Up until recently, the limitations of camera technology made it a huge challenge for the likes of NASA to record any detail in video shots of rocket motor plumes, their awesome power and brightness resulting in intensely brilliant footage that causes the rest of the image to remain dark beyond recognition.
But that’s all changed with the arrival of the space agency’s new High Dynamic Range Stereo X (HiDyRS-X) camera, a revolutionary prototype device capable of capturing multiple exposures that combine to produce remarkably detailed footage.
“Traditionally, video cameras record using one exposure at a time, but HiDyRS-X records multiple, slow motion video exposures at once, combining them into a high dynamic range video that perfectly exposes all areas of the video image,” the space agency explains on its website.
The extremely detailed video provided by the new high-speed camera significantly boosts NASA’s research capabilities, allowing it to view not only the plume but also important components on the motor as it fires.
The booster test shown in the video took place at Orbital ATK’s test facility in Promontory, Utah, a couple of months back. It was the second and final booster test before NASA’s planned 2018 trial of the Space Launch System (SLS) heavy-lift rocket with the Orion spacecraft.
SLS will be the most powerful rocket in the world when it goes into operation and is set to help take astronauts further into space than ever before.
Problems
The team charged with gathering the video footage only had one shot at getting it right, as the booster couldn’t be turned off and restarted if something went wrong with the camera equipment. And go wrong it did.
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