WASHINGTON -- Expanding the new frontier just as they did the
old, railroads will take flight next month as the first space
railroad is launched aboard Space Shuttle Atlantis, according to a
report from Cosmiverse.com.
Circling Earth aboard the
International Space Station, the car on this railway will have a top
speed of only 300 feet per hour, but the entire line -- tracks and
all -- will travel almost nine times faster than a speeding bullet,
over 17,000 miles per hour, in orbit. The rail line eventually will
stretch almost 100 yards along the structural backbone of the
station, serving as a mobile base from which the station's
Canadian-built robotic arm can assemble and maintain the complex.
"To build the rails that linked the east and west coasts of
the United States, thousands of workers endured desert heat, frigid
mountains and countless obstacles. These rails in space will run in
temperatures far hotter than any desert and far colder than any
mountain," said NASA Mobile Transporter Subsystem Manager Tom
Farrell at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. "And just like the
transcontinental rails pulled together our country, these rails pull
together 16 nations around the world, cooperating in orbit."
Atlantis will launch the railcar, called the Mobile
Transporter, and an initial 43-foot section of track as it delivers
the first segment of the International Space Station's exterior
truss. Designated "S0 (S-zero)," the first section of truss will be
carried aloft by Atlantis on shuttle mission STS-110 in April.
More sections of track will be added during the next two
years as eight segments of the girder-like truss are launched aboard
the shuttle. By the end of this year, the tracks already will
stretch more than 130 feet. When completed, the truss will stretch
over 360 feet, the longest structure ever built in space.
An
additional base system will be attached atop the flatcar- like
Mobile Transporter during a shuttle flight in May, but the space
train will leave the depot for its inaugural run during Atlantis'
April mission. After spacewalkers loosen launch restraints and
attach electrical and computer cable reels, Mission Control will
command the Mobile Transporter railcar to inch its way up and down
the 43-foot section of track.
"It's built for precise
positioning and smooth velocity control; it's not built for speed,"
said Randy Straub, subcontract technical manager for the system with
The Boeing Company in Huntington Beach, Calif.
The operation
of the railway is critical for continued assembly of the station. It
will allow the station's Canadarm2 robotic arm to carry future truss
segments and solar arrays down the tracks to install them. Part
flatcar and part locomotive, the Mobile Transporter weighs 1,950
pounds and is a horse made of aluminum, not iron.
The Mobile
Transporter was built by TRW Astro in Carpinteria, Calif., for
Boeing, the prime contractor for station construction. It measures
three feet high, nine feet long and eight feet wide and moves along
two parallel rails attached to the station truss at speeds varying
from one-tenth of an inch to one inch per second. Although driven by
dual electric motors that generate only about a hundredth of one
horsepower, the transporter can move 23 tons of cargo down the
rails.
What is the hardest part about building a
zero-gravity railroad?
"We've done a lot of work to make
certain it can't jump the tracks," said Farrell. "We have to be sure
it will be safe during all the station's activities, like reboosting
its orbit or having visiting vehicles dock."
The transporter
stays on track with three sets of wheels, one set that propels it
and two sets in roller suspension units, spring-loaded units that
have rollers on both sides of the track to ensure the transporter
can't float loose. The railcar will have 10 stops, specific
locations called worksites where it can be locked down with a
7,000-pound grip, allowing the robotic arm to safely maneuver cargo.
Although it can be driven from the station or from the ground, the
engineers for NASA's space railroad will normally reside in Mission
Control, Houston, driving the train from thousands of miles away and
hundreds of miles below.
Although the Mobile Transporter
will be a freight train and not a passenger train, space- walking
astronauts will have their own form of personal rail transportation
aboard the station. Astronauts will operate a small handcar to
maneuver up and down the rail line, a car that they will pull along
the zero-gravity railway by hand to move themselves and their gear
from place to place. Called the Crew and Equipment Translation Aid,
two such carts will be delivered to the station before the end of
the year.