Johnson Space Center Roundup 2011-02

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National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center

Our next giant leap

February | 2011

JSC Director
are two topics I enjoy talking about more than
anything else. First, I love talking about my
familyespecially my twin granddaughters Abby and Anna, who take up a
great deal of space in my conversations. At age 4, they are curious, funny,
loving and joyful. When my daughter says Im spoiling them, I congratulate
myself for a job well done.
My second favorite topic is to share the stories and accomplishments of
my Johnson Space Center family. In a year of unparalleled challenges, all
of the JSC team members continue to amaze me with their dedication and
commitment to our successful and continuing mission of being the leader in
human spaceflight. Each member of our civil service and contractor team
deserves recognition, and I am proud to share the national recognition that
has recently been announced for a few of our teammates.

On the cover:

Congratulations to Mike Suffredini and the International Space Station


Program, recipients of the National Air and Space Museum Current Achievement Trophy
The International Space Station Program has been selected for the Current Achievement Trophy in recognition of
the inspiration and incentive the program has provided to stimulate aerospace industries and the new and improved
technologies, understanding and insight. Mike has been invited to receive this trophy on behalf of the station program
at the annual awards event at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

The Orion Crew Exploration


Vehicle Parachute Assembly
System performs a successful
airdrop test shortly after sunrise
on July 27, 2010, at the U.S. Army
Yuma Proving Grounds in Arizona.

NASA PHOTO

There

Congratulations to Jeff Hanley, recipient of the Astronautics Engineer Award


Sponsored by the National Space Club, the Astronautics Engineer Award honors one engineer annually for his
or her outstanding contribution to the advancement of space technology. Jeff has been selected for his innovative
leadership in the field of aerospace and his exemplary contributions to the agency.
Congratulations to Steve Altemus, agency winner of the Federal Engineer of the Year
The Federal Engineer of the Year Award recognizes federal engineers for their commitment, innovation and value in
service to our nation.
Congratulations to Dr. Ellen Ochoa, 2011 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Fellow
The distinction of fellow is conferred by AIAA upon outstanding members of the institute who have made notable
and valuable contributions to the arts, sciences or technology of aeronautics or astronautics.

Photo of the month:


Space shuttle Discovery waits to
roll back from Launch Pad 39A
to the Vehicle Assembly Building
at Kennedy Space Center during
the early morning hours of Dec.
21 with the beginning of the total
lunar eclipse clearly in view.

2 | Roundup

In this edition
3

A path forward

Texas Twister goes Martian for the sake of humankind

Resupplying the International Space Station

Orion: The next-generation spacecraft

NASA Ambassadors

Looking to the future of spaceflight by harnessing the past

10

Meet Mitchell Sweeney, Altitude Rescue Specialist

11

Center Scoop

12

Keeping tabs on the lab aloft

NASA/PHOTO 507169MAIN_2010-5866_FULL

NASA/PHOTO

These are but a few of the great accomplishments that our NASA team has garnered during the past year. I know
there will be many more in the future, and we can all take pride in these successes. As we work toward the future of
spaceflight, JSC will be at the forefront of these efforts. We will continue to lead the way, raise the bar and set new
marks. I look forward to sharing in many great achievements with you!

A path forward
By Dale Thomas

What

does 2011 hold for the Constellation team? It


will be a year of change and implementation
as NASA moves to build a space program for the 21st century.
With the Fiscal Year 2011 (FY11) budget request, the president
called for the cancellation of the Constellation Program and gave

analysis, data and lessons learned as the program continues to


balance the work portfolio to meet future goals.
Presently that portfolio includes the following:
n The fabrication and test of the J2-X engine will, at a minimum,
demonstrate the capability to plan, design, develop and validate U.S.
modern rocket engine fabrication techniques. This knowledge will
support any engines selected for future acquisition.
n The test stands that have been modified and renovated are now
better prepared for future engine tests, including tests by commercial
sources.
n The solid rocket motor development efforts have resulted in a more
capable system, one ready to apply to a heavy lift system if a solid
element is required.
n The upper stage development efforts apply to the design and
manufacture of the core section of a heavy lift system. Knowledge
gained will assist in the future acquisition of a new design.

NASA/PHOTO

n The Orion capsule system efforts have focused on mitigating the


risks of human spaceflight, including the thermal protection system
and parachuteskeys in the success of the recent SpaceX test flight.
We have been given a roadmap that calls for the next generation
of space transportation systems to be as flexible as the shuttle while
improving safety, taking advantage of changes in technology and
reducing costs. NASA and the Constellation team are doing their
best to take the most prudent path to meet those goalsa path that
minimizes waste and will meet a go-forward plan.
For more transition-related articles, catch the latest in
Rendezvous at http://rendezvous.jsc.nasa.gov/.

Parachutes are installed into the forward bay area of the Orion
crew module Ground Test Article at the Michoud Assembly
Facility in New Orleans.

At left: Members of the


Constellation leadership team,
including Program Manager
Dale Thomas, get an up close
look at the Orion crew module
Ground Test Article.

Ar right: The Orion Ground


Test Article heat shield
carrier structure is rotated for
structural acceptance testing
at Lockheed Martin Space
Systems in Denver. The heat
shield is 16.5 feet in diameter,
and it is the largest of its kind
ever fabricated.

NASA/PHOTO

NASA/PHOTO

NASA a new direction: reposition NASA on the cutting edge, adapt to


a changing external environment, embrace new technologies, engage
with the public and develop more partnerships and collaborations.
Yet, despite the new direction and the Authorization Act of 2010,
NASA is presently required to continue its 2010 funding lines
including the Constellation Programas the government operates
under a Continuing Resolution.
This has been challenging for the agency and even more so for
those who work for Constellation. While planning continues, and with
many options still under consideration, it remains important to poise
Constellation work in FY11 to provide the most value to NASA.
During the past year, this team has been conscientious as it
attempted to answer a complex question: How can Constellation use
the work required by the Continuing Resolution to make possible a
running start for future programs when the time comes?
The Constellation Program captured the state of the program and
re-examined the capabilities needed to develop a safe and efficient
human spaceflight system and conduct mission operations. This
effort was closely coordinated with headquarters and the Exploration
Systems Mission Directorate. Because of this effort, Constellation
is focused on development activities that should play forward to
scenarios shaped by the Human Exploration Framework Team.
This past year, the Constellation team experienced great progress
and accomplishmentsall achieved in an environment of great
uncertainty. This year will indeed be a year of transition: one of
people, facilities, budgets, contracts and other assets such as

Roundup | 3

Texas Twister goes Martian for the sake of humankind


How selfless of me
By Texas Twister

NASA/JPL-CALTECH

you know there is a stronger than ever possibility of


cows in space? No, seriously.
So I watched this fascinating Mars Program Update on NASA TV
that featured a variety of super-smart panelists with shiny credentials,
and nearly fell out of my chair when European Space Agency
Programs Coordinator Dr. Marcello Coradini said, Does (methane)
imply that we have cows on Mars?
Cows on Mars? That is exactly why Ive been saying we need to
explore outer space!
Then he said, I dont think so. But the question isif we can find
much more methane, does that discovery mean there are other life
forms?
That sound you heard? Yeah, that was the sound of my bubble
bursting.
I consoled myself with the fact that super-smart panelists cant be
privy (yet, anyway) to all the secrets of the universe while I listened
and learned a lot more about the forbidden red planet that has been
such a magnet for exploration. Andthat cows could be there
already. If we would just open our minds.
For instance, Dr. Steve Squyres of Cornell University reiterated
the methane link to cows. He mentioned that the primary source of
methane, to put it sugarcoatedly (I invented the word, so get over it,
okay?), are cows having a particularly gassy day.

An artists concept of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory (left) serves


to compare it with Spirit, one of NASA's twin Mars Exploration
Rovers. The images of Spirit and the more advanced rover are both
superimposed by special effects on a scene from Mars Columbia
Hills, photographed by Spirit's panoramic camera on April 13,
2005, and presented here in false color.

The next rover making a trip to Mars, leaving this calendar year
around Thanksgiving, is adorably named Curiosity. (Ready, set
aww!) Curiosity is different from the Mars Exploration Rovers (Spirit
and Opportunity) currently scoping out the red planet. Instead of
being equipped with only super-cool cameras and such, Curiosity will
4 | Roundup

also have the equivalent of a chemical laboratory in its belly. (Well, if


rovers had bellies, thats where it would be.)
This time were going with a full laboratory of instruments, and
because of that, were going to discover new things, said NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center bio/geochemist Dr. Jennifer Eigenbrode.
Likemaybecows?
One of the challenges of looking for life elsewhere is (that) our

NASA/PHOTO

Did

An artists concept of Curiosity vaporizing a patch of rock for


analysis.

search is based on what we know, said NASA Astrobiology Program


Manager Dr. Mary Voytek. So how can it be expanded to include life
as we dont know it? Can we use something else besides water?
Weve seen lakes of methane on Titan (Saturns largest moon),
one of the bodies were interested in. Could life grow in liquid
methane? Scientists are trying to expand it to make the search as
broad as possible.
To find life on Mars, one has to understand how we find life on
Earth.
We find organic molecules throughout the geological rock record,
Eigenbrode said. In this, we find evidence of microbial organisms.
NASA is evaluating where on Mars we might best find clues to life,
or past lives, by reading the rocks. We dont want to dump that
adorably and aptly named Curiosity just anywhere.
When we go to Mars, were taking an instrument that will be
capable of looking for molecular fossils, Eigenbrode said. It kind of
presents this ideathis creative conceptionbillions of years ago
on Mars.
Just about seven years ago, Spirit and Opportunity landed on Mars.
They drive reeeeeeally slowly, Squyres said, and have covered
just more than 20 miles collectively. However, theyve told us an
enormous amount of what rocks are like at these two locations on
the (Martian) surface. Mars today is a cold, dry, desolate world. If you
went there, you would hate it.
Butevidence shows that at one time, it may have been much
more habitable. And heck, what more could organisms want? A red
carpet?
Humans may be picky but cows are certainly not such prima
donnas. Someone tell me where I can catch the next rocket ship. I
may want to check this out for myself.

Resupplying the International Space Station


By Rachel Kraft

ATV-2 Johannes Kepler at night during shipment.


sending an array of crew supplies totaling 3,000 pounds, from
multipurpose goods like Nitrile gloves, batteries and tape, to
socks, shirts and food for crew members. Johannes Kepler will
also transport critical spare parts such as Recycle Filter Tank
Assemblies and Multifiltration Beds that help purify water and a
Power Distribution Unit that will help the station function.
ATV-2 will also transport crucial liquid cargo to station.
ATV is bringing up 4,000 kg of propellant that can be used
when the ATV is attached, said Launch Package Integration
Manager Eugene Schwanbeck. ATV will also transport fuel that will
be transferred to the stations thrusters and gaseous oxygen.
Preparing cargo for ATV-2s journey is not as easy as simply
sending it directly to French Guiana, on the northeastern coast of
South America.
The vehicle office here determines that were going to run out
of things by a certain date and we need to get a few things up
there, Schwanbeck said. They look at the flight schedule and
flight program and determine which (vehicle) candidates are best.

Team members must then account for every factor that could
affect the cargo during flight to ensure that it will arrive to station
in mint condition.
The Joint Cargo Certification Team looks at the specific launch
vehicle and the hardware to determine if theyre compatible,
Schwanbeck said.
Then they consider every small detail, from how much padding
and foam cushioning are needed, to vibration, acoustics and
temperature during flight.
There are two parameters that we really keep in mindmass
and volume, Schwanbeck said.
Cargo that originates at Johnson Space Center is first
transported to Houstons Bush Intercontinental Airport, where it is
typically shipped via commercial aircraft to Paris Charles de Gaulle
Airport.
The only cargo that goes regularly into that country is on Air
France, Schwanbeck said.
From there, the cargo is consolidated with other cargo, trucked
across town to the citys other major airport and flown to Cayenne,
the capital of French Guiana. After the aircraft lands, the cargo is
transported up the countrys coast to Kourou, where ESA assembles
the cargo in the ATV before launch aboard the Ariane 5 rocket.
NASA allows the shipment process to take two weeks to
account for possible delays en route, but the agencys ATV-2 cargo
shipment arrived in Kourou in four days.
Schwanbeck emphasized that standing armies, from a
stowage integrator to teams that do the physical packing, help
carry out the logistics of readying cargo for a trip to space. Once
docked to station, Johannes Kepler will spend more than three
months on orbit, allowing station crew members enough time to
unload the many tons of supplies and restock it with trash that,
after undocking, will incinerate as it reenters the Earths orbit
during descent.

The Integrated Cargo Carrier


for Europe's second Automated
Transfer Vehicle, Johannes
Kepler, is prepared for
transportation from Thales
Alenia Space Italy in Turin, Italy,
to EADS Astrium in Bremen,
Germany.

PHOTO/ESA TV

PHOTO/ESA/ASTRIUM

mid-February, the European Space Agency (ESA) will


launch its second Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV-2)
from its spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. This event comes
shortly after the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agencys H-II
Transfer Vehicle and the 41st Russian Progress launched to station
in January. Coordinating the launch and arrival of a resupply
vehicle takes methodical planning and precision, and preparing
and transporting NASA cargo sent to station via an unmanned
vehicle requires a small army.
ATV-2, named Johannes Kepler after the German astronomer
and mathematician, will transport seven tons of cargo and is the
second ESA resupply vehicle to visit stationthe Jules Verne
rendezvoused with the orbiting laboratory in 2008. NASA is

PHOTO/ESA/THALES ALENIA SPACE

In

ATV-1 left the International


Space Station in September
2008.

Roundup | 5

Orion: The next-generation spacecraft


NASAs Orion spacecraft has seen tremendous technological advancements in the past year. The capsule
is undergoing continuous research and development phases geared toward being the next manned
spacecraft after the retirement of the space shuttle.

Riding the STORRM to safer, more reliable docking


navigation
An inventive navigation system that will make docking operations
safer and easier for future spacecraft will be Orions first system to
be flown and tested on orbit. Developed collaboratively by NASA,
Ball and Lockheed Martin, the docking navigation system prototype
will be tested by astronauts aboard STS-134 in an unprecedented
on-orbit maneuver as part of the Sensor Test for Orion Relative
Navigation Risk Mitigation (STORRM) Development Test Objective.
On Flight Day 11 of the mission, the shuttle crew will undock from
6 | Roundup

station and then


re-rendezvous with
the station on an
Orion-like approach.
As Orion
approaches the
station, STORRMs
sensors will provide
real-time, 3-D
images to the crew
with a resolution
Ball Aerospace technicians
16 times higher
work with STORRM, an inventive
than the current
shuttle sensors. This navigation system of the future, in
single-system design a clean room.
provides the required
docking accuracy and range capability necessary to meet Orions
crew safety, mass, volume and power constraints.
Because of its capability to determine shapes, intensity and
distance, STORRMs sensing technology may also improve a variety
of Earthbound applications such as terrain mapping, deforestation
monitoring and transportation hazardous avoidance systems.

Orions right stuff: Thermal protection system


Protecting the spacecraft and its crew from the extreme
temperatures experienced during reentry is one of the most missioncritical requirements for human spaceflight. Orion will be protected
by the worlds
largest heat
shield structure,
composed
of a newly
developed resin
that can endure
higher reentry
temperatures,
which will result
in improved crew
safety and mass
Aerojet completed acceptance testoptimization of the
ing of the second R-4D development Orion spacecraft.
The Lockheed
engine at their test facility in RedMartin Orion team
mond, Washington. The R-4D is the
in Denver recently
Aerojet engine that will be used on
performed a heat
the Orion vehicle for Service Module shield flipping
procedure to
Auxiliary propulsion.

NASA/PHOTO

With computing power 1,000 times faster than current shuttle


systems, NASAs Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle (CEV) is designed to
be the most technically self-sufficient spacecraft ever built. Orion will
use a networking technology called Time Triggered Gigabit Ethernet
(TT-GbE), which will allow NASA engineers to categorize different
types of data and prioritize how that data should travel through the
network.
This technology
ensures that
critical data and
nonessential data
will be able to safely
travel over a single
network onboard
the spacecraft,
as opposed to
the shuttle and
the space station,
The Orion Ground Test Article will
where critical data
serve as a production pathfinder
travels over separate
to validate the flight vehicle
dedicated networks.
TT-GbE data is
production processes and tools.
time-critical
control
This first full-sized crew module
data that manages
will be tested on the ground in
vital systems like
equivalent flight-like environments. navigation and life
support. This data
will have guaranteed bandwidth and message timing to ensure it
will always reach its destination on time, regardless of other network
traffic.
Orions easily upgradable design makes it adaptable for future
technology advancements. For example, Honeywell is already actively
investing in future technology research to make Orion-like avionics
available to future space vehicles at 1/10th the current size, weight
and power penalty. These additional savings are necessary to enable
longer missions to more distant destinations in the near future.

NASA/PHOTO JSC2010E198535

NASA/PHOTO

Orion next-generation networking

conduct static testing and prepare the structure for simulated Avcoat
application and painting. When the simulated Avcoat is applied and
painted, the heat shield will be ready for integration to the Orion Crew
Module Ground Test Article vehicle. Once integrated with the heat
shield and thermal protection backshell, the spacecraft will undergo
rigorous testing in flight-like environments. The craft will also undergo
a series of drop tests later this year at the NASA Langley Research
Center Hydro Impact Basin.

PHOTO/ NICK HEATH/SILICON.COM

Serious software
Orions robust software architecture is highly reconfigurable,
using a table-based approach that allows for mission-to-mission
flexibility. In addition, the software development team integrated
commercial off-theshelf products with
heritage products
to incorporate
operational
applications without
unnecessary rework,
thereby saving time
and money. Orions
software architecture,
requirements
and initial design
This reproduction of part of the
successfully passed
Orion cockpit dashboard is used
NASAs Software
inside a flight simulator.
Preliminary Design
Review in 2010,
proving that the design encompassed Orions five necessary software
elements: flight software; electronic ground support equipment
software; simulation and test software; data services software; and
initial updates to the backup flight control software.
Orions software demonstrated the right stuff during Orions
successful Pad Abort 1 flight test in May of last year. The crew
module test article used included Honeywell avionics and Lockheed
Martin software for onboard control of abort sequencing and inertial
navigation. The three pallet-mounted avionics systems for the flight
test hosted a vehicle management computer system based on
integrated modular avionics technology developed for the Boeing 787
and a remote interface unit that works between the vehicle computers
and all analog parts of the system.

Wind tunnel testing


The CEV Aeroscience Project (CAP) aerothermal group uses a
complex combination of high-fidelity computational simulations
and wind tunnel testing to create design environments for the Orion
Command Module (CM) and the Launch Abort Vehicle. Each phase
of wind tunnel testing covers a different flight regime, physical

phenomenon or geometric complexity to support the engineering tools


and computational prediction of flight environments. These predictions
give the extreme
temperatures during
hypersonic reentry
that the CM must
withstand using its
thermal protection
system.
The high-fidelity
aerothermodynamic
testing of the Orion
CM backshell, CAPs
The High Fidelity Wind Tunnel
most ambitious
and extensive wind Model for aerothermodynamic
testing of the Orion Capsule,
tunnel test, was
recently completed mounted on a blade sting in
after years of
CUBRC's Large Energy National
planning. The test
Shock Tunnel. Each of the gold dots
results gave vital
is a thin film sensor measuring
information in its
heat transfer values.
prediction of flight
environments, and
also provided data on the complex aerothermal environment on the
CM backshell in all its intricacies.

NASA/PHOTO

Compiled by Neesha Hosein

Parachutes: Ensuring crew safety by design


The CEV Parachute Assembly System (CPAS) will ensure the crew
enjoys a safe and gentle landing following a dynamic, high-speed
reentry from space. The entire system is made up of eight parachutes:
two mortar-deployed drogues for stabilization and initial speed
reduction; three pilots; and three main parachutes, which further
reduce the speed of the module to its final descent rate of 25 feet per
second. The CPAS airdrop development test program is responsible
for robust risk mitigation of parachute deployment through a variety of
possible reentry conditions.
Orions system combines proven heritage design elements of the
Apollo-era parachutes with new innovations that will meet more
demanding mission challenges. The drogue chutes will deploy at
a higher altitude to provide increased vehicle stability. (Orion can
still land safely even if a drogue or main parachute fails to deploy.)
And, the system can ensure a secure landing in an emergency, as
demonstrated during the successful Pad Abort 1 flight test.
To date, CPAS has completed both Generation 1 and 2 test series in
preparation for the Engineering Development Unit test series that will
begin this year, which will fully characterize the end-to-end system
performance, validate the simulations, reduce technical risk and
demonstrate reliability in the various operational configurations. These
tests will provide the insight into the parachute system leading to
qualification for human spaceflight.
Roundup | 7

NASA Ambassadors
By Rachel Kraft

January, 16 Johnson

Space Center interns

were selected to be part of NASA

Ambassadors, a program where

many of the agencys highest

achieving student interns are

chosen to do research in their

fields and help encourage and

inspire other students in science,

technology, engineering and

mathematics (STEM) fields. JSCs

newly minted ambassadors were

nominated by their managers

and mentors and will join nearly

100 other interns selected

agencywide this year and nearly

200 selected in 2009 and 2010.

The students who are

nominated to the ambassadors

and to represent NASA are the

outstanding students in their

programs, the ones who go above

and beyond excelling both in

school and at work, said Sherri

Burrow, program coordinator for

the Career Explorations Program

(CEP), which helps high school
Recently selected NASA Ambassadors (left to right): Zaida Hernandez, Selina Zalesak, Martin
and college students learn
administrative and technical skills Guevara and Fidelina Quiroz.
at NASA, and from which seven
Guevara is interested in improving the link between technology
of JSCs ambassadors were selected this year. Nine were selected
and the environment. During his time at NASA, he studied how
from the Minority University Research Education Program (MUREP).
cyanobacteria adapts to extreme environments in the Astromaterials
They love NASA and love to share that with their peers.
Research and Engineering Science Directorate, and worked with lunar
Each ambassador brings a unique perspective to the program.
dust and regolith in the toxicology research department. Guevara
Zaida Hernandez, now a mechanical engineering major at the
currently works in the Habitability and Environmental Factors Division,
University of Houston, has always enjoyed building things and began
where he studies human factors to allow for safe and productive
considering engineering as a major in college, and as a profession,
space missions.
after she took engineering graphics classes in high school.
Other JSC interns selected for NASA Ambassadors from the
I knew I wanted to be an engineer, but my internship at NASA
MUREP and CEP programs have supported Mission Operations,
last year helped me decide that I wanted to pursue mechanical
Engineering, White Sands Test Facility, assisted with tests to perfect
engineering, Hernandez said.
the Orion design, worked on robotics programming, worked in the
Hernandez works in the Space Suit and Crew Survival Systems
Branch and will help test self-adjustable gloves and boots this year. She International Space Stations Procurement Office and supported 2010
Summer of Innovation programmingand thats on top of continued
is looking forward to helping other students realize that their dreams in
leadership in and out of the classroom at their respective universities.
STEM fields are attainable.
Through peer-to-peer interaction, the NASA Ambassadors program
Two years ago I had no idea that NASA even hired interns,
helps show a broad range of students that people like them can
Hernandez said. I want to let people know that if working at NASA is
pursue opportunities to help NASA accomplish its mission.
their dream, there are many ways to reach that goal.
They bring fresh ideas to the agency, they bring boundless energy,
Martin Guevara grew up in Mexico and is pursuing an engineering
degree at the University of Houston. He said that he hopes the program enthusiasm and amazing I can do anything attitudes, along with
will enable him to inspire at least one person one that will keep that intelligence and common sense, Burrow said.
For more information, see http://go.usa.gov/rL4 or visit the
inspiration continuous so that it may propel him forward into a STEM
SOLAR website: http://intern.nasa.gov
field and that in the end, he and our society may find progress.
8 | Roundup

PHOTO/ LAUREN REID, UNIVERSITIES SPACE RESEARCH ASSOCIATION

In

Looking to the future of spaceflight


by harnessing the past

JSC Voices, the centers storytelling program, provides the


platform and means for team members to pass on their work
experiences to future generations.
JSC Voices
JSC Voices is the centers StoryCorps program, where participants
can produce their own movie or be in a production sponsored by
the CKO, showcasing their NASA experiences. The project honors
these personal stories and makes them accessible to everyone.
When colleagues hear these stories, they become a part of the
trials and triumphs and hear the courage and humor found in an
incredible range of voices. JSC Voices ensures that these moments
are preserved so that they can be passed on for future knowledge
transfer.
Storytelling
A vital component of knowledge management, in a single word,
is storytelling. Each month, the CKO holds storytelling sessions
where JSC team members can listen to a cross section of current
and former employees on a variety of topics with broad, centerwide
appeal. These stories can be from the past, present or futureand
are offered in a lighthearted or serious vein.
Lessons Learned
Lessons learned share knowledge derived from experience to
promote the recurrence of desirable outcomes or preclude the
recurrence of undesirable outcomes. The references to lessons

learned reflect the need to communicate acquired data and ensure


that beneficial information is factored into planning, work processes
and activities.
The JSC Lessons Learned Program consists of a number of local,
agency and program collections and a center-level coordinating
functionthe Center Data Manager (CDM). Because of the diverse
nature of JSC work, the infrastructure mechanisms are tailored
to each local level. JSC organizations fit their own processes in
accordance with their functions, responsibilities and authorities.
The CDM links the local, agency and program collections together
to facilitate the sharing of lessons with JSC organizations and the
agency.
Lean Six Sigma
Lean Six Sigma (L6S) is a structured approach to process
evaluation for improvement. Analysis tools and techniques are used
to identify possible forms of waste, such as procedural steps that
may be required but don't add value and causes of variation in
product.
In May 2009, the Quality and Flight Equipment Division and the
Office of Knowledge and Quality Management partnered to integrate
the principles and practices of L6S into the continuous improvement
aspect of the JSC Quality Management System. The training
division of Human Resources provided training, facilities for events
and an L6S Implementation and Facilitation Team (LIFT) member.
Engineering joined the effort and added a member to the LIFT as
well.
JSCs implementation was guided and supported by the NASA
Lean Six Sigma Office and industry L6S experts. The combined effort
provided training, mentoring, certification criteria, checklists and
other tools needed for a successful program.
At JSC, NASA is partnering with local contractors, many of whom
have years of L6S experience. Several L6S process-improvement
events have been heldsome of which have completed

NASA/DEHOYOS JSC2010E042046

NASA/BLAIR JSC2010E061626

Johnson Space Center is one of the few centers with a Chief


Knowledge Officer (CKO) and comprehensive knowledgemanagement programessential to the capture and retention
of more than 50 years of human spaceflight expertise. Since its
inception in 2006, the avenues for sharing knowledge within
JSC have grown exponentially. You may have heard of the
Office of Knowledge and Quality Management through popular
storytelling events, but there is more to itall for the wider
goal of enhancing what you know (tacit knowledge gained
through experience and training), who you know (your social
network) and what everyone else knows (explicit knowledge
that has been codified and made available in knowledge bases).

Compiled by Catherine E. Williams

The Office of Knowledge and Quality Management offered A


Six-pack of Wisdom: 5 Engineers + 1 Astronaut to viewers in
Building 30.
(continued on page 11)
Roundup | 9

Spotlight Mitchell Sweeney


Altitude Rescue Specialist, Jacobs Technology

PHOTOS ARE COURTESY OF MITCHELL SWEENEY

Q: Weve never heard of an Altitude Rescue Specialist.


What do you do?
A: Altitude Rescue Specialists serve as rescue personnel for
the astronauts while they perform any training inside altitude
chambers. We train to remove the crew member from his/
her Extravehicular Mobility Unit (EMU) in any dangerous or
uncomfortable situations he or she may experience when testing
inside the human-rated vacuum chambers. We do manned and
unmanned testing in the vacuum chambers of Buildings 7 and
33, testing flight hardware and also full EMUs. We are partially
responsible for assisting astronauts in the use of the Space Station
Airlock Test Assembly located inside Building 7. Our secondary
duties involve building testing apparatuses and assemblies for
advanced life-support testing related to various projects.
Q: Favorite hobbies or interesting things you do away from
the office?
A: Gardening, boxing, muay thai and jiu jitsu.
Q: What was your first job (not necessarily at NASA,
but ever)?
A: In high school I did large-scale car wash maintenance and
automotive detail and installation for car dealerships.
Q: If you could trade places with any other person for a
week, famous or obscure, living or dead, real or fictional,
who would it be?
A: Any member of a U.S. Special Forces team.

Q: What is your most prized possession?


A: My thoughts, if they could be considered a possession!

Q: What would people be surprised to know about you?


A: I enjoy vegetable gardening.

Q: 13. What is your best memory at NASA or Johnson


Space Center?
A: Being very young and getting to tour the facilities with my
grandfather, who has served NASA for 45+ years!

Q: What is your favorite quote or motto?


A: Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does
knowledge. Charles Darwin

Q: Describe yourself in three words.


A: Humble, open, blunt.

Q: What would we find in your refrigerator right now?


A: Grandmas homemade stew.
Q: Last good book or article you read?
A: The Encyclopedia of Country Living.
Q: Favorite travel destination (or place youd love to go if
given the opportunity)?
A: Alaska.
Q: Favorite TV show and why?
A: Modern Marvels. It gives a good amount of insight to the
process and manpower it takes to accomplish large taskssimilar
to what goes on here at NASAmany minds being utilized to
accomplish a common goal.

10 | Roundup

WANTED!
Do you know a JSC colleague or team that does something
extraordinary on or off the job? Whether its a unique skill,
interesting work, special professional accomplishment,
remarkable second career, hobby or volunteerism, your
nominee(s) may deserve the spotlight!
The Roundup shines the light on one special person or
team each month, chosen from a cross section of the JSC
workforce. To suggest Spotlight candidates, send your
nomination to the JSC Roundup Office mailbox at [email protected]. Please include contact information
and a brief description of why your nominee(s) should
be considered.

Center Scoop
Toys for Kids

Calling all
retirees

NASA/STAFFORD JSC2010E196930

NASA/STAFFORD JSC2010E196927

Johnson Space Center supported U.S. Representative Sheila Jackson Lees annual
Toys for Kids event at the George R. Brown Convention Center on Dec. 18. Astronauts George Zamka,
Stephanie Wilson, Lee Morin and Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger took part by speaking to the crowd and
signing autographs. NASAs exhibit featured the inflatable International Space Station node display,
childrens interactive displays and volunteers to engage the approximately 3,000 children in attendance.
JSCs mascot, Cosmo, also participated in this years event, which marked the 16th anniversary of Toys
for Kids.

Have you retired from NASA


and taken up a unique
hobby, new profession or
are involved in interesting
volunteer work? We want
to hear what youve been
up to since leaving NASA.
Send us an e-mail at [email protected].
We may choose to feature
you in Roundup or on JSC
Features!

(continued from page 9)


implementation plans, and others with numerous actions in work.
For more information regarding training or improvement events,
or to discuss opportunities for L6S in your organization, contact:
Cheryl Corbin ([email protected]); Cheryl Andrews
([email protected]); Laurie Peterson (laurie.j.peterson@
nasa.gov); or Terri Washington ([email protected]).
Or, access the LIFT website: http://www6.jsc.nasa.gov/ISO9000/
Lean_6_Sigma

and can comment on others ideas. The ultimate vision for taxonomy
is to connect information stovepipes and present a unified view for
information and knowledge across the center, organizations and
decades.
For more on taxonomy, contact JSC Taxonomist Sarah Berndt
([email protected]); Katie Redmond with JSC taxonomy support
([email protected]); or Information Resources Directorate
Taxonomist Ebony Fondren ([email protected]).

JSC Taxonomy
The CKO has developed the
JSC Taxonomy to capitalize on the
accomplishments of yesterday while
maintaining the flexibility needed for
the evolving information environment
of today. The taxonomy is a set of
labels, known as preferred terms,
arranged in a hierarchy to effectively
categorize the information associated
with more than 50 years of human
spaceflight.
Participating in the JSC Taxonomy
is now easier than ever. The first
version of the Taxonomy Feedback
Tool is available at JSC Knowledge
Online (http://knowledge.jsc.nasa.
gov). With this tool, JSC users can
suggest terms, images and websites,

Quality Management System


The JSC Quality Management System (QMS) is the collection of
management principles, people and policies into a single system
used to manage the work of the center. The eight management
principles (customer focus, leadership, involvement of people, process
approach, system approach to management, continual improvement,
factual approach to decision-making and mutually beneficial supplier
relationships) are the basis for the International Standards for Quality
Management.
JSCs QMS has been certified to the ISO 9000 standard since
March 1998, and has been recertified every three years to its latest
revision. Additionally, the JSC QMS was certified to the International
Standard for Aerospace Quality Management Systems in 2006. These
certifications ensure that JSC complies with federal/agency policies
and maintains an integrated management system. It also means that
JSC uses the same quality-management standards as our International
Partners and local contractors.
More information on the QMS can be found at http://www6.jsc.nasa.
gov/ISO9000/index.cfm.

The Rosetta Stone provided


a common vocabulary for
the use of hieroglyphic,
demotic and Greek scripts,
allowing multiple groups to
communicate information.
The JSC Taxonomy acts as
our own Rosetta Stone as it
identifies terms to accurately
describe JSC content.

Roundup | 11

PRSRTSTD
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID

Roundup
The Roundup is an official publication of the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration, Johnson Space
Center, Houston, Texas, and is published by the Public
Affairs 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
Web site at: http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/roundup/online/
For distribution questions or to suggest a story idea,
send an e-mail to [email protected].

WEBSTER.TX
Permit No. 39

Catherine Ragin Williams Editor


Logan Goodson Graphic Designer
Rachel Kraft NASA Publication Manager
Cassandra V. Miranda Contractor Publication Manager

OR CURRENT RESIDENT

Keeping tabs on the


lab aloft

12 | Roundup

NASA astronaut Cady Coleman, Expedition 26 flight


engineer, removes the Low Gradient Furnace and installs the
Solidification and Quench Furnace in the Material Science
Laboratory in the Destiny laboratory.

NASA/PHOTO ISS025-E-009858

International Space Station Program has


incorporated new tools for enthusiasts to keep
up with whats going on in the orbiting laboratory.
Space and science aficionados can follow on Twitter, where
the program tweets multiple times a day under @ISS_Research.
NASAs official space station Facebook page (http://www.
facebook.com/ISS )republishes the Twitter feed for additional
outreach to the public.
Station also launched a new and improved subsection
on nasa.gov (http://www.nasa.gov/station/research) that
provides access to weekly science updates and interesting
feature stories regarding station research stories, experiments
and results. Additional content and features will be added in
the next six months. This is where interested parties can read
up on the orbiting laboratorys facilities and current tasks and
find information on how to get new experiments onboard the
station.
More personal communications about research and
accomplishments were added with the launch of a blog
titled A Lab Aloft (http://blogs.nasa.gov/). This blog
shares International Space Station Chief Scientist Dr. Julie A.
Robinsons observations of station research, along with a large
number of guest bloggersinvestigators, astronauts and
implementation teamsproviding personal accounts, opinions
and experiences. This forum also allows readers the capability
to comment and respond, opening an opportunity for dialogue.
Stay connected with the lab aloft as it embarks on
exciting new discoveries during its first full year of the era of
International Space Station utilization.

NASA/PHOTO ISS026-E-014925

The

From 220 miles above Earth, an Expedition 25 crew member


took this nighttime photo featuring the bright lights of Cairo
and Alexandria, Egypt, on the Mediterranean coast. The Nile
River and its delta stand out clearly as well. On the horizon, the
airglow of the atmosphere is seen across the Mediterranean.
The Sinai Peninsula, on the right, is outlined with lights
highlighting the Gulf of Suez and Gulf of Aqaba.

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