2015 — Space Launch System Co-Manifested Payload Options for Habitation

David Smitherman
2 min readOct 1, 2021

August 31, 2015

Author: David Smitherman, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center.

Figure 2. Co-Manifested Payload Extraction Sequence (NASA)

Abstract: The Space Launch System (SLS) has a co-manifested payload capability that will grow over time as the launch vehicle matures and planned upgrades are implemented. The final configuration is planned to be capable of inserting a payload greater than 10 metric tons (mt) into a trans-lunar injection trajectory along with the crew in the Orion capsule and its service module. The co-manifested payload is located below the Orion and its service module in a 10 m high fairing similar to the way the Saturn launch vehicle carried the lunar lander below the Apollo command and service modules. Various approaches that utilize this co- manifested payload capability to build up infrastructure in deep space have been explored in support of future asteroid, lunar, and Mars mission scenarios. This paper reports on the findings of the Advanced Concepts Office study team at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) working with the Advanced Exploration Systems Program on the Exploration Augmentation Module Project. It includes some of the possible options for habitation in the co-manifested payload volume of the SLS. Findings include a set of module designs that can be developed in 10 mt increments to support these co-manifested payload missions along with a comparison of this approach to a large-module payload flight configuration for the SLS.

Full paper availability at:

NASA Technical Report Server: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20150021406

American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics: https://arc.aiaa.org/doi/10.2514/6.2015-4516

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David Smitherman

Retired architect and space architect from NASA. Married with a growing family. Currently into travel, historical architecture, photography and genealogy.