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Ascent Propulsion System (DPS)
Country of origin  United States
Date 1964-1972
Manufacturer Bell Aircraft / Rocketdyne
Application Lunar Ascent Stage/Spacecraft propulsion
Predecessor Bell 8247
Successor RS-18
Status Retired
Liquid-fuel engine
Propellant N2O4 / Aerozine 50
Cycle Pressure-fed cycle
Configuration
Chamber 1
Performance
Thrust (vac.) 3,500 pounds-force (16 kN)
Thrust-to-weight ratio 19.44
Isp (vac.) 311 s (3,050 N·s/kg)
Dimensions
Length 47 inches (120 cm)
Diameter 34 inches (86 cm)
Dry weight 180 pounds (82 kg)
Used in
Lunar Module as Ascent Engine


The Ascent Propulsion System (APS) or LMAE (Lunar Module Ascent Engine) is a fixed thrust hypergolic rocket engine developed by Bell Aerosystems for use in the Apollo Lunar Module Ascent Stage. It used Aerozine 50 propellant, and N2O4 oxidizer. Rocketdyne provided the injector system, at the request of NASA, when Bell could not solve combustion instability problems.[1]

Contents

Origins [edit]

The LMAE traces its origin to the earlier Bell Aerosystems engines (8096, 8247) used in the RM-81 Agena, the American rocket upper stage and satellite support bus developed by Lockheed initially for the canceled WS-117L reconnaissance satellite program.[2] The Agena served as an upper stage for several defense, intelligence, and exploration programs: SAMOS-E, SAMOS-F (ELINT Ferret) and MIDAS (Missile Defense Alarm System) military early-warning satellites, Corona photo intelligence program, and the Ranger and Lunar Orbiter lunar probes.
The Lockheed Agena target vehicle using the Bell 8247 engine was qualified for 15 restarts for NASA's Project Gemini.[3]
A total of 365 Agena rockets were launched by NASA and the US Air Force between February 28, 1959 and the last Agena D launched on 12 February 1987, configured as the upper stage of a Titan 34B.[4][5]

Development [edit]

During the spring of 1963, Grumman hired Bell to develop the Lunar Module ascent engine, on the assumption that Bell's experience in development of the Air Force Agena engine would be transferable to the Lunar Module requirements. Grumman placed heavy emphasis upon high reliability through simplicity of design, and the ascent engine emerged as the least complicated of the three main engines in the Apollo space vehicle, including the LM descent and CSM service propulsion system engines.
Embodying a pressure-fed fuel system using hypergolic (self-igniting) propellants, the ascent engine was fixed-thrust and nongimbaled, capable of lifting the ascent stage off the Moon or aborting a landing if necessary.[6]
The engine developed about 3,500 pounds (1.6 kN) of thrust, which produced a velocity of 2,000 meters per second from lunar launch,[citation needed] to LOR, and CM docking.[1] It weighed 180 pounds (81.6 kg), with a length of 47 inches (119.4 cm) and diameter of 34 inches (86.4 cm).[7][not in citation given]

According to the Science Channel's documentary Moon Machines, the fuel and oxidizer were so corrosive that the engines had to be rebuilt after each firing. This meant that each ascent from the Moon was performed with an engine that was not tested prior to flight.[8]

RS-18 Engine [edit]

Rocketdyne brought the Lunar Module Ascent Engine (LMAE) out of its 36 year retirement, now designated as RS-18, and reconfigured this non-throttable hypergolic engine to use LOX/Methane for NASA Exploration Systems Architecture Study (ESAS) engine testing in 2008.[9]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b "LM Ascent Propulsion". Encyclopedia Astronautica. Retrieved June 7, 2012. 
  2. ^ Jacob Neufeld, George M. Watson, Jr., and David Chenoweth (1997). "Technology and the Air Force A Retrospective Assessment". Air Force History and Museums Program. 
  3. ^ Lockheed Missiles & Space Company (1972-02-25). "Shuttle/Agena study. Volume 1: Executive summary". NASA. 
  4. ^ "HISTORY - AGENA AS OF 31 DEC67, VOLUME I". SPACE AND MISSILE SYSTEMS ORGANIZATION AIR FORCE SYSTEMS COMMAND. 1966-06. 
  5. ^ Andreas Parsch (2010). "Lockheed RM-81 Agena". Directory of U.S. Military Rockets and Missiles. Retrieved June 6, 2012. 
  6. ^ Courtney G Brooks, James M. Grimwood, Loyd S. Swenson (September 20, 2007). "Engines, Large and Small; Chariots for Apollo: A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft". Retrieved June 7, 2012. 
  7. ^ "LM Ascent Engine Specifications". 
  8. ^ "The Lunar Module". Moon Machines. June 2008. Science. http://store.discovery.com/moon-machines-dvd/detail.php?p=108637&v=science-channel_dvds&pagemax=all.
  9. ^ "New RS-18 builds upon LM Ascent Engine heritage". SpaceRef.com. September 3, 2008. 

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

External links [edit]


Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascent_Propulsion_System — Please support Wikipedia.
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