6.4
Terrestrial Environment (Climatic) Criteria Handbook For Use In Aerospace Vehicle Development
Dale L. Johnson, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; and W. W. Vaughan
An update of the NASA ‘Terrestrial Environment (Climatic) Criteria Handbook for Use in Aerospace Vehicle Development’ (NASA-HDBK-1001) is currently in the final process of completion for release in late-2004 or early 2005. The current version of the Handbook was approved by the NASA Chief Engineer in 2000 as a NASA Preferred Technical Standard. However, it was based on natural environment criteria developed mostly in the early 1990’s. Therefore, a task was approved to completely update the Handbook in order to reflect the current state-of-the-art in the various terrestrial environmental climatic criteria areas. The technical areas include: Winds, atmospheric constituents, thermodynamic parameters/models/extremes, humidity, electricity, precipitation/fog/icing, cloud phenomena/cover, diffusion/toxic release, severe weather/tornado/hurricane, solar/thermal radiation, geologic hazards, and sea state. A summary of this extensive update will be presented along with some key examples of the new contents. Earlier versions of this publication have been extensively used by the aerospace community, especially program managers and design engineers for required natural terrestrial environment inputs to use in mission planning, development studies and trades, plus by those concerned with terrestrial environment descriptions for the major test ranges within the United States.
Session 6, Space Launch and Range Support
Wednesday, 6 October 2004, 8:00 AM-10:00 AM
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