156 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
156 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
"6_2_11.TXT" (8607 bytes) was created on 02-21-89
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ORIGIN OF THE NAME "SPACE SHUTTLE"
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The name "Space Shuttle" evolved from descriptive references in the
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press, aerospace industry, and government and gradually came into use
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as concepts of reusable space transportation developed. As early NASA
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advanced studies grew into a full program, the name came into official
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use.
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In January 1975, NASA's Project Designation Committee was
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considering suggestions for a new name for the Space Shuttle,
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submitted by Headquarters and Center personnel and others at the
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request of Dr. George M. Low, NASA Deputy Administrator. Rockwell
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International Corporation, Shuttle prime contractor, was reported as
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referring to it as "Spaceplane." (Bernice M. Taylor, Administrative
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Assistant to Administrator for Public Affairs, NASA, telephone
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interview, 12 Feb 1975; and AVIATION WEEK & SPACE TECHNOLOGY, 102 [20
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Jan 1975], 10)
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From its establishment in 1958, NASA studied aspects of reusable
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launch vehicles and spacecraft that could return to the Earth. The
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predecessor National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) and
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then NASA cooperated with the Air Force in the X-15 rocket research
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aircraft program in the 1950s and 1960s and in the 1958-1963 Dyna-Soar
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("Dynamic-Soaring") hypersonic boost-glide vehicle program. Beginning
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in 1963, NASA joined the USAF in research toward the Aerospaceplane, a
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manned vehicle to go into orbit and return, taking off and landing
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horizontally. Joint flight tests in the 1950s and 1960s of wingless
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lifting bodies--the M2 series, HL-10, and eventually the X-24--tested
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principles for future spacecraft reentering the atmosphere.
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Marshall Space Flight Center sponsored studies of recovery and reuse
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of the Saturn V launch vehicle. MSFC Director of Future Projects Heinz
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H. Koelle in 1962 projected a "commercial space line to Earth orbit
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and the Moon," for cargo transportation by 1980 or 1990. Leonard M.
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Tinnan of MSFC published a 1963 description of a winged, flyback
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Saturn V. Other studies of "logistics spacecraft systems," "orbital
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carrier vehicles," and "reusable orbital transports" followed
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throughout the 1960s in NASA, the Department of Defense, and industry.
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As the Apollo program neared its goal, NASA's space program objectives
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widened and the need for a fully reusable, economical space
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transportation system for both manned and unmanned missions became
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more urgent. In 1966 the NASA budget briefing outlined an FY 1967
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program including advanced studies of "ferry and logistics vehicles."
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The President's Science Advisory Committee in February 1967
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recommended studies of more economical ferry systems with total
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recovery and rescue possibilities. Industry studies under NASA
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contracts 1969-1971 led to definition of a reusable Space Shuttle
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system and to a 1972 decision to develop the Shuttle.
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The term "shuttle" crept into forecasts of space transportation at
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least as early as 1952. In a COLLIER'S article, Dr. Wernher von Braun,
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then Director of the U.S. Army Ordnance Guided Missiles Development
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Group, Huntsville AL, envisioned space stations supplied by rockets
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ships that would enter orbit and return to Earth to land "like a
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normal airplane," with small, rocket-powered "shuttle-craft," or
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"space taxis," to ferry men and materials between rocket ship and
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space station.
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In October 1959 Lockheed Aircraft Corporation and Hughes Aircraft
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Company reported plans for space ferry or "commuter express," for
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"shuttling" men and materials between Earth and outer space. In
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December, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Correspondent Courtney Shelton
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wrote of the future possibility of a "man-carrying space shuttle to
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the nearest planets."
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The term reappeared occasionally in studies through the early 1960s. A
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1963 NASA contract to Douglas Aircraft Company was to produce a
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conceptual design for Philip Bono's "Reusable Orbital Module Booster
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and Utility Shuttle (ROMBUS)," to orbit and return to touch down with
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legs like the lunar landing module's. Jettison of eight strap-on
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hydrogen tanks for recovery and reuse was part of the concept. The
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press--in accounts of European discussions of Space Transporter
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proposals and in articles on the Aerospaceplane, NASA contract
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studies, USAF START reentry studies, and the joint lifting-body
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flights--referred to "shuttle" service, "reusable orbital shuttle
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transport." and "space shuttle" forerunners.
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The DEFENSE/SPACE BUSINESS DAILY newsletter was persistent in
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referring to USAF and NASA reentry and lifting-body tests as "Space
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Shuttle" tests. Editor-in-Chief Norman L. Baker said the newsletter
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had first tried to reduce the name "Aerospaceplane" to "Spaceplane"
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for that project and had moved from that to "Space Shuttle" for
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reusable, back-and-forth space transport concepts as early as 1963.
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The name was suggested to him by the Washington DC to New York airline
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shuttle flights. (Telephone interview, 22 April 1975.)
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Application of the word "shuttle" to anything that moved quickly
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back and forth (from shuttlecock to shuttle train and the verb "to
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shuttle") had arisen in the English language from the name of the
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weaving instruments that passed or "shot" the thread of the woof from
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one edge of the cloth to the other. The English word came from the
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Anglo-Saxon "scytel" for missile, related to the Danish "skyttel" for
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shuttle, the Old Norwegian "skutill" for harpoon, and the English
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"shoot." (WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY, ed 2, unabridged.)
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In 1965 Dr. Walter R. Dorberger, Vice President for Research of
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Textron Corporation's Bell Aerosystems Company, published "Space
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Shuttle of the Future: The Aerospaceplane" in Bell's periodical
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RENDEZVOUS. In July Dr. Dornberger gave the main address in a
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University of Tennessee Space Institute short course: "The
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Recoverable, Reusable Space Shuttle."
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NASA used the term "shuttle" for its reusable transportation concept
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officially in 1968. Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight
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George E. Mueller briefed the British Interplanetary Society in London
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in August with charts and drawings of "space shuttle" operations and
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concepts. In November, addressing the National Space Club in
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Washington DC, Dr. Mueller declared the next major thrust in space
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should be the space shuttle.
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By 1969 "Space Shuttle" was the standard NASA designation, although
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some efforts were made to find another name as studies were pursued.
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The "Space Shuttle" was given an agency-wide code number; the Space
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Shuttle Steering Group and Space Shuttle Task Group appointed by
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President Nixon to help define post-Apollo space objectives
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recommended the U.S. develop a reusable, economic space transportation
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system including a shuttle. And in October feasibility study results
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were presented at a Space Shuttle Conference in Washington. Intensive
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design, technology, and cost studies followed in 1970 and 1971.
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On 5 January 1972 President Nixon announced that the United States
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would develop the Space Shuttle.
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The Space Shuttle would be a delta-winged aircraftlike orbiter about
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the size of a DC-9 aircraft, mounted at launch on a large, expendable
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liquid-propellant tank and two recoverable and reusable
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solid-propellant rocket boosters (SRBs) that would drop away in
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flight. The Shuttle's cargo bay eventually would carry most of the
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Nation's civilian and military payloads. Each Shuttle was to have a
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lifetime of 100 space missions, carrying up to 29,500 kilograms at a
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time. Sixty or seventy flights a year were expected in the 1980s.
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Flown by a three-man crew, the Shuttle would carry satellites to
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orbit, repair them in orbit, and later return them to Earth for
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refurbishment and reuse. It would also carry up to four scientists and
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engineers to work in a pressurized laboratory or technicians to
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service satellites. After a 7- to 30-day mission, the orbiter would
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return to Earth and land like an aircraft, for preparation for the
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next flight.
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At the end of 1974, parts were being fabricated, assembled, and tested
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for flight vehicles. Horizontal tests were to begin in 1977 and
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orbital tests in 1979. The first manned orbital flight was scheduled
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for March 1979 and the complete vehicle was to be operational in 1980.
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---
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ORIGINS OF NASA NAMES, Helen T. Wells, Susan H. Whiteley, and Carrie
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E. Karegeannes, The NASA History Series, SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL
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INFORMATION OFFICE, 1976, Washington DC, NASA SP-4402.
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