Former astronaut Chris Ferguson of The Boeing Company demonstrated that the CST-100 spacecraft simulator and software allows a human pilot to take over control of the spacecraft from the computer during various phases of a mission following separation from the launch vehicle.
Boeing Crew Space Transportation (CST)-100 simulator.
Chris Ferguson, Boeing's director of Crew and Mission Operations and commander of the final Space Shuttle flight, virtually returned to space recently in the Boeing Crew Space Transportation (CST)-100 simulator to satisfy a NASA testing requirement for the spacecraft.
Ferguson performed manual piloting activities including on-orbit attitude and translation maneuvers, docking and backing away from a virtual International Space Station and a manual re-entry to Earth in the simulator.
"It was great to be back in the pilot's seat, even if I didn't leave the ground," Ferguson said.
"It's important for the spacecraft to have manual controls because although it's designed to be largely autonomous, the pilot should always be able to back up that autonomy."
"Manual flight controls provide a sort of a belt-and-suspenders capability for piloting the spacecraft."
The testing for NASA officials satisfied a CST-100 development milestone known as "Pilot in the Loop."
It is the final milestone before the spacecraft's critical design review.
Ferguson, a veteran of three shuttle missions and commander of STS-135, the final shuttle flight, has logged more than 40 days in space and 5,700 hours in high-performance aircraft.
He now oversees the crew interface of the Boeing CST-100 spacecraft and plays a key role in development and testing of system concepts and technologies for the vehicle and integrated launch and ground systems.
"This was the one opportunity to really show off, from a user's perspective, just how real our vehicle is becoming," said Ferguson.
"We demonstrated that the CST-100 is on track to return Americans to space in an American spacecraft."
The simulator will be used for preliminary astronaut training while Boeing builds additional units dedicated exclusively to training astronauts and mission controllers.
A mock-up of Boeing's Crew Space Transportation (CST)-100 spacecraft and a pressurized structure of the crew module is on display at the Boeing exhibit at the 27th National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colo.
The Crew Space Transportation (CST)-100 can carry a crew of seven and will be used to support the International Space Station and Bigelow Orbital Space Complex.
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