Detail View: NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Collection: Solid Rocket Booster-Illustration

Name of Image: 
Solid Rocket Booster-Illustration
Full Description: 
This illustration is a cutaway of the solid rocket booster (SRB) sections with callouts. The Shuttle's two SRB's are the largest solids ever built and the first designed for refurbishment and reuse. Standing nearly 150-feet high, the twin boosters provide the majority of thrust for the first two minutes of flight, about 5.8 million pounds, augmenting the Shuttle's main propulsion system during liftoff. The major design drivers for the solid rocket motors (SRM's) were high thrust and reuse. The desired thrust was achieved by using state-of-the-art solid propellant and by using a long cylindrical motor with a specific core design that allows the propellant to burn in a carefully controlled marner. At burnout, the boosters separate from the external tank and drop by parachute to the ocean for recovery and subsequent refurbishment. The boosters are designed to survive water impact at almost 60 miles per hour, maintain flotation with minimal damage, and preclude corrosion of the hardware exposed to the harsh seawater environment. Under the project management of the Marshall Space Flight Center, the SRB's are assembled and refurbished by the United Space Boosters. The SRM's are provided by the Morton Thiokol Corporation.
Date of Image: 
1977-01-01
Category: 
Space Shuttle Projects
term: 
SRB
facet_what: 
Space Shuttle Orbiter
facet_where: 
Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)
Reference Number: 
MSFC-75-SA-4105-2C
MIX #: 
7776231
NIX #: 
MSFC-7776231
MSFC Negative Number: 
7776231
UID: 
SPD-MARSH-7776231
original url: 
http://mix.msfc.nasa.gov/abstracts.php?p=1732