European eXPErimental Re-entry Testbed
European eXPErimental Re-entry Test-bed (EXPERT) is an European Space Agency aerothermodynamics research programme. It was planned that vehicle will be launched on a Russian Volna launch system and will provide knowledge and experience in the design and development of re-entry vehicles.[1] As of 2012, one element in a European Space Agency push to develop vehicles capable of re-entry has been pushed back until at least 2013 as the agency seeks a launch alternative to the Russian submarine-launched Volna rocket which was withdrawn.[2] One of its main goals was to test materials for ESA’s Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle (IXV), an unmanned, delta-winged plane launched in 2015 aboard ESA’s new Vega small-satellite launcher.[3] Currently EXPERT remains in storage conditions in Turin.[4]
EXPERT Mission Objectives
According to an ESA-ESTEC paper,[5] the EXPERT program has the following goals:
- Enable in-flight data gathering of selected aerothermodynamic phenomena with high accuracy and reliability
- Allow the validation of numerical modeling tools (CFD) and of methodologies for ground-to-flight data extrapolation
- Qualify in-flight classical and advanced measurement techniques
- Conduct extensive post-flight analyses based on in-flight data, pre-flight numerical databases, preflight ground testing activities.
References
- ↑ Space cone to acquire expert data
- ↑ ESA re-entry test needs new budget after Russian pull-out
- ↑ European Re-entry Capsule Grounded After Russia Withdraws Launch Offer
- ↑ "ESA Bulletin 161 (1st quarter 2015)" (PDF). ESA. 2015. p. 79. ISSN 0376-4265. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
- ↑ European Experimental Re-Entry Testbed EXPERT: Qualification of Payloads for Flight
External links
- European eXPErimental Re-entry Test-bed (EXPERT)
- EXPERT – European experimental re-entry test-bed
- EXPERT: An atmospheric re-entry test-bed
- Development of the re-entry spectrometer RESPECT for the ESA capsule EXPERT