[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 147 (Thursday, December 4, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6325-S6326]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
``ORION'' SPACECRAFT
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I wish to share with the Senate the fact
that we are about to do the first flight test of the new NASA human
spacecraft, called Orion.
As a matter of fact, it was attempted earlier this morning. There was
a launch window between 7:05 and 9:44 eastern time. In fact, a
combination of some weather concerns plus some questions of valves
opening on some of the fuel lines in the rocket and trying to rework
those valves ultimately led to the decision to scrub the mission today.
[[Page S6326]]
The spacecraft looks like a capsule. If we recall the Apollo capsule
that took us to the Moon, it carried three astronauts. It was 12 feet
in diameter. Orion is 16.5 feet in diameter and is being designed to
carry four astronauts. But it is the forerunner to the space systems
that will eventually--in 20 years--carry us to the planet Mars.
It will be launched today on an existing workhorse. We have two major
workhorses in our stable. The Delta--the Delta IV and this, configured
with additional boosters, is called the Delta IV Heavy.
The other workhorse in the stable getting so many of our payloads
into space, including our military satellites, is the Atlas V. Both of
them are proven workhorses and have been almost flawless. This
particular spacecraft, for its first flight test, is going up on a
Delta IV Heavy.
As such, what it will do is first to put it into low Earth orbit, and
from there it will be projected out 3,600 miles from the Earth and come
back as if it were on a mission to the Moon or to an asteroid or coming
back from Mars in a trajectory, coming through the Earth's atmosphere,
creating quite a few g's and creating--at about 20,000 miles an hour as
it is coming back into the Earth's atmosphere--about 4,000 degrees
Farenheit on the heat shield.
So the flight test today is to test the structural integrity of the
spacecraft as well as to test the viability of the heat shield. That
has now been postponed until tomorrow. It was my expectation Senator
Thune would be able to go. As it turns out, he has to go back to South
Dakota. I will be there at the Cape, and we will report on the launch
later on to the Senate next week.
But it will all be done in 1 day, and it will splash down in the
Pacific, somewhere in the region of the State of the Presiding Officer.
They are actually going to have television coverage of the splashdown
because we have a Predator that will be over the Atlantic. That is why
we have to have the weather there, as well as the weather at the Cape,
to be exactly right so we can record the splashdown, because this is a
flight test.
We are developing a new spacecraft to take humans to missions far
beyond low Earth orbit. A lot of people think the human space program
was shut down after the space shuttle. No, we are just going into the
new design of new spacecraft that can take us on a mission out of
Earth's orbit as we explore the Earth's heavens. I will give a report
to the Senate next week.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
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