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Featured researches published by Bryan C. Yount.


ieee aerospace conference | 2013

Venus In Situ Explorer Mission design using a mechanically deployed aerodynamic decelerator

Brandon Smith; Ethiraj Venkatapathy; Paul F. Wercinski; Bryan C. Yount; Dinesh K. Prabhu; Peter Gage; Lori S. Glaze; Charles Baker

The Venus In Situ Explorer (VISE) Mission addresses the highest priority science questions within the Venus community outlined in the National Research Councils Decadal Survey. The heritage Venus atmospheric entry system architecture, a 45° sphere-cone rigid aeroshell with a carbon phenolic thermal protection system, may no longer be the preferred entry system architecture compared to other viable alternatives being explored at NASA. A mechanically-deployed aerodynamic decelerator, known as the Adaptive Deployable Entry and Placement Technology (ADEPT), is an entry system alternative that can provide key operational benefits and risk reduction compared to a rigid aeroshell. This paper describes a mission feasibility study performed with the objectives of identifying potential adverse interactions with other mission elements and establishing requirements on decelerator performance. Feasibility is assessed through a launch-to-landing mission design study where the Venus Intrepid Tessera Lander (VITaL), a VISE science payload designed to inform the Decadal Survey results, is repackaged from a rigid aeroshell into the ADEPT decelerator. It is shown that ADEPT reduces the deceleration load on VITaL by an order of magnitude relative to a rigid aeroshell. The more benign entry environment opens up the VISE mission design environment for increased science return, reduced risk, and reduced cost. The ADEPT-VITAL mission concept of operations is presented and details of the entry vehicle structures and mechanisms are given. Finally, entry aerothermal analysis is presented that defines the operational requirements for a revolutionary structural-TPS material employed by ADEPT: three-dimensionally woven carbon cloth. Ongoing work to mitigate key risks identified in this feasibility study is presented.


AIAA Aerodynamic Decelerator Systems (ADS) Conference | 2013

Thermal and Structural Performance of Woven Carbon Cloth For Adaptive Deployable Entry and Placement Technology

James O. Arnold; Keith Peterson; Bryan C. Yount; Nigel Schneider; Jose Chavez-Garcia

Arcjet testing and analysis of a three-dimensional (3D) woven carbon fabric has shown that it can be used as a thermal protection system and as a load bearing structural component for a low ballistic coefficient hypersonic decelerator called ADEPT (Adaptive Deployable Entry and Placement Technology). Results of arcjet tests proved that the 3D woven carbon fabric can withstand flight-like heating while under flight-like biaxial mechanical loads representative of those encountered during shallow entry flight path angles into the atmosphere of Venus. Importantly, the arcjet test results have been used to extend a preliminary material thermal response model based on previous testing of the same 3D woven carbon fabric under uni-axial mechanical loading.


AIAA Aerodynamic Decelerator Systems (ADS) Conference | 2013

Progress in Payload Separation Risk Mitigation for a Deployable Venus Heat Shield

Brandon Smith; Bryan C. Yount; Ethiraj Venkatapathy; Eric C. Stern; Dinesh K. Prabhu; Daniel K. Litton

A deployable decelerator known as the Adaptive Deployable Entry and Placement Technology (ADEPT) offers substantial science and mass savings for the Venus In Situ Explorer (VISE) mission. The lander and science payload must be separated from ADEPT during atmospheric entry. This paper presents a trade study of the separation system concept of operations and provides a conceptual design of the baseline: aft-separation with a subsonic parachute. Viability of the separation system depends on the vehicles dynamic stability characteristics during deceleration from supersonic to subsonic speeds. A trajectory sensitivity study presented shows that pitch damping and Venusian winds drive stability prior to parachute deployment, while entry spin rate is not a driver of stability below Mach 5. Additionally, progress in free-flight CFD techniques capable of computing aerodynamic damping parameters is presented. Exploratory simulations of ADEPT at a constant speed of Mach number of 0.8 suggest the vehicle may have an oscillation limit cycle near 5 angle-of-attack. The proposed separation system conceptual design is thought to be viable.


ieee aerospace conference | 2016

Nano-ADEPT aeroloads wind tunnel test

Brandon Smith; Bryan C. Yount; Carl Kruger; Chad Brivkalns; Alberto Makino; Alan M. Cassell; Kerry A. Zarchi; Ryan McDaniel; James C. Ross; Paul F. Wercinski; Ethiraj Venkatapathy; Gregory Swanson; Nili Gold

A wind tunnel test of the Adaptable Deployable Entry and Placement Technology (ADEPT) was conducted in April 2015 at the US Armys 7×10 Foot Wind Tunnel located at NASA Ames Research Center. Key geometric features of the fabric test article were a 0.7 m deployed base diameter, a 70° half-angle forebody cone angle, eight ribs, and a nose-to-base radius ratio of 0.7. The primary objective of this wind tunnel test was to obtain static deflected shape and pressure distributions while varying pretension at dynamic pressures and angles of attack relevant to entry conditions at Earth, Mars, and Venus. Other objectives included obtaining aerodynamic force and moment data and determining the presence and magnitude of any dynamic aeroelastic behavior (buzz/flutter) in the fabric trailing edge. All instrumentation systems worked as planned and a rich data set was obtained. This paper describes the test articles, instrumentation systems, data products, and test results. Four notable conclusions are drawn. First, test data support adopting a pre-tension lower bound of 10 lbf/in for Nano-ADEPT mission applications. Second, test results indicate that the fabric conditioning process needs to be reevaluated. Third, no flutter/buzz of the fabric was observed for any test condition and should also not occur at hypersonic speeds. Fourth, translating one of the gores caused ADEPT to generate lift without the need for a center of gravity offset. At hypersonic speeds, the lift generated by actuating ADEPT gores could be used for vehicle control.


ieee aerospace conference | 2017

ADEPT sounding rocket one (SR-1) flight experiment overview

Paul F. Wercinski; Brandon Smith; Bryan C. Yount; Carl Kruger; Chad Brivkalns; Alberto Makino; Alan M. Cassell; Soumyo Dutta; Shakib Ghassemieh; Shang Wu; Stephen Battazzo; Owen Nishioka; Ethiraj Venkatapathy; Gregory Swanson

The Adaptable, Deployable Entry and Placement Technology (ADEPT) architecture represents a novel approach for entry vehicle design utilizing a high performance carbon-fabric to serve as the primary drag surface of the mechanically deployed decelerator. The ADEPT project team is advancing this decelerator technology via systems-level testing at the one-meter diameter (nano-ADEPT) scale. A subsonic aeroloads test (May 2015) and an arc-jet aeroheating test (Sept 2015) have already been completed. The initial system-level development of the nano-ADEPT architecture will culminate in the launch of a 0.7 meter deployed diameter ADEPT sounding rocket flight experiment named, SR-1. Launch is planned for August 2017. The test will utilize the NASA Flight Opportunities Program sounding rocket platform provided by UP Aerospace to launch SR-1 to an apogee over 100 km and achieve re-entry conditions with a peak velocity near Mach 3. The SR-1 flight experiment will demonstrate most of the primary end-to-end mission stages including: launch in a stowed configuration, separation and deployment in exo-atmospheric conditions, and passive ballistic re-entry of a 70-degree half-angle faceted cone geometry. ADEPT SR-1 will determine supersonic through transonic aerodynamic stability of the unique ADEPT blunt body shape with an open-back entry vehicle configuration.


4th AIAA Spacecraft Structures Conference | 2017

Non-Axisymmetric Inflatable Pressure Structure (NAIPS) Full-Scale Pressure Test

Thomas C. Jones; William R. Doggett; Jerry E. Warren; Judith J. Watson; Khadijah Shariff; Alberto Makino; Bryan C. Yount

Inflatable space structures have the potential to significantly reduce the required launch volume for large pressure vessels required for exploration applications including habitats, airlocks and tankage. In addition, mass savings can be achieved via the use of high specific strength softgoods materials, and the reduced design penalty from launching the structure in a densely packaged state. Large inclusions however, such as hatches, induce a high mass penalty at the interfaces with the softgoods and in the added rigid structure while reducing the packaging efficiency. A novel, Non-Axisymmetric Inflatable Pressure Structure (NAIPS) was designed and recently tested at NASA Langley Research Center to demonstrate an elongated inflatable architecture that could provide areas of low stress along a principal axis in the surface. These low stress zones will allow the integration of a flexible linear seal that substantially reduces the added mass and volume of a heritage rigid hatch structure. This paper describes the test of the first full-scale engineering demonstration unit (EDU) of the NAIPS geometry and a comparison of the results to finite element analysis.


3rd AIAA Spacecraft Structures Conference | 2016

Non-Axisymmetric Inflatable Pressure Structure (NAIPS) Concept that Enables Mass Efficient Packageable Pressure Vessels with Sealable Openings

William R. Doggett; Thomas C. Jones; Winfred S. Kenner; David F. Moore; Judith J. Watson; Jerry E. Warren; Alberto Makino; Bryan C. Yount; Molly Selig; Khadijah Shariff; Douglas Litteken; Martin Mikulas

Achieving minimal launch volume and mass are always important for space missions, especially for deep space manned missions where the costs required to transport mass to the destination are high and volume in the payload shroud is limited. Pressure vessels are used for many purposes in space missions including habitats, airlocks, and tank farms for fuel or processed resources. A lucrative approach to minimize launch volume is to construct the pressure vessels from soft goods so that they can be compactly packaged for launch and then inflated en route or at the final destination. In addition, there is the potential to reduce system mass because the packaged pressure vessels are inherently robust to launch loads and do not need to be modified from their in-service configuration to survive the launch environment. A novel concept is presented herein, in which sealable openings or hatches into the pressure vessels can also be fabricated from soft goods. To accomplish this, the structural shape is designed to have large regions where one principal stress is near zero. The pressure vessel is also required to have an elongated geometry for applications such as airlocks.


AIAA Aerodynamic Decelerator Systems (ADS) Conference | 2013

Structures and Mechanisms Design Concepts for Adaptive Deployable Entry Placement Technology

Bryan C. Yount; James O. Arnold; Peter Gage; Jeffrey Mockelman; Ethiraj Venkatapathy


Archive | 2012

Mechanically-Deployed Hypersonic Decelerator and Conformal Ablator Technologies for Mars Missions

Ethiraj Venkatapathy; Paul F. Wercinski; Robin Beck; Kenneth R. Hamm; Bryan C. Yount; Alberto Makino; Brandon Smith; Peter Gage; Dinesh K. Prabhu


Archive | 2016

System Level Aerothermal Testing for the Adaptive Deployable Entry and Placement Technology (ADEPT)

Alan Cassell; Sergey Gorbunov; Bryan C. Yount; Dinesh K. Prabhu; Maxim de Jong; Tane Boghozian; Frank Hui; Yuli Chen; Carl Kruger; Carl C. Poteet; Paul F. Wercinski

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