterbody. The Apollo-CM (AS-501) flew a lifting entry with a hypersonic trim angle of attack of −27° (0° is blunt-end first) to yield an average L/D of 0.368. This angle of attack was achieved by precisely offsetting the vehicle's center of mass from its axis of symmetry. Other examples of the spherical section geometry in manned capsules are Soyuz/Zond, Gemini and Mercury.Sphere-cone
The sphere-cone is a spherical section with a frustum or blunted cone attached. The sphere-cone's dynamic stability is typically better than that of a spherical section. With a sufficiently small half-angle and properly placed center of mass, a sphere-cone can provide aerodynamic stability from Keplerian entry to surface impact. (The "half-angle" is the angle between the cone's axis of rotational symmetry and its outer surface, and thus half the angle made by the cone's surface edges.)The original American sphere-cone aeroshell was
the Mk-2 RV which was developed in 1955 by the General
Electric Corp. The Mk-2's design was derived from blunt-body
theory and used a radiatively cooled thermal protection system
(TPS) based upon a metallic heat shield (the different TPS types
are later described in this article). The Mk-2 had significant
defects as a weapon delivery system, i.e., it loitered too long in
the upper atmosphere due to its lower ballistic coefficient and
also trailed a stream of vaporized metal making it very visible to
radar. These defects made the Mk-2 overly susceptible to
anti-ballistic missile (ABM) systems. Consequently an alternative
sphere-cone RV to the Mk-2 was developed by General Electric.
Reconnaissance
satellite RVs (recovery vehicles) also used a sphere-cone shape
and were the first American example of a non-munition entry vehicle
(Discoverer-I, launched on 28 February 1959). The sphere-cone was
later used for space exploration missions to other celestial bodies
or for return from open space, e.g., Stardust
probe. Unlike with military RVs, the advantage of the blunt
body's lower TPS mass remained with space exploration entry
vehicles like the Galileo
Probe with a half angle of 45° or the Viking
aeroshell with a half angle of 70°. Space exploration
sphere-cone entry vehicles have landed on the surface or entered
the atmospheres of Mars,
Venus,
Jupiter
and Titan.
Biconic
The biconic is a sphere-cone with an additional frustum attached. The biconic offers a significantly improved L/D ratio. A biconic designed for Mars aerocapture typically has an L/D of approximately 1.0 compared to an L/D of 0.368 for the Apollo-CM. The higher L/D makes a biconic shape better suited for transporting people to Mars due to the lower peak deceleration. Arguably, the most significant biconic ever flown was the Advanced Maneuverable Reentry Vehicle (AMaRV). Four AMaRVs were made by the McDonnell-Douglas Corp. and represented a quantum leap in RV sophistication. Three of the AMaRVs were launched by Minuteman-1 ICBMs on 20 December 1979, 8 October 1980 and 4 October 1981. AMaRV had an entry mass of approximately 470 kg, a nose radius of 2.34 cm, a forward frustum half-angle of 10.4°, an inter-frustum radius of 14.6 cm, aft frustum half angle of 6°, and an axial length of 2.079 meters. No accurate diagram or picture of AMaRV has ever appeared in the open literature. However a schematic sketch of an AMaRV-like vehicle along with trajectory plots showing hairpin turns has been published.AMaRV's attitude was controlled through a split
body flap (also called a "split-windward flap") along with two yaw
flaps mounted on the vehicle's sides. Hydraulic
actuation was used for controlling the flaps. AMaRV was guided
by a fully autonomous navigation system designed for evading
anti-ballistic
missile (ABM) interception. The McDonnell
Douglas DC-X (also a biconic) was essentially a scaled up
version of AMaRV. AMaRV and the DC-X also served as the basis for
an unsuccessful proposal for what eventually became the Lockheed
Martin X-33. Amongst aerospace engineers, AMaRV has achieved
legendary status alongside such technological marvels as the
SR-71
Blackbird and the N-1
rocket.
Non-axisymmetric shapes
Non-axisymmetric shapes have been used for manned entry vehicles. One example is the winged orbit vehicle that uses a delta wing for maneuvering during descent much like a conventional glider. This approach has been used by the American Space Shuttle and the Soviet Buran. The lifting body is another entry vehicle geometry and was used with the X-23 PRIME (Precision Recovery Including Maneuvering Entry) vehicle.The FIRST (Fabrication of Inflatable Re-entry
Structures for Test) system was an Aerojet proposal
for an inflated-spar Rogallo wing
made up from Inconel wire cloth
impregnated with silicone rubber and Silicon Carbide dust. FIRST
was proposed in both one-man and six man versions, used for
emergency escape and reentry of stranded space station crews, and
was based on an earlier unmanned test program that resulted in a
partially successful reentry flight from space (the launcher nose
cone fairing hung up on the material, dragging it too low and fast
for the TPS, but otherwise it appears the concept would have
worked, even with the fairing dragging it, the test article flew
stably on reentry until burn-through).
The proposed MOOSE system would
have used a one-man inflatable ballistic capsule as an emergency
astronaut entry vehicle. This concept was carried further by the
Douglas Paracone project.
While these concepts were unusual, the inflated shape on reentry
was in fact axisymmetric.
Shock layer gas physics
An approximate rule-of-thumb used by heat shield designers for estimating peak shock layer temperature is to assume the air temperature in kelvins to be equal to the entry speed in meters per second - a mathematical coincidence. For example, a spacecraft entering the atmosphere at 7.8 km/s would experience a peak shock layer temperature of 7800 K. This is unexpected, since the kinetic energy increases with the square of the velocity, and can only occur because the specific heat of the gas increases greatly with temperature (unlike the nearly constant specific heat assumed for solids under ordinary conditions).At typical reentry temperatures, the air in the
shock layer is both ionized and dissociated.
This chemical dissociation necessitates various physical models to
describe the shock layer's thermal and chemical properties. There
are four basic physical models of a gas that are important to
aeronautical engineers who design heat shields:
Perfect gas model
Almost all aeronautical engineers are taught the perfect (ideal) gas model during their undergraduate education. Most of the important perfect gas equations along with their corresponding tables and graphs are shown in NACA Report 1135. Excerpts from NACA Report 1135 often appear in the appendices of thermodynamics textbooks and are familiar to most aeronautical engineers who design supersonic aircraft.Perfect gas theory is elegant and extremely
useful for designing aircraft but assumes the gas is chemically
inert. From the standpoint of aircraft design, air can be assumed
to be inert for temperatures less than 550 K at one atmosphere
pressure. Perfect gas theory begins to break down at 550 K and is
not usable at temperatures greater than 2000 K. For temperatures
greater than 2000 K, a heat shield designer must use a real gas
model.
Real (equilibrium) gas model
The real gas equilibrium model is normally taught to aeronautical engineers studying towards a master's degree. Not surprisingly, it is a common error for a bachelor's-level engineer to incorrectly use perfect-gas theory on a hypersonic design. An entry vehicle's pitching moment can be significantly influenced by real-gas effects. Both the Apollo-CM and the Space Shuttle were designed using incorrect pitching moments determined through inaccurate real-gas modeling. The Apollo-CM's trim-angle angle of attack was higher than originally estimated, resulting in a narrower lunar return entry corridor. The actual aerodynamic center of the Columbia was upstream from the calculated value due to real-gas effects. On Columbia’s maiden flight (STS-1), astronauts John W. Young and Robert Crippen had some anxious moments during reentry when there was concern about losing control of the vehicle.An equilibrium real-gas model assumes that a gas
is chemically reactive but also assumes all chemical reactions have
had time to complete and all components of the gas have the same
temperature (this is called thermodynamic equilibrium). When air is
processed by a shock wave, it is superheated by compression and
chemically dissociates through many different reactions (contrary
to popular belief, friction is not the main cause of shock-layer
heating). The distance from the shock wave to the stagnation
point on the entry vehicle's leading edge is called shock wave
stand off. An approximate rule of thumb for shock wave standoff
distance is 0.14 times the nose radius. One can estimate the time
of travel for a gas molecule from the shock wave to the stagnation
point by assuming a free stream velocity of 7.8 km/s and a nose
radius of 1 meter, i.e., time of travel is about 18 microseconds.
This is roughly the time required for shock-wave-initiated chemical
dissociation to approach chemical
equilibrium in a shock layer for a 7.8 km/s entry into air
during peak heat flux. Consequently, as air approaches the entry
vehicle's stagnation point, the air effectively reaches chemical
equilibrium thus enabling an equilibrium model to be usable. For
this case, most of the shock layer between the shock wave and
leading edge of an entry vehicle is chemically reacting and not in
a state of equilibrium. The Fay-Riddell equation, which is of
extreme importance towards modeling heat flux, owes its validity to
the stagnation point being in chemical equilibrium. It should be
emphasized that the time required for the shock layer gas to reach
equilibrium is strongly dependent upon the shock layer's pressure.
For example, in the case of the Galileo Probe's entry into
Jupiter's atmosphere, the shock layer was mostly in equilibrium
during peak heat flux due to the very high pressures experienced
(this is counterintuitive given the free stream velocity was 39
km/s during peak heat flux).
Determining the thermodynamic state of the
stagnation point is more difficult under an equilibrium gas model
than a perfect gas model. Under a perfect gas model, the ratio of
specific heats (also called "isentropic exponent", adiabatic
index, "gamma" or "kappa") is assumed to be constant along with
the gas
constant. For a real gas, the ratio of specific heats can
wildly oscillate as a function of temperature. Under a perfect gas
model there is an elegant set of equations for determining
thermodynamic state along a constant entropy stream line called the
isentropic chain. For a real gas, the isentropic chain is unusable
and a Mollier diagram would be used instead for manual calculation.
However graphical solution with a Mollier diagram is now considered
obsolete with modern heat shield designers using computer programs
based upon a digital lookup table (another form of Mollier diagram)
or a chemistry based thermodynamics program. The chemical
composition of a gas in equilibrium with fixed pressure and
temperature can be determined through the Gibbs free energy method.
Gibbs
free energy is simply the total enthalpy of the gas minus its
total entropy times
temperature. A chemical equilibrium program normally does not
require chemical formulas or reaction-rate equations. The program
works by preserving the original elemental abundances specified for
the gas and varying the different molecular combinations of the
elements through numerical iteration until the lowest possible
Gibbs free energy is calculated (a Newton-Raphson
method is the usual numerical scheme). The data base for a
Gibbs free energy program comes from spectroscopic data used in
defining
partition functions. Among the best equilibrium codes in
existence is the program Chemical Equilibrium with Applications
(CEA) which was written by Bonnie J. McBride and Sanford Gordon at
NASA Lewis (now renamed "NASA Glenn Research Center"). Other names
for CEA are the "Gordon and McBride Code" and the "Lewis Code". CEA
is quite accurate up to 10,000 K for planetary atmospheric gases
but unusable beyond 20,000 K (double ionization is not modeled).
CEA can be downloaded
from the Internet along with full documentation and will
compile on Linux under the G77 Fortran compiler.
Real (non-equilibrium) gas model
A non-equilibrium real gas model is the most accurate model of a shock layer's gas physics but is more difficult to solve than an equilibrium model. The simplest non-equilibrium model is the Lighthill-Freeman model. The Lighthill-Freeman model initially assumes a gas made up of a single diatomic species susceptible to only one chemical formula and its reverse, e.g. N2 → N + N and N + N → N2 (dissociation and recombination). Because of its simplicity, the Lighthill-Freeman model is a useful pedagogical tool but is unfortunately too simple for modeling non-equilibrium air. Air is typically assumed to have a mole fraction composition of 0.7812 molecular nitrogen, 0.2095 molecular oxygen and 0.0093 argon. The simplest real gas model for air is the five species model which is based upon N2, O2, NO, N and O. The five species model assumes no ionization and ignores trace species like carbon dioxide.When running a Gibbs free energy equilibrium
program, the iterative process from the originally specified
molecular composition to the final calculated equilibrium
composition is essentially random and not time accurate. With a
non-equilibrium program, the computation process is time accurate
and follows a solution path dictated by chemical and reaction rate
formulas. The five species model has 17 chemical formulas (34 when
counting reverse formulas). The Lighthill-Freeman model is based
upon a single ordinary differential equation and one algebraic
equation. The five species model is based upon 5 ordinary
differential equations and 17 algebraic equations. Because the 5
ordinary differential equations are loosely coupled, the system is
numerically "stiff" and difficult to solve. The five species model
is only usable for entry from low Earth
orbit where entry velocity is approximately 7.8 km/s. For lunar
return entry of 11 km/s, the shock layer contains a significant
amount of ionized nitrogen and oxygen. The five species model is no
longer accurate and a twelve species model must be used instead.
High speed Mars entry which involves a carbon dioxide, nitrogen and
argon atmosphere is even more complex requiring a 19 species
model.
An important aspect of modeling non-equilibrium
real gas effects is radiative heat flux. If a vehicle is entering
an atmosphere at very high speed (hyperbolic trajectory, lunar
return) and has a large nose radius then radiative heat flux can
dominate TPS heating. Radiative heat flux during entry into an air
or carbon dioxide atmosphere typically comes from unsymmetric
diatomic molecules, e.g. cyanogen (CN), carbon
monoxide, nitric oxide
(NO), single ionized molecular nitrogen, et cetera. These molecules
are formed by the shock wave dissociating ambient atmospheric gas
followed by recombination within the shock layer into new molecular
species. The newly formed diatomic molecules initially
have a very high vibrational temperature that efficiently
transforms the vibrational
energy into radiant energy, i.e. radiative heat flux. The whole
process takes place in less than a millisecond which makes modeling
a challenge. The experimental measurement of radiative heat flux
(typically done with shock tubes) along with theoretical
calculation through the unsteady Schrödinger
equation are among the more esoteric aspects of aerospace
engineering. Most of the aerospace research work related to
understanding radiative heat flux was done in the 1960s but largely
discontinued after conclusion of the Apollo Program. Radiative heat
flux in air was just sufficiently understood to insure Apollo's
success. However radiative heat flux in carbon dioxide (Mars entry)
is still barely understood and will require major research.
Frozen gas model
The frozen gas model describes a special case of a gas that is not in equilibrium. The name "frozen gas" can be misleading. A frozen gas is not "frozen" like ice is frozen water. Rather a frozen gas is "frozen" in time (all chemical reactions are assumed to have stopped). Chemical reactions are normally driven by collisions between molecules. If gas pressure is slowly reduced such that chemical reactions can continue then the gas can remain in equilibrium. However it is possible for gas pressure to be so suddenly reduced that almost all chemical reactions stop. For that situation the gas is considered frozen.The distinction between equilibrium and frozen is
important because it is possible for a gas such as air to have
significantly different properties (speed-of-sound, viscosity, et cetera) for the
same thermodynamic state, e.g. pressure and temperature. Frozen gas
can be a significant issue in the wake behind an entry vehicle.
During reentry, free stream air is compressed to high temperature
and pressure by the entry vehicle's shock wave. Non-equilibrium air
in the shock layer is then transported past the entry vehicle's
leading side into a region of rapidly expanding flow that causes
freezing. The frozen air can then be entrained into a trailing
vortex behind the entry vehicle. Correctly modeling the flow in the
wake of an entry vehicle is very difficult. TPS heating in the
vehicle's afterbody is usually not very high but the geometry and
unsteadiness of the vehicle's wake can significantly influence
aerodynamics (pitching moment) and particularly dynamic
stability.
Thermal protection systems
Ablative
The type of heat shield that best protects against high heat flux is the ablative heat shield. The ablative heat shield functions by lifting the hot shock layer gas away from the heat shield's outer wall (creating a cooler boundary layer) through blowing. The overall process of reducing the heat flux experienced by the heat shield's outer wall is called blockage. Ablation causes the TPS layer to char, melt, and sublime through the process of pyrolysis. The gas produced by pyrolysis is what drives blowing and causes blockage of convective and catalytic heat flux. Pyrolysis can be measured in real time using thermogravimetric analysis, so that the ablative performance can be evaluated. Ablation can also provide blockage against radiative heat flux by introducing carbon into the shock layer thus making it optically opaque. Radiative heat flux blockage was the primary thermal protection mechanism of the Galileo Probe TPS material (carbon phenolic). Carbon phenolic was originally developed as a rocket nozzle throat material (used in the Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster) and for RV nose tips. Thermal protection can also be enhanced in some TPS materials through coking. Coking is the process of forming solid carbon on the outer char layer of the TPS. TPS coking was discovered accidentally during development of the Apollo-CM TPS material (Avcoat 5026-39).The thermal
conductivity of a TPS material is proportional to the
material's density. Carbon phenolic is a very effective ablative
material but also has high density which is undesirable. If the
heat flux experienced by an entry vehicle is insufficient to cause
pyrolysis then the TPS material's conductivity could allow heat
flux conduction into the TPS bondline material thus leading to TPS
failure. Consequently for entry trajectories causing lower heat
flux, carbon phenolic is sometimes inappropriate and lower density
TPS materials such as the following examples can be better design
choices:
SLA-561V
"SLA" in SLA-561V stands for "Super Light weight Ablator". SLA-561V is a proprietary ablative made by Lockheed Martin that has been used as the primary TPS material on all of the 70 degree sphere-cone entry vehicles sent by NASA to Mars. SLA-561V begins significant ablation at a heat flux of approximately 110 W/cm² but will fail for heat fluxes greater than 300 W/cm². The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) aeroshell TPS is currently designed to withstand a peak heat flux of 234 W/cm². The peak heat flux experienced by the Viking-1 aeroshell which landed on Mars was 21 W/cm². For Viking-1, the TPS acted as a charred thermal insulator and never experienced significant ablation. Viking-1 was the first Mars lander and based upon a very conservative design. The Viking aeroshell had a base diameter of 3.54 meters (the largest yet used on Mars). SLA-561V is applied by packing the ablative material into a honeycomb core that is pre-bonded to the aeroshell's structure thus enabling construction of a large heat shield.PICA
Phenolic Impregnated Carbon Ablator (PICA) was developed by NASA Ames Research Center and was the primary TPS material for the Stardust aeroshell. Because the Stardust sample-return capsule was the fastest man-made object to reenter Earth's atmosphere (12.4 km/s or 28,000 mph relative velocity at 135 km altitude), PICA was an enabling technology for the Stardust mission. (For reference, the Stardust reentry was faster than the Apollo Mission capsules and 70% faster than the reentry velocity of the Shuttle.) PICA is a modern TPS material and has the advantages of low density (much lighter than carbon phenolic) coupled with efficient ablative capability at high heat flux. Stardust's heat shield (0.81 m base diameter) was manufactured from a single monolithic piece sized to withstand a nominal peak heating rate of 1200 W/cm2. PICA is a good choice for ablative applications such as high-peak-heating conditions found on sample-return missions or lunar-return missions. PICA's thermal conductivity is lower than other high-heat-flux ablative materials, such as conventional carbon phenolics.SIRCA
Silicone Impregnated Reuseable Ceramic Ablator (SIRCA) was also developed at NASA Ames Research Center and was used on the Backshell Interface Plate (BIP) of the Mars Pathfinder and Mars Exploration Rover (MER) aeroshells. The BIP was at the attachment points between the aeroshell's backshell (also called the "afterbody" or "aft cover") and the cruise ring (also called the "cruise stage"). SIRCA was also the primary TPS material for the unsuccessful Deep Space 2 (DS/2) Mars probes with their 0.35 m base diameter aeroshells. SIRCA is a monolithic, insulative material that can provide thermal protection through ablation. It is the only TPS material that can be machined to custom shapes and then applied directly to the spacecraft. There is no post-processing, heat treating, or additional coatings required (unlike current Space Shuttle tiles). Since SIRCA can be machined to precise shapes, it can be applied as tiles, leading edge sections, full nose caps, or in any number of custom shapes or sizes. SIRCA has been demonstrated in BIP applications but not yet as a forebody TPS material.Early research on ablation technology in the USA
was centered at NASA's Ames
Research Center located at Moffett
Field, California. Ames
Research Center was ideal, since it had numerous wind tunnels
capable of generating varying wind velocities. Initial experiments
typically mounted a mock-up of the ablative material to be analyzed
within a hypersonic
wind tunnel.
Thermal soak
Thermal soak is a part of almost all TPS schemes. For example, an ablative heat shield loses most of its thermal protection effectiveness when the outer wall temperature drops below the minimum necessary for pyrolysis. From that time to the end of the heat pulse, heat from the shock layer soaks into the heat shield's outer wall and would eventually convect to the payload. This outcome is prevented by ejecting the heat shield (with its heat soak) prior to the heat convecting to the inner wall.Thermal soak TPS is intended to shield mainly
against heat load and not against a high peak heat flux (a long
duration heat pulse of low intensity is assumed for the TPS
design). The Space
Shuttle orbit vehicle was designed with a reusable heat shield
based upon a thermal soak TPS. It should be emphasized that the
tradeoff for TPS reusability is an inability to withstand a high
heat flux, e.g. a Space Shuttle TPS would not be practical as a
primary thermal protection for lunar return. A Space Shuttle's
underside is coated with thousands of tiles made of silica foam,
which are intended to survive multiple reentries with only minor
repairs between missions. Fabric sheets known as gap fillers are
inserted between the tiles where necessary. These gap fillers
provide for a snug fit between separate tiles while allowing for
thermal
expansion. When a Space Shuttle lands, a significant amount of
heat is stored in the TPS. Shortly after landing, a ground-support
cooling unit connects to the Space Shuttle's internal Freon coolant
loop to remove heat soaked in the TPS and orbiter structure.
Typical Space Shuttle's TPS tiles (LI-900) have remarkable thermal
protection properties but are relatively brittle and break easily,
and cannot survive in-flight rain. An LI-900 tile exposed to a
temperature of 1000 K on one side will remain merely warm to the
touch on the other side. An impressive stunt that can be performed
with a cube of LI-900 is to remove it glowing white hot from a
furnace and then hold it with one's bare fingers without discomfort
along the cube's edges.
Passively cooled
In some early ballistic missile RVs, e.g. the Mk-2 and the sub-orbital Mercury spacecraft, radiatively cooled TPS were used to initially absorb heat flux during the heat pulse and then after the heat pulse, radiate and convect the stored heat back into the atmosphere. Unfortunately, the earlier version of this technique required a considerable quantity of metal TPS (e.g. titanium, beryllium, copper, et cetera). Modern designers prefer to avoid this added mass by using ablative and thermal soak TPS instead. Radiatively cooled TPS can still be found on modern entry vehicles but Reinforced Carbon-Carbon (also called RCC or carbon-carbon) is normally used instead of metal. RCC is the TPS material on the nose cone and leading edges of the Space Shuttle's wings. RCC was also proposed as the leading edge material for the X-33. Carbon is the most refractory material known with a one atmosphere sublimation temperature of 3825 °C for graphite. This high temperature made carbon an obvious choice as a radiatively cooled TPS material. Disadvantages of RCC are that it is currently very expensive to manufacture and lacks impact resistance.Some high-velocity aircraft, such as the SR-71
Blackbird and Concorde, had to
deal with heating similar to that experienced by spacecraft but at
much lower intensity. Studies of the SR-71's titanium skin revealed
the metal structure was restored to its original strength through
annealing
due to aerodynamic heating. In the case of Concorde the aluminium
nose was permitted to reach a maximum operating temperature of 127
°C (typically 180 °C warmer than the sub-zero ambient air); the
metallurgical implications (loss of temper) that would be
associated with a higher peak temperature was the most significant
factor determining the top speed of the aircraft.
A radiatively cooled TPS for an entry vehicle is
often called a "hot metal TPS". Early TPS designs for the Space
Shuttle called for a hot metal TPS based upon titanium shingles.
Unfortunately the earlier Shuttle TPS concept was rejected because
it was incorrectly believed a silica tile based TPS offered less
expensive development and manufacturing costs. A titanium shingle
TPS was again proposed for the unsuccessful X-33 Single-Stage to
Orbit (SSTO)
prototype.
Recently, newer radiatively cooled TPS materials
have been developed that could be superior to RCC. Referred to by
their prototype vehicle "SHARP" (Slender Hypervelocity
Aerothermodynamic Research Probe), these TPS materials have been
based upon substances such as zirconium diboride and hafnium
diboride. SHARP TPS have suggested performance improvements
allowing for sustained Mach 7 flight at sea level, Mach 11 flight
at 100,000 ft altitudes and significant improvements for vehicles
designed for continuous hypersonic flight. SHARP TPS materials
enable sharp leading edges and nose cones to greatly reduce drag
for air breathing combined cycle propelled space planes and lifting
bodies. SHARP materials have exhibited effective TPS
characteristics from zero to more than 2000 °C, with melting points
over 3500 °C . They are structurally stronger than RCC thus not
requiring structural reinforcement with materials such as Inconel.
SHARP materials are extremely efficient at re-radiating absorbed
heat thus eliminating the need for additional TPS behind and
between SHARP materials and conventional vehicle structure. NASA
initially funded (and discontinued) a multi-phase R&D program
through the University
of Montana in 2001 to test SHARP materials on test
vehicles.
Actively cooled
Various advanced reusable spacecraft and hypersonic aircraft designs have been proposed to employ heat shields made from temperature-resistant metal alloys that incorporated a refrigerant or cryogenic fuel circulating through them. Such a TPS concept was proposed for the X-30 National Aerospace Plane (NASP). The NASP was supposed to have been a scramjet powered hypersonic aircraft but failed in development.In the early 1960s various TPS systems were
proposed to use water or other cooling liquid sprayed into the
shock layer. Such concepts never got past the proposal phase since
ordinary ablative TPS is much more reliable and efficient.
Feathered reentry
In 2004, aircraft designer Burt Rutan
demonstrated the feasibility of a shape changing airfoil for
reentry with the suborbital
SpaceShipOne. The wings on this craft rotate to provide a
shuttlecock effect.
Notably, SpaceShipOne, does not experience significant thermal
loads on reentry.
This increases drag, as the craft is now less
streamlined. This results in more atmospheric gas particles hitting
the spacecraft at higher altitudes than otherwise. The aircraft
thus slows down more in higher atmospheric layers (which is the
very key to efficient reentry, see above). It should also be noted
that SpaceShipOne, in its "wings flipped" configuration, will
automatically orient itself to a high drag attitude. Rutan has
compared this to a falling shuttlecock. However, it is
important to realize that the velocity obtained by SpaceShipOne
prior to reentry is much lower than of an orbital spacecraft, and
most engineers (including Rutan) do not consider the shuttlecock
reentry technique viable for return from orbit.
The feathered or shuttlecock reentry was first
described by Dean
Chapman of NACA in 1958. In the section of his report on
Composite Entry, Chapman described a solution to the problem using
a high-drag device:
- ''"It may be desirable to combine lifting and nonlifting entry in order to achieve some advantages… For landing maneuverability it obviously is advantageous to employ a lifting vehicle. The total heat absorbed by a lifting vehicle, however, is much higher than for a nonlifting vehicle… Nonlifting vehicles can more easily be constructed… by employing, for example, a large, light drag device… The larger the device, the smaller is the heating rate"
Chapman noted that:
- "Nonlifting vehicles with shuttlecock stability are advantageous also from the viewpoint of minimum control requirements during entry."
Finally, Chapman said:
- "an evident composite type of entry, which combines some of the desirable features of lifting and nonlifting trajectories, would be to enter first without lift but with a… drag device; then, when the velocity is reduced to a certain value… the device is jettisoned or retracted, leaving a lifting vehicle… for the remainder of the descent".''
Entry vehicle design considerations
There are four critical parameters considered
when designing a vehicle for atmospheric entry:
- Peak heat flux
- Heat load
- Peak deceleration
- Peak dynamic pressure
Peak heat flux and dynamic pressure selects the
TPS material. Heat load selects the thickness of the TPS material
stack. Peak deceleration is of major importance for manned
missions. The upper limit for manned return to Earth from Low Earth
Orbit (LEO) or lunar return is 10 Gs. For Martian atmospheric entry
after long exposure to zero gravity, the upper limit is 4 Gs. Peak
dynamic pressure can also influence the selection of the outermost
TPS material if spallation is an issue.
Starting from the principle of conservative
design, the engineer typically considers two worst case
trajectories, the undershoot and overshoot trajectories. The
overshoot trajectory is typically defined as the shallowest
allowable entry velocity angle prior to atmospheric skip-off. The
overshoot trajectory has the highest heat load and sets the TPS
thickness. The undershoot trajectory is defined by the steepest
allowable trajectory. For manned missions the steepest entry angle
is limited by the peak deceleration. The undershoot trajectory also
has the highest peak heat flux and dynamic pressure. Consequently
the undershoot trajectory is the basis for selecting the TPS
material. There is no "one size fits all" TPS material. A TPS
material that is ideal for high heat flux may be too conductive
(too dense) for a long duration heat load. A low density TPS
material might lack the tensile strength to resist spallation if
the dynamic pressure is too high. A TPS material can perform well
for a specific peak heat flux but fail catastrophically for the
same peak heat flux if the wall pressure is significantly increased
(this happened with NASA's R-4 test spacecraft). Older TPS
materials tend to be more labor intensive and expensive to
manufacture compared to modern materials. However modern TPS
materials often lack the flight history of the older materials (an
important consideration for a risk adverse designer).
Based upon Allen and Eggers discovery, maximum
aeroshell bluntness (maximum drag) yields minimum TPS mass. Maximum
bluntness (minimum ballistic coefficient) also yields a minimal
terminal
velocity at maximum altitude (very important for Mars EDL but
detrimental for military RVs). However there is an upper limit to
bluntness imposed by aerodynamic stability considerations based
upon shock wave detachment. A shock wave will remain attached to
the tip of a sharp cone if the cone's half-angle is below a
critical value. This critical half-angle can be estimated using
perfect gas theory (this specific aerodynamic instability occurs
below hypersonic speeds). For a nitrogen atmosphere (Earth or
Titan), the maximum allowed half-angle is approximately 60°. For a
carbon dioxide atmosphere (Mars or Venus), the maximum allowed
half-angle is approximately 70°. After shock wave detachment, an
entry vehicle must carry significantly more shocklayer gas around
the leading edge stagnation point (the subsonic cap). Consequently,
the aerodynamic center moves upstream thus causing aerodynamic
instability. It is incorrect to reapply an aeroshell design
intended for Titan entry (Huygens
probe in a nitrogen atmosphere) for Mars entry (Beagle-2 in a
carbon dioxide atmosphere). After being abandoned, the Soviet
Mars lander program achieved no successful landings (no useful
data returned) after multiple attempts. The Soviet Mars landers
were based upon a 60° half-angle aeroshell design. In the early
1960s, it was incorrectly believed the Martian atmosphere was
mostly nitrogen, (actual Martian atmospheric mole fractions are
carbon dioxide 0.9550, nitrogen 0.0270 and argon 0.0160). The
Soviet aeroshells were probably(?) based upon an incorrect Martian
atmospheric model and then not revised when new data became
available.
A 45 degree half-angle sphere-cone is typically
used for atmospheric probes (surface landing not intended) even
though TPS mass is not minimized. The rationale for a 45°
half-angle is either aerodynamic stability from entry-to-impact
(the heat shield is not jettisoned) or a short-and-sharp heat pulse
followed by prompt heat shield jettison. A 45° sphere-cone design
was used with the DS/2 Mars landers and Pioneer
Venus Probes.
History's most difficult atmospheric entry
The highest speed controlled entry so far achieved was by the Galileo Probe. The Galileo Probe was a 45° sphere-cone that entered Jupiter's atmosphere at 47.4 km/s (atmosphere relative speed at 450 km above the 1 bar reference altitude). The peak deceleration experienced was 230 g (2.3 km/s²). Peak stagnation point pressure before aeroshell jettison was 9 bars (900 kPa). The peak shock layer temperature was approximately 16000 K (the solar photosphere is merely 5800 K). Approximately 26% of the Galileo Probe's original entry mass of 338.93 kg was vaporized during the 70 second heat pulse. Total blocked heat flux peaked at approximately 15000 W/cm². By way of comparison, the peak total heat flux experienced by the Mars Pathfinder aeroshell, the highest experienced by a successful Mars lander, was 106 W/cm², and the Apollo-4 (AS-501) command module, re-entering at 10.77 km/s (atmosphere relative speed at 121.9 km altitude) experienced a peak total heat flux of 497 W/cm².Not all atmospheric re-entries have been
successful and some have led to significant disasters.
- Vostok 1 — The service module failed to detach for 10 minutes. Lone cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin survived.
- Mercury 6 — Instrument readings show that the heat shield and landing bag were not locked. The decision was made to leave the retrorocket pack in position during reentry. Lone astronaut John Glenn survived. The instrument readings were later found to be erroneous.
- Voskhod 2 — The service module failed to detach for some time, but the crew survived.
- Soyuz 1 — Different accounts exist. Either the attitude control system failed while still in orbit and/or parachutes got entangled during the landing sequence (entry, descent and landing (EDL) failure). Lone cosmonaut Vladimir Mikhailovich Komarov died.
- Soyuz 5 — The service module failed to detach, but the crew survived.
- Soyuz 11 — Early depressurization led to the death of all three crew.
- Mars Polar Lander — Failed during EDL. The failure was believed to be the consequence of a software error. The precise cause is unknown due to lack of real time telemetry.
- Space Shuttle Columbia disaster — The failure of an RCC tile on a wing leading edge led to breakup of the orbit vehicle at hypersonic speed resulting in the loss of all seven crew members.
- Genesis — The parachute failed to deploy due to a G-switch being installed backwards (a similar error delayed parachute deployment for the Galileo Probe). Consequently, the Genesis entry vehicle crashed into the desert floor. The payload was damaged but it was later claimed that some scientific data was recoverable.
Uncontrolled and unprotected reentries
More than 100 metric tons of man-made objects reenter in an uncontrolled fashion each year. Of satellites that reenter, approximately 10-40% of the mass of the object is likely to reach the surface of the Earth. On average, about one catalogued object reenters per day. Approximately a quarter of all objects are of U.S. origin.Due to the Earth's surface being primarily water,
most objects that survive reentry land in one of the world's
oceans. The estimated chances that a person will get hit and
injured is around 1 in a trillion.
In 1978, Cosmos 954
reentered uncontrolled and crashed near Great
Slave Lake in the Northwest
Territories of Canada. Cosmos 954
was nuclear powered, using a nuclear fission reactor, and spread
radioactive debris across northern Canada.
In 1979, Skylab reentered
uncontrolled and parts of it crashed into
Esperance, Western Australia, damaging several buildings. Local
authorities issued a fine for littering to the United
States, but the fine was never settled.
Deorbit disposal
In 2001, the Russian Mir space station was deliberately de-orbited, and broke apart during atmospheric re-entry. Mir entered the Earth's atmosphere on March 23, 2001, near Nadi, Fiji, and fell into the South Pacific Ocean. Previously, its two predecessors, Salyut 6 and Salyut 7, were deorbited in a controlled manner as well.On February 21,
2008, a
disabled U.S.
spy
satellite, USA 193, was
successfully intercepted and destroyed, at an altitude of approximately 246
kilometers (153
miles) above the Earth, by a U.S. Navy
cruiser off the coast of
Hawaii,
which fired an SM-3 missile. The satellite had been
inoperative upon its launch in 2006, and had never
reached its designated orbit, but was in a rapidly
deteriorating Low Earth
orbit, and destined for an uncontrolled reentry within a month.
United States Department of Defense expressed concern that the
debris, including a 1000-pound
(450-kilogram) highly
toxic hydrazine fuel tank,
might reach the Earth’s surface. Several governments
including those of Russia, China, and Belarus protested
the US action. They were claiming that the operation may have been
a disguised test of a new space
weapons system.
Research into atmospheric entry
Aerospace technologies can be used for civilian
or military purposes (known as dual
use). Atmospheric entry technology owes its origins to the
development of ballistic
missiles during the Cold War. Given the enormous expense
required in developing this technology, it is doubtful it could
have appeared as quickly as it did without the military incentive.
Mankind's survival beyond its planet of origin could be dependent
upon atmospheric entry technology. It is ironic that the same
technology enabling destructive nuclear-tipped missiles also
enables this exploration and development of outer space. Aerospace
technology is needed for civilian space exploration, yet certain
aspects are and will remain restricted to impede military
proliferation of the technology. This basic dilemma is present
throughout the literature on atmospheric entry. There is a glass
wall between pedagogical and practical information. For example, in
the text books referenced in this article, a topic thread will
proceed as long as the information is nonspecific but almost always
stops at the point of practical application. To go beyond
pedagogical information, one must search the technical literature
(NACA/NASA Technical Reports, declassified technical reports and
peer reviewed archive literature). Declassified
technical reports are a frustrating information source since
many of the reports were destroyed prior to going through the
legally required declassification process. It is almost always true
that significant documents referred to in declassified technical
reports no longer exist (technical information costing many
millions of dollars has simply vanished).
Further reading
- Atmospheric Entry - An Introduction to Its Science and Engineering
- Re-Entry Vehicle Dynamics (AIAA Education Series)
- Dynamics of Atmospheric Flight
- Introduction to Physical Gas Dynamics
- Molecular Physics of Equilibrium Gases, A Handbook for Engineers
- Hypersonic Flow Theory A revised version of this classic text has been reissued as an inexpensive paperback: Hypersonic Inviscid Flow
- Hypersonic and High Temperature Gas Dynamics
Notes and references
See also
External links
- Early Reentry Vehicles: Blunt Bodies and Ablatives
- Buran's heat shield
- Encyclopedia Astronautica article on the history of space rescue crafts, including some re-entry craft designs.
reentry in German: Wiedereintritt
reentry in Esperanto: Kontraŭvarma ŝildo
reentry in French: Rentrée atmosphérique
reentry in Italian: Rientro atmosferico
reentry in Hebrew: חדירה לאטמוספירה
reentry in Japanese: 大気圏再突入
reentry in Polish: Ponowne wejście w
atmosferę
reentry in Chinese: 返回式
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Earth insertion, LEM, LM, apogee, attitude-control rocket,
backset, backsliding, backward
motion, backward step, ballistic capsule, burn, capsule, deep-space ship,
docking, docking
maneuver, ferry rocket, fuel ship, homecoming, injection, insertion, lapse, lunar excursion module,
lunar module, manned rocket, module, moon ship, multistage
rocket, orbit, parking
orbit, perigee, reaction, recession, recidivation, recidivism, recursion, reentrance, refluence, reflux, regress, regression, relapse, remigration, retroaction, retrocession, retroflexion, retrogradation, retrogression, retrusion, return, rocket, rollback, setback, shuttle rocket, soft
landing, space capsule, space docking, space rocket, spacecraft, spaceship, sternway, throwback