Transcripts of 14525 Moving Roman: Propulsion



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[Emily Beckman] Once the fuel


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runs out, there is no more mission.


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You have to decommission.


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So the fuel is very important

for the spacecraft.


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It can only last as long as the fuel.


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[Title: Moving Roman - Propulsion]


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[Narrator] Telescopes like NASA's

Nancy Grace Roman Space


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Telescope move and point

using two methods.


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There are reaction wheels

to turn the spacecraft with precision


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and then hold it steady.


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And then there are thrusters

that use propellant for large motions


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to push the spacecraft into its correct

orbit and maintain that orbit.


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All which require fuel.


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Before entering the large clean room,


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the propulsion tanks were assembled

in a smaller lab.


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[Emily Beckman] So right now we're looking

at the propulsion system for the Roman


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Space Telescope.


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Today


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we put our last tank on the propulsion

support frame.


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The propulsion support frame is the frame

that's supporting everything.


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[Narrator] The four tanks seen here


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were each carefully lifted individually.


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The deck that supports them

gets positioned below that tank.


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These four tanks

fuel a series of 24 thrusters


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with two different sizes.


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[Emily Beckman] On the sides.


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We have all of the engines,

so we have four sets up top.


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Those are our upper ACS’s.


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We have four sets at the bottom.


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Those are our lower ACS engines.


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And then at the bottom over here,

those big triangle pods,


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those are all of our Delta V engines.


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So those will do our big maneuvers.


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[Narrator] With the tanks in position.


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They're ready for integration

into the telescope spacecraft bus,


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which happens in NASA's

largest clean room.


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Now, thrusters use conservation

of momentum, ignited


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fuel creates expanding gas,

which exits the engines in one direction.


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And the observatory moves

in the opposite direction.


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The thrusters are so efficient

in the vacuum of space


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that they can be surprisingly small

to move


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the 18 thousand pound spacecraft.


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This is all it needs.


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With the thrusters

on the outside of Roman,


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the propellant tanks will sit

within the observatory central cylinder


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close to their teammates,

the reaction wheels.


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When the reaction wheels

get to their maximum speed,


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they have to be slowed down again.


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The thrusters fire to balance

the angular momentum change


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so that the spacecraft doesn't

turn as the wheels slow.


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Since fuel is limited,


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it usually determines

the lifespan of distant


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spacecraft.


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Luckily, the telescope can also point


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only using electricity.


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But how reaction wheels work.


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That's another story.