2017 Summer Roundup

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T I M E T O ( D E E P S PA C E ) C H I L L


PHOTO: NASA

Melanie Saunders J S C A S S O C I AT E D I R E CTO R

Doing Things Differently

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support the mission. Nobody is going to come in and give us more money. If there is more money, it’s going into the mission budget. This is why I am conducting a zero-base review of CMO this year. We can’t keep doing what we’ve always done if we want to be successful. And—we want to be successful. Our missions can’t succeed without us. We work at a place where some of our employees don’t work on the planet. We work at a place where people buy tickets to come tour. We work at a place that makes people associate us with excellence, grace under pressure, courage and imagination, and the boldness to try new things and solve really hard problems. I don’t want to be the frog that realizes, all too late, that the pot of water it’s in is starting to boil. Together, let’s plan to figure out how to turn down the heat by doing things differently, and even walking away from some things altogether. Painful? Yes. Scary? You bet. Necessary? Absolutely. Now? Later is not an option. I joined NASA because I wanted to be part of building the International Space Station. I stayed because I want to be part of getting to Mars. If this is what it takes to help get there, I’m all for it.

IMAGE OF THE QUARTER

PHOTO: NASA

THE AGENCY HAS BEEN GOING THROUGH a period of significant change the past few years, and Johnson Space Center has been no exception to that. We are part of new missions, new destinations in the solar system and new ways of doing business. All our major change initiatives, from JSC 2.0 to the Technical Capability Assessment Team (TCAT), Strategic Acquisition Forecast Evaluation, Business Service Assessment and others have all been designed to move us forward in doing things differently. You have heard agency leaders, like Acting NASA Administrator Robert Lightfoot, speak about moving to a new operating model. These activities further that goal. While there have been significant alterations on the technical side of the house (TCAT, for example, and Commercial Crew), many of the changes have been in the mission support portfolio. The changes, while sometimes daunting, will enable us to be more effective in advancing human space exploration. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is here at JSC this year for testing. Like Hubble, we know JWST will fundamentally alter our understanding of the universe. We just went through a change in administration, and we should soon have a new NASA administrator. We are breaking records regularly with the International Space Station and working vigorously on Orion, which will take us to different areas of the cosmos and require new methods of exploring space. We will have to select and train crews differently. We will need to do mission control differently. We will need to medically support the crew differently. Crew return and postflight activities will, again, be different from what we have been accustomed to in the shuttle and space station eras. What always fascinates me is that we take all of this change in stride. Need to adjust how we do real-time operations? No problem, we’ll get it done. Need to figure out how to train the crew so they can operate more autonomously? We’ll do it. But when it comes to changing how we manage mission support, allocate resources, do hiring or plan Information Technology investments … these changes seem to elicit more conflict, resistance and debate. Why is that? I think it’s because we have internalized and accepted that we need to change mission preparation for new environments. We understand that the environment and thus, the work, will be vastly dissimilar. The proving ground is different than low-Earth orbit. Mars is an even stranger beast. However, the fact remains that we have already been operating in a different environment on the mission support side—and for several years. It’s just harder to see. We’re all so busy trying to get our work done that we may not have realized how the world has changed around us. The reason things have been bumpy is because we haven’t adapted to our new reality. I wish our Center Management and Operations (CMO) budget was going up. I wish it were even staying flat, because that would be an improvement over what is really going on—cuts each year and sustained loss of buying power due to inflation and rising personnel costs. This is our “new area of the cosmos” in which we need to operate and

NASA’s 2017 astronaut candidates stop to take a group photo while getting fitted for flight suits at Ellington Field near NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. After receiving a record-breaking number of applications to join an exciting future of space exploration, NASA has selected its largest astronaut class since 2000. Rising to the top of more than 18,300 applicants, NASA chose these 12 women and men as the agency’s new astronaut candidates. Pictured are, front row, left to right, Zena Cardman, Jasmin Moghbeli, Robb Kulin, Jessica Watkins, Loral O’Hara; back row, left to right, Jonny Kim, Frank Rubio, Matthew Dominick, Warren Hoburg, Kayla Barron, Bob Hines and Raja Chari.


B Y CAT H E R I N E RAG I N W I L L I A M S

BEFORE THE JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE leaves Earth for the outer recesses of the solar system in late 2018, it will get acquainted with deep space first at NASA’s Johnson Space Center—more specifically, in a rotund thermal vacuum chamber affectionately known to most Johnson team members as “Chamber A.” Inside what looks to be a cream-colored soda can of epic proportions will be NASA’s newest space-based observatory. This infrared telescope will, for the next decade, serve thousands of astronomers worldwide and study many phases in the history of our universe. Its sophisticated instruments will decode the first luminous glows after the Big Bang, the formation of solar systems capable of supporting life and the evolution of our own tiny cosmic corner. But before it gets there, it must be tested here. “Once we pump down (the chamber), we’re estimating at least a 93-day test if everything goes well,” said Jonathan Homan, Johnson’s project manager for testing the James Webb Space Telescope. Homan estimates that everything will go well—in fact, be successful—thanks to a series of Pathfinder tests that were run in the chamber before the actual telescope’s arrival in early May. With the telescope’s engineering unit, the chamber ran three simulations, including a thermal Pathfinder evaluation, to help plan out how to integrate the final test of the telescope worth a cool $4 billion. “It really let us know the predictions thermally and how we can get all the optical tests done correctly,” Homan said. “So it was very, very valuable. All these activities that we’re doing now were practiced with the Pathfinder unit.”

PHOTO: NASA/CHRIS GUNN

Universe, meet James Webb (the telescope)

NASA Johnson Space Center’s “Chamber A” in Houston is an enormous thermal vacuum testing chamber that appears to be opening its “mouth” to take in NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope for testing. The telescope and the Integrated Science Instrument Module are two of the three major elements that comprise the observatory’s flight system and are being lifted into the chamber in this photo. The other is the Spacecraft Element (spacecraft bus and sunshield), which is currently under construction at Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems in Redondo Beach, California.

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PHOTO: NASA/DESIREE STOVER

It’s springtime and the deployed primary mirror of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope looks like a flower in full bloom. In this photo, NASA technicians lifted the telescope using a crane and moved it inside a cleanroom at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Once launched into space, the Webb telescope’s 18-segment gold mirror is specially designed to capture infrared light from the first galaxies that formed in the early universe, and will help the telescope peer inside dust clouds where stars and planetary systems are forming today. With the Pathfinder series and following test this summer and fall that will go approximately a hundred days, the chamber replicates the actual environment the telescope will be exposed to out in L-2, or the second Lagrange point. One million miles from the creature comforts of our home planet, Webb will stay in line with Earth as it moves around the sun. The satellite’s hulking sunshield will protect the telescope from the light and heat of the sun, Earth and moon. However, on the other side of the sunshield, things get seriously frigid for the science hardware and mirrors. Like a minus 388 degrees Fahrenheit better-not-forget-your-coat-before-you-go-outside kind of bone chill. 4

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“Chamber A used to be more lunar, low-Earth-orbit-type testing,” Homan said. “Now we’re doing deep space. We made the modifications from 2009 to 2012 to change the chamber over from the Apollo requirements to the Webb requirements. Their big things, which were not probably big things on Apollo, are vibration, contamination, a much colder environment and significantly longer testing.” When inside, the telescope will be suspended in the chamber— floating—free from any possible vibrations. Although a stunning starscape backdrop will be missing, bitter temperatures will abound. “There’s not another facility that can do what this chamber does now,” Homan noted. “We have become so efficient performance-wise. Thermally, we’ve not just met the requirements, we’ve exceeded those requirements. The chamber actually acts as a cleanroom, because the helium shroud, which needs to be dark (light tight) and cold, allows clean air to flow from the top to bottom. Now, inside the chamber, we can create the environment of deep space—extremely dark and cold.” Webb, while being assessed at Johnson, will be exposed to 19.8 Kelvin (minus 424 degrees Fahrenheit)—temps so numbingly cold that only a bit of helium molecules and a dash of hydrogen will still have the wherewithal to circulate. “Oxygen’s not moving, nitrogen’s not moving in that environment,” Homan said. “Everything is frozen out, creating a deep vacuum, which is what [the telescope] needs to be able to detect the early light of the universe.”


This three-month-and-counting test will determine if the telescope is ready for the hostile environs of L-2. “So the big thing is, again, thermal performance,” Homan said. “Do the spacecraft thermal systems and flight predictions and modeling match up with what they expect? The thermal Pathfinder was a big one to prove that out—that we should. And two, even more important, are the optics. Hubble did not get tested optically, in a space-like environment, with the full integrated optics like Webb. We are taking Webb to its orbital-like conditions, getting the mirrors down to orbitpredicted temperatures, and then testing the mirrors.” Interestingly, the telescope’s optics are not yet in focus. That comes later, with the cold. “The mirrors, they look really nice here, but they’re not in perfect prescription until the mirrors are down below 40 Kelvin,” Homan said. It’s a feature that was built into the science instrument, taking into consideration its final destination, and most certainly not a bug. Part of the beauty of testing in a simulated deep space environment while in the confines of the chamber is gauging that crucial optical performance. If the mirror segments align perfectly the first time, great. If not, the chamber provides a safe space for changes. “Each of the different mirror segments and the science instruments, they’re all communicating,” Homan said. “And if they’re not, we can test that out and make the adjustments. If it looks like we’re not quite right, let’s reposition something slightly. We have the fine actuators that can move things fractions of an inch. When the optical guys say ‘Yes, I’m seeing what I expect,’ that’s very successful.”

This photo shows Northrop Grumman’s huge full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope being displayed for the public from Jan. 27 to Feb. 5 during Super Bowl Live in Houston near Discovery Green.

PHOTO: ALBERTO CONTI

PHOTO: NASA/CHRIS GUNN

This legacy photo from May 2015 shows the fifth floor of thermal vacuum Chamber A that now is being used for an end-to-end test of the James Webb Space Telescope. This photo was taken before the start of a test on the Webb telescope Pathfinder, an engineering version of the telescope. Here, the contamination control engineer on the left is doing his final FOD (Foreign Object Debris) inspection. In the center of this image, wrapped in the silver thermal blanketing, is the CoCoa (Center of Curvature optical assembly). CoCoa tests on the Webb telescope’s concave mirror segments are critical, because they will tell engineers if all of the mirrors work together to make a telescope that has the correct shape.

The simulation for Webb will be wrapped up by the end of the calendar year, and perhaps even as soon as late fall. Afterward, it will get its sunshield attached at Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems and undergo one more vibration test before transport to French Guiana, the launch site. That will be the last contact with Earth before hurtling to its destiny. It’s taken an integrated team as immense as the science instrument itself and a careful orchestration of teamwork to bring the telescope to life. Those working on Webb while it’s at the center include professionals from Goddard Space Flight Center, Harris, Northrop Grumman, Ball Aerospace and, of course, a large Johnson support team. Within Johnson, the Crew and Thermal Systems Division, Center Operations, Flight Operations, Jacobs Engineering and others are tending to Webb. “We’ve had about 50 people in the chamber and the cleanroom,” Homan said. “But we’ve had hundreds of people at Johnson directly supporting, either the buildup or the test.” Although the care and evaluation of this space observatory is not something that is the norm for Johnson, the nucleus of human space exploration, everyone working on it recognizes it for the honor it is. “I love that here at Johnson we focus on exploration,” Homan said. “I’ve done lots of manned tests with astronauts, and I think that is really amazing and we need to stay focused on human space exploration. But it’s also really cool to work with some great scientists and know that what they plan to get out of Webb will change history and our physics books. Whatever we see from Hubble, this is going so much further back and has much different and bigger optical properties. We’re going to learn a lot more.”

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Sharing the excitement Johnson Space Center team members close to the James Webb Space Telescope’s (JWST’s) preparation and testing operations share what they hope the telescope will reveal about the universe and their feelings about being a part of the buildup toward its launch in 2018.

Gretchen Thomas TEST DIRECTOR Company: NASA

“My favorite part of having JWST here has been the challenges of working with such a large team with so many test objectives and test events. The series of tests that we have performed have been building in complexity over the years, and it will be fun to actually run the facility with the real flight hardware in place and see how it performs. I’ve enjoyed successfully running the chamber at the extremely low vacuum levels and super-cold temperatures that we have to achieve for the telescope, knowing that there is no other facility in the world that can do that.”

“I am hopeful JWST will help identify and provide glimpses of the formation of the first galaxies and stars in our universe. Really, I hope the JWST will eventually be held in the same high regard as the Hubble [Space] Telescope. To be part of something so ambitious, with the potential to help understand the origins of the universe, can’t be beat. To be able to be part of a project like JWST is a once-in-acareer opportunity.”

Kenneth Anderle FACILITY TEST OPERATIONS MANAGER Company: Jacobs

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Andrew Francis TEST DIRECTOR Company: Jacobs

“I make it a point each day to take a moment and look upon the telescope as it is being prepared for testing in Building 32, reflecting on how amazing it truly is. My employees and I have dedicated much of our lives over the past 10 to 12 years preparing for this test, and it is very rewarding to see that our efforts are helping to provide humankind an instrument of exploration unlike any ever imagined.”


Mary Halligan BUILDING 32 FACILITY MANAGER, FACILITY ENGINEER

Company: NASA

“I hope [Webb] will see more evidence of the existence of other worlds that could sustain life. [I have enjoyed seeing] the notoriety and publicity it’s given to JSC.”

“My favorite part of having JWST at JSC is seeing all the excitement and wonder that this brings to my fellow workers and the general public.”

Gary Gastler PROJECT MANAGER Company: NASA

Greg Stiggins ELECTRICAL, DATA AND CONTROLS SECTION MANAGER

Company: Jacobs

“I think I’m most interested in the possibility of actual imaging of exoplanets, as well as just generally seeing as far back in the universe’s history as possible. Though it has been rewarding bringing the various Chamber A upgrades online over the past few years, my favorite part of JWST being here has yet to happen. That moment will come at the end of a successful test here in Building 32. While not as dramatic as the Mars Curiosity ‘Seven Minutes of Terror,’ we will have a solid ‘90-plus days of anticipation’ as the test is conducted over this summer. With many preliminary chamber tests, we’ve prepared well though, so we’re ready to go.”

“I’m hoping the telescope reveals details on how the first galaxies in the universe formed. The idea that JWST might be able to see the first light after the Big Bang is incredible. The energy and excitement surrounding the JWST project has been great, especially in these last few weeks since the telescope arrived at JSC. There were many challenges over the years as we prepared Chamber A for this test, and it is very satisfying to see it all come together.”

Jamie Garza CONTROL SYSTEMS ENGINEER Company: Jacobs

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BY BILL JEFFS

NASA SCIENTISTS HAVE FOUND a wide diversity of minerals in the initial samples of rocks collected by the Curiosity rover in the lowermost layers of Mount Sharp on Mars, suggesting that conditions changed in the water environments on the planet over time. “We have all this evidence that Mars was once really wet but now is dry and cold,” said Elizabeth Rampe, the first author of the study and a NASA exploration mission scientist at Johnson. “Today, much of the water is locked up in the poles and in the ground at high latitudes as ice.” Curiosity landed near Mount Sharp in Gale Crater in August 2012 and reached the base of the mountain in 2014. Layers of rocks at the base of Mount Sharp accumulated as sediment within ancient lakes around 3.5 billion years ago. Orbital infrared NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover examined a mudstone outcrop area called “Pahrump Hills” on lower spectroscopy shows that the mountain’s Mount Sharp, in 2014 and 2015. This view shows locations of some targets the rover studied. The lowermost layers have variations in minerals blue dots indicate where drilled samples of powdered rock were collected for analysis. that suggest changes in the ancient environments. In a paper published recently in Earth and Planetary Science Letters, in Hawaii. Moving higher in the section, scientists saw more silica-rich minerals. In the “Buckskin” sample, scientists found tridymite. Tridymite scientists in the Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science (ARES) Division at NASA’s Johnson Space Center report on the first four is found on Earth, for example, in rocks that formed from partial melting of Earth’s crust—a strange finding, because Mars never had samples collected from the lower layers of Mount Sharp. plate tectonics. “We went to Gale Crater to investigate these lower layers of Mount Scientists found clay minerals at the base, which generally form Sharp that have these minerals that precipitated from water and in the presence of liquid water with a near-neutral pH, and therefore suggest different environments,” Rampe said. “These layers were could be good indicators of past environments that were conducive to deposited about 3.5 billion years ago, coinciding with a time on Earth life. Another mineral discovered here was jarosite, a salt that forms in when life was beginning to take hold. We think early Mars may have acidic solutions, suggesting that there were acidic fluids at some point been similar to early Earth, and so these environments might have in time in this region. been habitable.” Hematite was found near the base, and only magnetite was found at The minerals found in the four samples drilled near the base of the top. Hematite contains oxidized iron, whereas magnetite contains Mount Sharp suggest several different environments were present in ancient Gale Crater. There is evidence for waters with different pH both oxidized and reduced forms of iron. and variably oxidizing conditions. The minerals also show that there The authors attribute this mineralogical diversity to the development of later-stage fluids. After the sediments were were multiple source regions for the rocks in “Pahrump Hills” and deposited, acidic, oxidizing groundwater moved into the area, “Marias Pass.” leading to precipitation of jarosite and hematite. In this scenario, the The paper primarily reports on three samples from the Pahrump environmental conditions present in the lake and in later groundwater Hills region, an outcrop at the base of Mount Sharp that contains were quite different, but both offered liquid water and a chemical sedimentary rocks scientists believe formed in a lake. The other diversity that could have been exploited by microbial life. sample, called “Buckskin,” was reported last year, but that data is “We think that the rocks Curiosity has studied reveal ancient incorporated into the paper. environmental changes that occurred as Mars started to lose its At the base of the Pahrump Hills are minerals from a primitive magma source; they are rich in iron and magnesium, similar to basalts atmosphere and water was lost to space,” Rampe said. 8

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NASA/JPL-CALTECH/MSSS

JSC scientists find evidence of diverse environments in Curiosity samples


BY VICTORIA UGALDE

THE MARS SCIENCE TEAM of the Astromaterials Research and The technology-driven Exploration Science (ARES) Division at NASA’s Johnson Space Center area also gives ARES now has a new “space” to call home for planetary surface operations. scientists the ability to collaborate remotely—and Located in Johnson’s Building 29, the brand-new Mars Science with greater ease—with other centers like NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (MSL) Operations Center functions as a mini Mission Laboratory (JPL). Control Center for the ARES science team, where they conduct experiments remotely for Curiosity as it roves the terrain of the “We are on the science team [at Johnson], but JPL is where all Red Planet, unlocking the mysteries of Mars’ past and present the rover planners and other engineering folks sit,” Archer said. “It’s environments. the science team that’s distributed across the country and in a few international locations as well.” ARES supports the daily rover operations on Mars to improve our understanding of the planet. Additionally, ARES scientists virtually Additionally, the MSL Operations Center has the capability to serve on Opportunity and Curiosity teams to plan and implement convert, if needed, to work surface operations for another exciting science objectives. rover mission on the docket: Mars 2020. “The MSL ops center enables us to better support Curiosity’s “JSC has had people working Mars mission ops for over a decade,” exploration of Mars,” said Doug Archer, a Mars scientist at Johnson. Archer said. “Having an ops center that can support multiple people “Having the ops center has enabled us to participate in remote working simultaneously, as well as meeting in a collaborative work meetings as a group, which facilitates more discussion and a better space, will help us maintain the work we’re doing and move forward understanding of what we’re seeing on Mars.” with future Mars exploration.” The brand-new center provides a designated space for Johnson’s For more information on ARES, go to: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/astromaterials scientists to meet and discuss upcoming objectives for Curiosity. While half of this specialized control room functions as a collaborative space, the other half is equipped with individual workstations, where scientists can work privately. “We have workstations in the ops room that have a lot of screen real estate, which is incredibly useful because we use many tools simultaneously,” Archer said. “Being able to see them all at the same time helps us get our jobs done without missing anything.” From inside the center, the team can review data from the previous day, pull up current imagery taken from Mars or decide what science tasks they want Curiosity to tackle next. Whether that means taking additional photographs of a specified area on the surface or using instruments on Curiosity such as the Sample Analysis at Mars tool to unveil the The Mars science team from NASA Johnson Space Center’s Astromaterials Research and crystalline structure in Martian samples, the Exploration Science Division provides mission support from the Mars Science Laboratory MSL-dedicated space helps ARES take part in Operations Center. missions like never before. LY N D O N B . J O H N S O N S PA C E C E N T E R

NASA PHOTO/JOSH VALCARCEL

NASA/JPL-CALTECH/MSSS

Mars Science Laboratory Operations Center now open

NASA’s Curiosity rover shows the purple-hued rocks near the rover’s late-2016 location on lower Mount Sharp. The scene’s middle distance includes higher layers that are future destinations for the mission. Curiosity’s tasks are scheduled, in part, by NASA Johnson Space Center’s Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science Division team members in the all-new Mars Science Laboratory Operations Center, which makes collaborating on Martian missions much easier to do with teams throughout the nation’s space agency.

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T+20 years and counting

B Y CAT H E R I N E RAG I N W I L L I A M S

IF YOU’RE LOOKING FOR THAT SPECIAL 20-year anniversary own upgrades to support operations for space station, Commercial Crew, gift for NASA Johnson Space Center’s legendary Sonny Carter Training Orion and NASA’s eventual journey to Mars. Facility (SCTF), home of the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL) and its “We’re always trying to keep up with what’s out there, that way we can titanic pool, traditional china and modern platinum options might not accommodate any new technology,” Otten said. “There’s nothing that we be the thing. More appreciated, however, would be nitrox, a mixture of can’t do—it’s just whether we can constrain it within our schedules with nitrogen and oxygen the divers and astronauts training underwater use all the other training. Today, we have spacesuits in the water at the same to breathe. To date, the facility has gone through more than 95 million time we have an ROV in the water, or a Micro-g NExT [Micro-g Neutral cubic feet of it—enough to fill NRG Stadium. Buoyancy Experiment Design Teams] event and commercial or Aircraft In fact, despite the conclusion of the Space Shuttle Program and Operations Directorate [AOD] water survival going on. It has become a finished assembly of the International Space Station, the NBL still very reachable facility over the years.” maintains a full schedule of event support. The future of the NBL is as bright as the new white “We just had three spacewalks in the last four coat of paint adorning its walls. weeks,” said Raytheon NBL Operations Manager “The ultimate thing is to train the crew Kurt Otten. “There’s a lot of times we have realhere,” Otten said. That’s especially true of time mission support, where they’ll come over NASA’s newest human space exploration and do a suited event or configured scuba program, Orion, which will rely on just to validate the process and procedures oceanic splashdowns. “[The crew must] that they’re going to do up in space for the familiarize themselves for the water EVA [Extravehicular Activity, or spacewalk].” landing—how to get out of the seats, Astronaut spacewalk training is still the out the door and into their life raft. NBL’s “bread and butter,” so to speak, but And, in case that doesn’t work out right, other new operations have entered the mix. we have to train the rescue divers and “We used to do dual ops, where we would pararescue specialists in the military that run two suited runs simultaneously—have two support the landings.” NASA PHOTO: JAMES BLAIR astronauts here and two astronauts there, and Further down the road, there’s always the View they would all be in the dive tank at one time doing option to explore other worlds—and NASA has of astronauts different things, but training at the same time,” Otten said. many facilities, including the NBL, for such in Extravehicular lofty goals. Now, while a broad section of the pool accommodates NASA’s Mobility Units and divers “A lot of folks feel that we can actually needs, the other caters to specialized commercial interests. working on a mock-up make some type of terrain on the bottom of “There’s a permanent ROV underwater in [Remotely Operated Vehicle] here the pool and simulate one-sixth G [gravity] If you were alive when the from Oceaneering,” Otten said. by changing the buoyancy in their suit,” Otten the pool. NBL completed its first “The ROV is what is used offshore. said. “That’s what we do right now. We make training exercise on Jan. 7, So it’s just like space—plan, train, them neutral in their suit so they don’t go up or 1997, the world was a little fly. With the ROV, same thing.” down, and they perform a spacewalk from end to end.” different. Twenty years ago … Due to the nature of hazardous Otten indicated that with alien terrain and adjusted gravitational operations offshore, Otten noted force, astronauts could practice walks on the moon and Mars. For an • The Houston Oilers football that companies don’t want added bonus, the test conductors could throw malfunctions at the crew, team moved to Tennessee. their divers out on the oil rigs like have their rovers quit working or spacesuit issues. The possibilities in unnecessarily. Instead, they come making NASA’s explorers battle hardened for the solar system are almost • The Green Bay Packers won to the NBL and check out their as endless as the pool’s shimmering surface. Super Bowl XXXI (for the tools and procedures in the safety The SCTF is more than a colossal pool, though. Lesser known is first time since 1967). of our pool. the logistic mock-up facility connected to it, which has a full-fledged “They can remove risk by doing machine, welding and sheet metal shop. That’s where a lot of the • Gas was a cheap $1.23 per it here,” Otten said. “Otherwise, mock-ups used for training are built, as well as one-of-a-kind parts gallon. they’re paying $100,000 a day needed for AOD. testing offshore [adding more While NASA’s missions have changed in the past 20 years, some of • The Dow Jones Industrial costs], and then they actually have the NBL’s fundamental characteristics, which have made it so successful, Average closed above 7,000 to go and do the job.” have not. for the first time. And, as technology continues to “It’s a landmark facility,” Otten said. “Just listening to the astronauts rapidly advance, the infrastructure talk, the NBL is very needed to continue their training to make them at the SCTF has responded with its successful in space.” 10

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Orion’s Exploration Flight Test-1 landing recovery with Flight Lead Tim Goddard from the NBL installing the rope harness around the spacecraft. NASA PHOTO

Astronaut Chris Cassidy addresses the NBL crowd.

NASA PHOTO: JAMES BLAIR

Pull up a floaty and enjoy these fun facts: • 150 spacewalks and counting have been rehearsed in the pool, including 13 in support of the Hubble Space Telescope. • The NBL provided training for 54 space shuttle flights and every space station crew.

NASA PHOTO: JAMES BLAIR

• Operations have included more than 326,000 hours of diving and 4,480 suited events.

NBL 20th anniversary service award recipients.

• The lab was built in 1991 as a processing facility for Space Station Freedom, now the International Space Station. • Pool stats: 102 feet wide, 202 feet long and 40 feet deep. • It took 30 days to fill the pool, and then 30 days to clean the water once filled.

NASA PHOTO

• The pool floor is 6 feet thick, while the walls range from 2.5 to 5 feet thick.

Astronaut Peggy Whitson participates in Aircraft Operations Directorate water survival training at the NBL. Former flight director Milt Heflin addresses the crowd at the NBL 20th anniversary celebration and speaks about his experiences working with the Apollo Spacecraft Recovery Team.

NASA PHOTO: JAMES BLAIR

NASA PHOTO

View of Earth with an NBL patch from the International Space Station during the STS-126 mission.

• The facility has moved 60,000 tons of mock-ups in its lifetime. • Its water is chlorinated like your run-of-the-mill backyard pool and stays a temperate 86 degrees. • How many gallons of water are in there? Try 6.2 million. • The NBL pool, if filled with jet fuel, would fuel flights for Aircraft Operations more than six years. • The pool has been recirculated more than 9,700 times, which translates to about 60 billion gallons moving through the pipes.

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The Roundup is an official publication of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, and is published by the External Relations Office for all Space Center employees. The Roundup office is located at the Johnson Space Center, Building 2. The mail code is AD94. Visit our website at: http://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/roundup/ roundup_toc.html For distribution questions or to suggest a story idea, send an email to jsc-roundup@mail.nasa.gov. Catherine Ragin Williams Editor Logan Goodson Graphic Design Lynnette Madison NASA Publication Manager

OR CURRENT RESIDENT

Investigation aims to identify unknown microbes in space BY JENNY HOWARD

NASA/PHOTO

BUILDING ON THE ABILITY TO SEQUENCE DNA in space and The miniPCR (polymerase chain reaction) device was first used aboard previous investigations, Genes in Space-3 is a collaboration to prepare, the station during the Genes in Space-1 and soon-to-be Genes in Space-2 sequence and identify unknown organisms entirely from space. When investigations, student-designed experiments in the Genes in Space NASA astronaut Kate Rubins sequenced DNA aboard the International program. Genes in Space-1 successfully demonstrated the device could be Space Station (ISS) in 2016, it was a game changer. used in microgravity to amplify DNA, a process used That first-ever sequencing of DNA in space was to create thousands of copies of specific sections of part of the Biomolecule Sequencer investigation. DNA. The second investigation arrived at the space Although it’s not as exciting as a science-fiction station on April 22 and will be tested this summer. movie may depict, the walls and surfaces of the Next came the Biomolecule Sequencer space station do experience microbial growth from investigation, which successfully tested the time to time. Currently, the only way to identify MinION’s ability to sequence strands of Earthcontaminants is to take a sample and send it back prepared DNA in an orbiting laboratory. to Earth. “Coupling these different devices [allows] us to take the lab to the samples instead of us “We have had contamination in parts of having to bring the samples to the lab,” said Aaron the station where fungi was seen growing or biomaterial has been pulled out of a clogged Burton, NASA biochemist and Genes in Space-3 waterline, but we have no idea what it is until co-investigator. the sample gets back down to the lab,” said Sarah Crew members will collect a sample from within the space station to be cultured aboard the orbiting Wallace, NASA microbiologist and the project’s laboratory. The sample will then be prepared for principal investigator at the NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston. sequencing in a process similar to the one used Student Anna-Sophia Boguraev, during the Genes in Space-1 investigation using the “On the ISS, we can regularly resupply winner of the Genes in Space miniPCR and, finally, sequenced and identified using disinfectants, but as we move beyond low-Earth competition, is pictured with the orbit, where the ability for resupply is less frequent, the MinION device. miniPCR device. The miniPCR In addition to identifying microbes in space, this knowing what to disinfect or not becomes very will be used with the minION to important,” Wallace said. technology could be used to diagnose crew member prepare, sequence and identify a wounds or illnesses in real time, help identify Developed in partnership by NASA’s Johnson DNA-based life on other planets and help with Space Center and Boeing, this ISS National Labmicroorganism from start to finish sponsored investigation will marry two pieces of other investigations aboard the station. Closer to aboard the space station. existing spaceflight technology, miniPCR and the home, this process can be used to provide real-time MinION DNA sequencer, to change that process, diagnosis of viruses in areas of the world where allowing for the first unknown biological samples to be prepared, access to a laboratory may not be possible. sequenced and then identified in space. Read the full story here: https://go.usa.gov/xNvK4 12

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