Cryogenic Fluid Management Technology Workshop. Volume 2: Roundtable Discussion of Technology Requirements
Abstract
The Cryogenic Fluid Management Technology Workshop was held April 28 to 30, 1987, at the NASA Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio. The major objective of the workshop was to identify future NASA needs for technology concerning the management of subcritical cryogenic fluids in the low-gravity space environment. In addition, workshop participants were asked to identify those technologies which will require in-space experimentation and thus are candidates for inclusion in the flight experiment being defined at Lewis. The principal application for advanced fluid management technology is the Space-Based Orbit Transfer Vehicle (SBOTV) and its servicing facility, the On-Orbit Cryogenic Fuel Depot (OOCFD). Other potential applications include the replenishment of cryogenic coolants (with the exception of superfluid helium), reactants, and propellants on board a variety of spacecraft including the space station and space-based weapon systems. The last day was devoted to a roundtable discussion of cryogenic fluid management technology requirements by 30 representatives from NASA, industry, and academia. This volume contains a transcript of the discussion of the eight major technology categories.
- Publication:
-
Workshop held in Cleveland
- Pub Date:
- March 1988
- Bibcode:
- 1988cloh.work...28.
- Keywords:
-
- Conferences;
- Cryogenic Fluids;
- Fluid Management;
- Technology Assessment;
- Aerospace Environments;
- Cryogenic Rocket Propellants;
- Orbit Transfer Vehicles;
- Orbital Servicing;
- Reduced Gravity;
- Space Shuttles;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer