Meet the USAF X37B Unmanned Space Plane

MEET THE USAF X37B UNMANNED SPACE PLANE
AN ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY DEMONSTRATOR!

April 21, 2010

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It will be interesting to watch this program for future modifications and changes for adaptation of this X37B, AFTER the US observes its capabilities for a multitude of other activities for which it was not originally designed. Evaluation of its potential is more than worth watching, but at this time it’s future uses are speculative.

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The following quoted material came from Wikipedia

Begin Quoted Information

The Boeing X-37 Advanced Technology Demonstrator is an unpiloted demonstration spacep

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lane that is intended to test future launch technologies while in orbit and during atmospheric reentry. It is a reusable robotic spacecraft that is a 120 percent–scaled derivative of the X-40A. The X-37 had its first flight as a drop test on April 7, 2006

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at Edwards AFB.

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The spacecraft will be launched as a United States Air Force mission, rather than a NASA mission, in April 2010.

Design and development

In 1999, NASA selected Boeing Integrated Defense Systems to design and develop the vehicle, which was built by the California

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branch of Boeing’s Phantom Works.

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The X-37 was transferred from NASA to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency on September 13, 2004. The program has become a classified project, though it is not known whether DARPA will maintain this status for the project. NASA’s spaceflight program may be centered around the Crew Exploration Vehicle, while DARPA will promote the X-37 as part of the independent space policy which the Department of Defense has pursued since the Challenger disaster.

This vehicle has the potential to become United States’ first operational military spaceplane, after the cancellation of Dyna-Soar in 1963. It is expected to operate in a velocity range of up to Mach 25.

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Among the technologies to be demonstrated with the X-37 are improved thermal protection systems, avionics, the autonomous guidance system, and an advanced airframe. The on-board engine is the Rocketdyne AR-2/3, which is fueled by hydrogen peroxide and JP-8.

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The X-37 was originally designed to be carried into orbit in the Space Shuttle cargo bay, but underwent redesign for launch on a Delta IV or comparable rocket after it was determined that a shuttle flight would be uneconomical.

The vehicle which was used as an atmospheric drop test glider had no propulsion system. Instead of an operational vehicle’s payload bay doors it had an enclosed and reinforced upper fuselage structure to allow

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it to be mated with a mothership.

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Most of the thermal protection tiles were ‘fake’, made of inexpensive foam rather than ceramic; a smaller number of the X-37’s tiles were actual TPS tiles, and TPS blankets were used in areas where heating would not have been severe enough to require tiles.

Drop test

On September 2, 2004 it was reported that for its initial atmospheric drop tests, the X-37 would be launched from the Scaled Composites White Knight, a high-altitude research aircraft better known for launching Scaled’s SpaceShipOne.

On June 21, 2005, the X-37 completed a captive-carry flight underneath the White Knight at Mojave Spaceport, Mojave, California.

Through the second half of 2005, the X-37 underwent structural upgrades including reinforcement of the nose wheel supports. Further captive-carry flight tests and the first drop test were expected mid-February 2006.

March 10, 2006 was scheduled for X-37’s public debut—its first free flight, to be broadcast live on NASA TV.

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But an Arctic storm covered the area, dropping snow on the Mojave. The X-37 remained in the airport’s Hangar 77, while an occasional engineer popped out onto the flight line to snap pictures of the snow.

The next attempt at a flight, on March 15, 2006 was canceled due to high winds.[3] On March 24, 2006, The X-37 flew, but a data link failure prevented the free flight and the vehicle returned to the ground still docked with its White Knight carrier.

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On April 7, 2006, the X-37 made its first free glide flight. During l anding, however an anomaly caused the vehicle to run off the runway

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and it sustained minor damage.

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Following an extended down time while the vehicle was repaired, the program moved from Mojave to Air Force Plant 42 (KPMD) in Palmdale, California for the remainder of the flight test program. White Knight continued to be based at Mojave, but would ferry over to Plant 42 when flights were scheduled. Five additional flights were performed, at least one of which is believed to have been a free flight with a successful landing.

X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle

On November 17, 2006 the U.S. Air Force announced it would develop the X-37B from the NASA X-37A. The Air Force version is designated X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle (OTV). The OTV program builds on industry and government investments by DARPA, NASA and the Air Force. The X-37B effort will be led by the Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office and includes partnerships with NASA and the Air Force Research Laboratory. Boeing is the prime contractor for the OTV program.[6]

The Secretary of the Air Force states the OTV program will focus on “risk reduction, experimentation, and operational concept development for reusable space vehicle technologies, in support of long term developmental space objectives.”

The X-37B was originally scheduled for launch in the payload bay of the Space Shuttle, but following the Columbia accident, it was transferred to a Delta II 7920. It was subsequently transferred to the Atlas V following concerns over the spacecraft’s aerodynamic properties during launch.

The X-37B is to be launched on an Atlas V rocket from SLC-41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida. The spacecraft will be placed into low Earth orbit for testing, then it will be de-orbited for landing. The landing is to occur on a runway at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California with Edwards Air Force Base as the alternate site.

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The duration of the mission has not been announced, although an Air Force spokesperson has said the vehicle has a requirement to be on-orbit for up to 270 days. The launch is scheduled for no earlier than April 22, 2010. A second test for the X-37B is scheduled for 2011.

End Quoted Material from Wikipedia

Begin Excerpt from DEBKAfile Special Report

Secret US Air Force unmanned space plane set for launch

DEBKAfile Special Report

April 20, 2010, 7:12 PM (GMT+02:00)

Blastoff of the unmanned X-37B space plane from Kennedy Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida Space Center was delayed until Thursday, April 22, to allow Discovery to return to earth at the nearby Kennedy Space Center. With many of its features kept secret, the project has sparked speculation that the little Orbital Test Vehicle is the space version of the US Predator drone.

The shuttle with its seven astronauts made a safe landing to earth Tuesday after a 14-day journey of more than 6.2 million miles in space.

The 4.9-ton spacecraft – which has a wingspan of 4.27 meters and is 8.84 meters long – will be testing the long-duration ability of reusable space vehicles to stay in space for up to 270 days at an altitude of 200-800 km from earth before making an automatic landing at the Vandenberg Air force Base in California.

The duration and exact nature of the Orbital Test Vehicle’s mission have not been disclosed by the US Air Force Capabilities Office which oversees the project. Some space experts are calling its launch the onset of the “weaponization” or militarization” of space. Our military experts describe the X-37B as the first unmanned space craft able to carry out combat missions outside Earth.

The X-37B will be launched Thursday by an Atlas-5 rocket.

Originally built by Boeing’s Phantom Works Division as NASA X-37, the space agency closed it down when funding ran out and turned the space plane over to the Defense Research Projects Agency (DARPA). In 2006, the Air Force took over the prototype.

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