This document provides information which shows that the NASA Lewis Research Center's Space Power Facility (SPF) will be ready to execute the Space Station electric power system thermal vacuum chamber testing. The SPF is located at LeRC West (formerly the Plum Brook Station), Sandusky, Ohio. The SPF is the largest space environmental chamber in the world, having an inside horizontal diameter of 100 ft. and an inside height at the top of the hemisphere of 122 ft. The vacuum system can achieve a pressure lower than 1 x 10(exp -5) Torr. The cryoshroud, cooled by gaseous nitrogen, can reach a temperature of -250 F, and is 80 ft. long x 40 ft. wide x 22 ft. high. There is access to the chamber through two 50 ft. x 50 ft. doors. Each door opens in...
Testing high power electric propulsion devices poses unique requirements on space simulation facilit...
The Space Station Freedom (SSF) Program requirements are a 30 year reliable service life in low Eart...
The Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP) subpanel of the Space Nuclear Propulsion Test Facilities Panel ...
NASA Lewis Research Center facilities were developed to support testing of the Space Station Electri...
The purpose of this paper is to describe the current and near-term environmental test capabilities o...
In April of 1997, the NASA Lewis Research Center hosted the testing of the photovoltaic thermal radi...
The generation and distribution of electric power for Space Station Freedom (SSF) is critical to the...
The NASA Lewis Research Center, located in Cleveland, Ohio, has a number of space chemical propulsio...
A preliminary plan is presented for testing a thermionic reactor in the Plum Brook Space Power Facil...
Space Station Freedom's (SSF's) electric power system (EPS) hardware and software verification is pe...
The 8 ft. by 15 ft. thermal vacuum chamber (TVAC), housed in Building 1250 at the NASA Langley Resea...
In 1984, the President directed NASA to undertake the development of Space Station Freedom, the next...
An overview is presented of the NASA Lewis Research Center Free-Piston Stirling Space Power Converte...
One-page descriptions for approximately 200 existing government, university, and industry facilities...
The presentation includes general description on the following test facilities: Fuel Cell Testing La...
Testing high power electric propulsion devices poses unique requirements on space simulation facilit...
The Space Station Freedom (SSF) Program requirements are a 30 year reliable service life in low Eart...
The Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP) subpanel of the Space Nuclear Propulsion Test Facilities Panel ...
NASA Lewis Research Center facilities were developed to support testing of the Space Station Electri...
The purpose of this paper is to describe the current and near-term environmental test capabilities o...
In April of 1997, the NASA Lewis Research Center hosted the testing of the photovoltaic thermal radi...
The generation and distribution of electric power for Space Station Freedom (SSF) is critical to the...
The NASA Lewis Research Center, located in Cleveland, Ohio, has a number of space chemical propulsio...
A preliminary plan is presented for testing a thermionic reactor in the Plum Brook Space Power Facil...
Space Station Freedom's (SSF's) electric power system (EPS) hardware and software verification is pe...
The 8 ft. by 15 ft. thermal vacuum chamber (TVAC), housed in Building 1250 at the NASA Langley Resea...
In 1984, the President directed NASA to undertake the development of Space Station Freedom, the next...
An overview is presented of the NASA Lewis Research Center Free-Piston Stirling Space Power Converte...
One-page descriptions for approximately 200 existing government, university, and industry facilities...
The presentation includes general description on the following test facilities: Fuel Cell Testing La...
Testing high power electric propulsion devices poses unique requirements on space simulation facilit...
The Space Station Freedom (SSF) Program requirements are a 30 year reliable service life in low Eart...
The Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP) subpanel of the Space Nuclear Propulsion Test Facilities Panel ...