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NASA signs agreement for a European-provided Orion service module

The service module will be the powerhouse that fuels and propels the manned spacecraft.
By NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. Published: January 17, 2013
Orion-spacecraft
As part of a new agreement between the two space agencies, the European Space Agency will provide the service module for NASA’s Orion spacecraft. // Credit: NASA
NASA signed an agreement in mid-December for the European Space Agency (ESA) to provide a service module for the Orion spacecraft’s Exploration Mission-1 in 2017.

When the Orion spacecraft blasts off atop NASA’s Space Launch System rocket in 2017, attached will be the ESA-provided service module — the powerhouse that fuels and propels the Orion spacecraft.

“Space has long been a frontier for international cooperation as we explore,” said Dan Dumbacher of NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. “This latest chapter builds on NASA’s excellent relationship with ESA as a partner in the International Space Station and helps us move forward in our plans to send humans farther into space than we’ve ever been before.”

The agreement primarily maps out a plan for ESA to fulfill its share of operational costs and additional supporting services for the International Space Station by providing the Orion service module and necessary elements of its design for NASA’s Exploration Mission-1 in 2017.

There are three major components to the Orion vehicle: the crew capsule, which will carry four astronauts into space on crewed flights and bring them home for a safe landing; the launch abort system, which would pull the crew module to safety in the unlikely event of a life-threatening problem during launch; and the service module, which will house Orion’s power, thermal, and propulsion systems. The service module is located directly below the crew capsule and will contain the in-space propulsion capability for orbital transfer, altitude control, and high-altitude ascent aborts. It also will generate and store power and provide thermal control, water, and air for the astronauts. It will remain connected to the crew module until just before the capsule returns to Earth.

“This is not a simple system,” said Mark Geyer from NASA. “ESA’s contribution is going to be critical to the success of Orion’s 2017 mission."

Exploration Mission-1 in 2017 will be the first integrated flight test with both the Orion spacecraft and NASA’s new Space Launch System. It will follow the upcoming Exploration Flight Test-1 in 2014 in which an uncrewed Orion will launch atop a Delta IV Heavy rocket and fly to an altitude of 3,600 miles (5,800 kilometers) above Earth’s surface, farther than a human spacecraft has gone in 40 years. Lockheed Martin is building a test service module for the flight test.

Exploration Mission-1 in 2017 will launch an uncrewed Orion spacecraft to demonstrate the performance of the integrated Space Launch System rocket and spacecraft prior to a crewed flight. It will be followed by Exploration Mission-2, which will launch Orion and a crew of four astronauts into space.

“We have a lot to look forward to in the coming years with human exploration,” Dumbacher said. “NASA is thrilled to have ESA as a partner as we set out to explore our solar system.”

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5 stars
GEORGE STACEY said:
No, we're consolidating co-operation in the eventual human -- not just American -- exploration and colonization of the solar system. There are 7 billion of us on this planet, and we -- ALL of us -- need the additional real estate!
RUSSELL FERO from ARIZONA said:
This seems like it should go to not only provide jobs for Americans, but also - why also outsource technologies we need and can develop ourselves ? We went to the Moon by ourselves. We did not 'outsource' that technology - or jobs.

Any nation that would achieve man-kinds dream of the ages.. only to just trash out all of that hardware and the skilled know how, the scientists and technicians.

Look at America today. We cannot even send our people up to our (mostly !) space station... unless we pay carfare to Russia.

NASA was ravaged across the years, the 'Augustine' committee ruined our tremendous capabilities. Just think, more than 44 years ago.. America had already sent 3 humans all the way to the Moon. Then landed there in July 1969 !!! We could do so regularly and we not only were walking on the Moon - we were DRIVING on the Moon !! America had become the only interplanetary society.

It is fine to have a joint project with another nation. But to rely on another nation for America's ongoing manned spaceflight:

“This is not a simple system,” said Mark Geyer from NASA. “ESA’s contribution is going to be critical to the success of Orion’s 2017 mission." Uh huh. Not even to mention the use of an ancient Delta missile. The old IRBM - 'upgraded'. With Apollo we had a purely scientific Saturn V rocket. It was not usable for War purposes. The Delta still is.

Who would ever have dreamed we would be at this point.. as we watched the guys on Apollo 15.. drive right up to Hadley Rille !

4 stars
RICHARD MCCONNELL from UNITED KINGDOM said:
Let's hope that this means that humanity will at last get out of low Earth orbit (again!!).
5 stars
ROBERT A MORSTADT from UTAH said:
It's not about outsourcing jobs. ESA will fulfill their share of operational costs and support services for the ISS.
3 stars
ROBERT MCCABE from NORTH CAROLINA said:
So we're outsourcing more jobs...
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