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Federal Aviation Administration. Reusable Launch Vehicle Working Group Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee . Presented to COMSTAC Meeting George Whitesides, RLVWG Chairman May 16, 2008. RLV Working Group: Agenda. Acknowledgement of Michael S. Kelly
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Federal Aviation Administration Reusable Launch Vehicle Working Group Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee Presented to COMSTAC Meeting George Whitesides, RLVWG Chairman May 16, 2008
RLV Working Group: Agenda • Acknowledgement of Michael S. Kelly • Previous Action Item Status • Safety Performance Targets • Human Space Flight Study • Update on FAA Experimental Permits • Update on HSP Training Task Force • Action Item Review and New Business
Recognizing Ten Years of Leadership of the RLV Working Group … Thank You Mike!
RLV Working Group: Actions Status • RLVWG Chair to distribute biomedical research briefings to RLVWG (complete) • RLVWG to submit suggestions for biomedical data collection to AST by 20 November 2007 (complete) • RLVWG stakeholders to submit Human Spaceflight Safety Performance Target recommendations to AST by 20 November (complete) • RLVWG members to submit AST R&D topics to Chair by 14 December 2007 (complete) • Notify broader COMSTAC of Taskforce on Training Standards (complete)
Comments on Development of Human Space Flight Safety Performance (HSF) TargetKen Wong, Manager, Licensing and Safety Division, AST • On October 10, 2007, the COMSTAC RLV Working Group was invited to submit comments and suggestions for a proposed HSF performance target. • The FAA received nine comments from different companies, organizations, and individuals. Comments included: • It’s too early to establish an HSF safety performance target at this time because there haven’t been enough commercial human space flights. • The FAA will consider the comments it receives as it develops an HSF safety performance target. • It is not too early to consider what metrics should be used to monitor HSF safety in the future. • The FAA would like the continued assistance of COMSTAC in creating these metrics and requests comments on the preliminary HSF target: • Limit the fatal accident rate for licensed suborbital launches and reentries carrying flight crew or space flight participants to less than the overall historical rate of 1%.
Status of Human Space Flight (HSF) Study Required By CongressKen Wong, Manager, Licensing and Safety Division, AST • Team of Aerospace Corporation, George Washington Univ., and Massachusetts Institute of Technology selected in September 2007 to conduct study. • Preliminary and formal kickoff meetings with FAA and study team held in Oct. and Nov. 2007. • Study team provided to various organizations in Nov. 2007, a list of questions concerning HSF-related issues that the study will address. • Study team briefed its study approach to the Personal Spaceflight Federation (Dec. 2007). • Study team spoke to Congressional Staff (Jan. 2008) and NASA HQ personnel (Dec. 2007 and May 2008). • FAA discussed initial planning and briefed status of study to: • NASA and NASA’s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (March 2007 and April 2008) • COMSTAC RLV Working Group (May 2007 and May 2008). • Study team is drafting report while it awaits additional responses to its list of questions. • Draft study report due on June 23, 2008.
Experimental Permits Report to COMSTACMichelle Murray, Experimental Permit Program Lead • Eight Maximum Probable Loss Determinations • Third Party Ranged from $3-9M • Government Ranged from $0-1.5M • Four Experimental Permits Issued • Fifteen Permitted Launches • Challenges • Allowable Changes vs. Application Modification • Methodology for determining MPL • Safety Clear Zones • Operating Areas • Buffer Zones • Regression and Software Testing • 1st party vs. 3rd party
COMSTAC RLV Task Force on Training Status ReportMaurice Kennedy, Director, Research and Strategic Planning, United Space Alliance • RLV Task Force was formed October 2007 • Their purpose is to develop recommended commercial human spaceflight training standards and submit appropriate recommendations to the FAA through the COMSTAC RLV WG • Focus is on U.S. Commercial human spaceflight operations phase, not the development and experimental phase. • The training standards are intended to apply to all U. S. companies and foreign companies that operate in the U. S. • The task force has conducted 8 meetings completing a first cut at a comprehensive list of space operations job categories and the associated knowledge and procedures that may require training standards. • Next steps are: • Select the job categories and associated knowledge and procedures that should be included in the final report to the FAA • Identify criteria for defining a training standard for each job category.
Actions: • Human Space Flight Safety Performance (HSF) Target: The FAA would like the continued assistance of COMSTAC in creating these metrics and requests comments on the preliminary HSF target within 1 month. • Human Space Flight (HSF) Study: Study organizations are still accepting input before draft submission on June 23. • Comments and suggestions for new business for RLVWG: George Whitesides National Space Society george@nss.org (202) 429-1600