Advanced Launch Technology Life Cycle Analysis Using the Architectural Comparison Tool (ACT)
NASA NTRS, 6 April 2015
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20150004148
[Note: This report seems to indicate increased interest and a finding to put more effort into development of small launch vehicles at NASA.]
In FY14, NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) Game Changing
Development (GCD) Program investigated two technology areas in the ALTIA activity. The first
would enable new markets in dedicated nanolaunchers; that is, launchers whose payload is very
small and devoted solely to delivering CubeSat-sized payloads that would otherwise be restricted
to secondary accommodation on missions that use a much larger class of launch vehicle (the
state of the art).
Finding #2 – Pursue focused nanolauncher technologies and design approaches, such as
integrated avionics and a three-stage nanolauncher.
These two examples enable simpler infrastructures, shorter production times, and greater flight
rate capability. Of the technologies the team had time to pursue, advanced avionics can reduce
recurring cost by ~20%, as well as improve launch rates. However, advances in avionics that do
not reduce the number of procured and installed avionics components do not realize significant
cost and productivity benefits. A wider technology portfolio would be more effective in
improving life cycle characteristics. A three-stage NL001 configuration (perhaps one with solids
on the lower stages topped with a very small liquid upper stage) should achieve similar
reductions,