Archive for heavy lift

NASA insists human space program still strong

NASA is on track with its goals for future space exploration, including the development of a new rocket and spacecraft designed to take astronauts to asteroids and Mars, the agency’s administrator told lawmakers Thursday.

NASA chief Charles Bolden testified before the Senate Subcommittee on Science and Space today to discuss NASA’s human spaceflight ambitions and its work to turn them into a reality.

“Contrary to popular belief, this has been an incredible year for NASA,” Bolden said.

He pointed to the completion of the International Space Station, the burgeoning commercial space sector that will assume the responsibility of taking cargo and eventually astronauts to the orbiting outpost, and the concurrent development within NASA of a new heavy-lift rocket and space capsule designed to explore farther out in the solar system, as indicators that NASA’s future is vibrant despite the tough economic times.



NASA

Bolden listed these three areas as the agency’s key priorities for the future. NASA retired its 30-year space shuttle program in July to focus instead on manned exploration beyond low-Earth orbit.

The transition left a gap in U.S. human spaceflight capabilities, and the agency is currently relying on Russian rockets to take astronauts to and from the space station until U.S. commercial services become available.

In the meantime, NASA is also moving ahead with the development of its Space Launch System and Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle. The booster and space capsule are being designed to carry astronauts on future missions to an asteroid and Mars. The design of the MPCV capsule is based on plans for NASA’s Orion spacecraft, which was originally part of the now-defunct Constellation program to return astronauts to the moon.

Bolden said incremental tests have already been completed for the $10 billion Space Launch System. Most recently, NASA successfully test-fired a huge upper-stage rocket engine, called the J-2X, on Nov. 9 at the Stennis Space Center in Mississippi.

The agency is aiming to complete an unmanned test flight of the MPCV capsule by 2014.

The NASA administrator also spoke about the challenges of working within such a difficult fiscal climate, particularly without the benefit of a clearly established budget. Like many other federal agencies, NASA has been forced to trim costs across a wide variety of programs.

“When I talk about prioritization, that is exactly what we’re doing,” Bolden said. “There are science imperatives that we have to be able to satisfy if we’re going to go to Mars. There’s no capability we can drop off the table. How do we accomplish the critical goals and objectives, but do it with less?”


    1. Image: False-color Saturn


      NASA / JPL-Caltech / SSI


      Sentinel at Saturn watches the rise of colossal storm



      Updated 64 minutes ago

      11/18/2011 4:13:55 AM +00:00




      Science editor Alan Boyle’s Weblog: NASA’s Cassini mission chronicles the evolution of a planet-encircling storm that ravaged Saturn for nearly a year.


    2. Moon may outshine Leonid meteor show


    3. Orbiter watches dunes on the move on Mars


    4. Chinese craft returns from space docking mission

Yet, Bolden expressed optimism that NASA is on track, with a manned mission to the Red Planet firmly in its sight.

“I think people are excited about space,” Bolden said. “We are putting in place a capabilities-driven program because we have decided that our ultimate destination for humans is Mars.”

And, in an indication that NASA is committed to its goals for human spaceflight, the agency recently started accepting applications for its next astronaut class.

“I don’t recruit astronauts if I don’t intend to fly them,” Bolden said.

You can follow Space.com staff writer Denise Chow on Twitter @denisechow. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom  and on Facebook.

© 2011 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

Article source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45347173/ns/technology_and_science-space/

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Funding for NASA program to replace shuttle comes up short

The allocation for the commercial crew program, which will team the space agency with private companies to develop a new vehicle for taking astronauts to the International Space Station, is part of a spending bill that will finance several federal agencies, including the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, in fiscal 2012.

The compromise legislation was brokered by House and Senate negotiators and is expected to pass later this week.

It would provide $17.8 billion for the space agency — $648 million below the fiscal 2011 level and $924 million less than President Barack Obama requested.

NASA could have fared worse. The original House proposal called for $1 billion less than what’s in the compromise.

The James Webb Space Telescope, the agency’s top science priority, would receive the $529 million it needs to proceed with a 2018 launch. House lawmakers had proposed giving the project nothing unless NASA identified programs to delay or eliminate in order to pay for the $8.8 billion telescope, which has been beset by cost overruns.

Other NASA-related provisions in the budget deal would provide:

— $1.2 billion for the Orion multi-purpose crew vehicle

— $1.86 billion for the Space Launch System, the heavy-lift rocket that will carry Orion on a planned Mars mission.

— $573 million related to retirement of the space shuttle.

— $2.8 billion for the space station.

Another provision would continue to bar NASA and the Office of Science and Technology Policy from engaging in bilateral activities with China unless authorized by Congress.

Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Florida, called the deal “good news” for the space program.

“This budget makes a major investment in the next generation of human space flight,” he said.

NASA officials have pushed Congress to provide full funding for the commercial crew program, which will help private companies design, build and launch spacecraft to and from the space station.

NASA originally was aiming for an initial launch in 2015, but administrators have suggested that could be pushed back to 2017 or later without adequate funding.

“At first glance, we are concerned about the funding level for commercial crew, which is significantly below the president’s request and could extend the length of our dependence on Russia to get to space,” NASA spokesman Michael Cabbage said Tuesday.

NASA has agreed to pay Russia for seats on its Soyuz rockets to get to the space station. The price per round trip is about $62 million, according to the agency.

Dale Ketcham, director of the Spaceport Research Technology Institute at the University of Central Florida, called it a “very disappointing decision to direct more money to Moscow.”

Article source: http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/space/story/2011-11-15/nasa-shuttle-budget/51227050/1

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NASA adds test flight for deep-space capsule


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla |
Tue Nov 8, 2011 11:28pm IST

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) – NASA plans to add a $370 million unmanned test flight of a new deep-space capsule designed to send astronauts to asteroids, the moon, Mars and other destinations in the inner solar system, officials said on Tuesday.

The Orion capsule, which is being developed by Lockheed Martin Corp, would fly aboard a Delta 4 or Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in 2014, said NASA spokesman Josh Byerly.

The test capsule would be launched into an orbit that soars as high as 5,000 miles (8,000 km) above the planet. After circling Earth twice, it would slam back into the atmosphere at more than 20,000 mph (32,000 kph), eclipsing the 17,500 mph (28,000 kph) speed of a returning space shuttle.

The fastest a spaceship has returned to Earth with astronauts aboard was the 24,700 mph (39,700 kph) re-entry of Apollo 10 in 1969, Byerly added.

“We will learn through this test that Orion would survive re-entry, being as fast as it is,” he said.

The unmanned test, which will cost NASA an extra $370 million including the launch vehicle, will bump back a test of Orion’s launch abort system from 2015 to 2016.

Along with developing Orion, a legacy program from NASA’s canceled Constellation moon exploration initiative, the United States is developing a heavy-lift rocket based in part on space shuttle hardware. The goal of the program is to send astronauts to explore an asteroid by 2025.

NASA already has spent about $5 billion on the Orion program.

(Editing by Tom Brown and Eric Beech)

Article source: http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/11/08/idINIndia-60397720111108

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NASA adds test flight for deep-space capsule


CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida |
Fri Nov 11, 2011 8:25am EST

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) – NASA plans to add a $370 million unmanned test flight of a new deep-space capsule designed to send astronauts to asteroids, the moon, Mars and other destinations in the inner solar system, officials said on Tuesday.

The Orion capsule, which is being developed by Lockheed Martin Corp, would fly aboard a Delta 4 or Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in 2014, said NASA spokesman Josh Byerly.

The test capsule would be launched into an orbit that soars as high as 5,000 miles above the planet. After circling Earth twice, it would slam back into the atmosphere at more than 20,000 mph, eclipsing the 17,500 mph speed of a returning space shuttle.

The fastest a spaceship has returned to Earth with astronauts aboard was the 24,700 mph re-entry of Apollo 10 in 1969, Byerly added.

“We will learn through this test that Orion would survive re-entry, being as fast as it is,” he said.

The unmanned test, which will cost NASA an extra $370 million including the launch vehicle, will bump back a test of Orion’s launch abort system from 2015 to 2016.

Along with developing Orion, a legacy program from NASA’s canceled Constellation moon exploration initiative, the United States is developing a heavy-lift rocket based in part on space shuttle hardware. The goal of the program is to send astronauts to explore an asteroid by 2025.

NASA already has spent about $5 billion on the Orion program.

(Editing by Tom Brown and Eric Beech)

Article source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/11/11/us-space-nasa-orion-f-idUSTRE7AA32820111111

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Nasa announces 2014 test flight of its Orion deep space capsule

By
Ted Thornhill

Last updated at 5:07 PM on 10th November 2011

Nasa will launch a test flight in 2014 of a new deep-space capsule designed to send astronauts to asteroids, the Moon, Mars.

The Orion capsule, which is being developed by Lockheed Martin Corp, would fly aboard a Delta 4 or Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, said Nasa spokesman Josh Byerly.

The test capsule would be launched into an orbit that soars as high as 5,000 miles (8,000 km) above the planet.

SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO

Having a blast off: An artist's impression of the Orion crew vehicle in orbit

Having a blast off: An artist’s impression of the Orion crew vehicle in orbit

Making a splash: Engineers conduct a water-drop test of Orion, which will land in the sea when it returns to Earth

Making a splash: Engineers conduct a water-drop test of Orion, which will land in the sea when it returns to Earth

After circling Earth twice, it would slam back into the atmosphere at more than 20,000mph (32,000kph), eclipsing the 17,500mph (28,000kph) speed of a returning space shuttle.

The fastest a spaceship has returned to Earth with astronauts aboard was the 24,700 mph (39,700 kph) re-entry of Apollo 10 in 1969, Byerly added.

‘We will learn through this test that Orion would survive re-entry, being as fast as it is,’ he said.

The unmanned test, which will cost Nasa an extra $370million (£232million) including the launch vehicle, will bump back a test of Orion’s launch abort system from 2015 to 2016.

Along with developing Orion, a legacy program from Nasa’s cancelled Constellation moon exploration initiative, the U.S. is developing a heavy-lift rocket based in part on space shuttle hardware.

Under the bonnet: A Nasa weld technician works on Orion

Under the bonnet: A Nasa weld technician works on Orion

Up, up and away: An artist's impression of the heavy-lift rocket that will take Orion into space

Up, up and away: An artist’s impression of the heavy-lift rocket that will take Orion into space

The goal of the program is to send astronauts to explore an asteroid by 2025.

Nasa has already has spent about $5billion on the Orion program.

As part of the preparations for a possible trip to the Red Planet six astronauts recently completed a 500-day stay in a windowless capsule in Moscow.

The facility simulated confinement, stress and fatigue of interplanetary travel – the only thing not simulated was weightlessness.

The crew communicated with the organisers and their families via the Internet, which was delayed and occasionally disrupted to imitate the effects of space travel. They ate canned food similar to that offered on the International Space Station.

The organisers said each crew member will be paid about $100,000, except the Chinese researcher whose reward hasn’t been revealed by the Chinese officials.

Vitaly Davydov, a deputy head of the Russian space agency, said the experiment will help pave the way for a real Mars mission. He added that it’s not expected until mid 2030s and should be done in close international cooperation

One of the astronauts on board, French engineer Romain Charles, said in a recent diary entry: ‘Our international crew went through the Mars500 mission successfully.

We’re happy and proud to answer positively to the question asked a year-and-a-half ago: ‘Is man able to endure, physiologically and psychologically, the confinement of a trip to Mars?’

‘Yes, we’re ready to go!’

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Here’s what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below,
or debate this issue live on our message boards.

The comments below have not been moderated.

Just as private enterprise seems to heading towards building a real space plane it seems bizarre that NASA should seek to build Apollo Mark 2. I can’t see this programme capturing the imagination as Apollo once did.
The dream of manned deep space flight will remain (as opposed to low Earth orbit) I think a dream for some time to come. I’m in my early forties now and I have doubts that I’ll see a manned landing on Mars in my lifetime. Such a mission will cost a fortune and unless there is either a strategic, economic or some other pressing need I cannot see it happening. But if we do go we should go with a purpose to stay and build once we get there.
That said with improvements in artificial intelligence future deep space exploration would perhaps – at least until we have faster propulsion systems – be better left to even more advance robot probes (which have already done a sterling job in exploring the solar system already).
.

There is scientific reason why they looked like that 40 years ago. The shape of capsule is a blunt body, this shape creates a shock wave in front of it during re-entry. This shock wave does not touch the capsule and carries away the heat of re-entry. It by the far the safest design shape. Other shapes such as the orbiter create leading edges and other hot spots on their body during re-entry.
So now you are educated in space vehicle re-entry design and should stop talking about how it “looks” like it did 40 years ago.
Remember, 40 years ago they spent a tremendous amount of money to research and develop space craft. Next time think about the fact that they may have had a reason for it to “look” like that.

No austerity at nasa then……………….OK for some!

Oh look, how sweet, it looks almost the same as the ones they were building 40 YEARS AGO!!!! peter Pan,
well it worked didn’t it? I expect the car you drive looks in essence liek the ones built 40 yrs ago. Just goes to show how brave and clever apollo program was, whatever the reason for doing it. This is what the world needs now, a new adventure to capture the imagination

Why do I, who lives in Houston, get to read this in the British Press?

I don’t think it will ever happen, they have lost the spirit of the 60′s. There will be no monetary profit in it.

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

Article source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2059758/Nasa-announces-2014-test-flight-Orion-deep-space-capsule.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

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New Heavy-Lift Rocket Motor Gets a Workout

NASA’s Space Launch Systems upper stage J-2X rocket engine was successfully test fired for 500 seconds on November 9th, 2011.

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Nasa announce 2014 test flight of its Orion deep space capsule

By
Ted Thornhill

Last updated at 11:13 AM on 10th November 2011

Nasa will launch a test flight in 2014 of a new deep-space capsule designed to send astronauts to asteroids, the Moon, Mars.

The Orion capsule, which is being developed by Lockheed Martin Corp, would fly aboard a Delta 4 or Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, said Nasa spokesman Josh Byerly.

The test capsule would be launched into an orbit that soars as high as 5,000 miles (8,000 km) above the planet.

SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO

Having a blast off: An artist's impression of the Orion crew vehicle in orbit

Having a blast off: An artist’s impression of the Orion crew vehicle in orbit

Making a splash: Engineers conduct a water-drop test of Orion, which will land in the sea when it returns to Earth

Making a splash: Engineers conduct a water-drop test of Orion, which will land in the sea when it returns to Earth

After circling Earth twice, it would slam back into the atmosphere at more than 20,000mph (32,000kph), eclipsing the 17,500mph (28,000kph) speed of a returning space shuttle.

The fastest a spaceship has returned to Earth with astronauts aboard was the 24,700 mph (39,700 kph) re-entry of Apollo 10 in 1969, Byerly added.

‘We will learn through this test that Orion would survive re-entry, being as fast as it is,’ he said.

The unmanned test, which will cost Nasa an extra $370million (£232million) including the launch vehicle, will bump back a test of Orion’s launch abort system from 2015 to 2016.

Along with developing Orion, a legacy program from Nasa’s cancelled Constellation moon exploration initiative, the U.S. is developing a heavy-lift rocket based in part on space shuttle hardware.

Under the bonnet: A Nasa weld technician works on Orion

Under the bonnet: A Nasa weld technician works on Orion

Up, up and away: An artist's impression of the heavy-lift rocket that will take Orion into space

Up, up and away: An artist’s impression of the heavy-lift rocket that will take Orion into space

The goal of the program is to send astronauts to explore an asteroid by 2025.

Nasa has already has spent about $5billion on the Orion program.

As part of the preparations for a possible trip to the Red Planet six astronauts recently completed a 500-day stay in a windowless capsule in Moscow.

The facility simulated confinement, stress and fatigue of interplanetary travel – the only thing not simulated was weightlessness.

The crew communicated with the organisers and their families via the Internet, which was delayed and occasionally disrupted to imitate the effects of space travel. They ate canned food similar to that offered on the International Space Station.

The organisers said each crew member will be paid about $100,000, except the Chinese researcher whose reward hasn’t been revealed by the Chinese officials.

Vitaly Davydov, a deputy head of the Russian space agency, said the experiment will help pave the way for a real Mars mission. He added that it’s not expected until mid 2030s and should be done in close international cooperation

One of the astronauts on board, French engineer Romain Charles, said in a recent diary entry: ‘Our international crew went through the Mars500 mission successfully.

We’re happy and proud to answer positively to the question asked a year-and-a-half ago: ‘Is man able to endure, physiologically and psychologically, the confinement of a trip to Mars?’

‘Yes, we’re ready to go!’

Print this articlePrint this article

Read laterRead later

Email to a friendEmail to a friend

Article source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2059758/Nasa-announce-2014-test-flight-Orion-deep-space-capsule.html

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NASA Test Fires Engine for Giant New Rocket


This artist's concept shows NASA's Space Launch System atop its Florida launch pad.


NASA's New Heavy-Lift Rocket - Animated Look


Latest News About NASA's Space Launch System




J-2X test fire

NASA test-fires the J-2X engine on Nov. 9, 2011. The J-2X is a key component of the agency’s Space Launch System, the heavy-lift rocket designed to carry astronauts to the moon, Mars and other deep-space destinations.
CREDIT: NASA TV


This story was updated at 5:30 p.m. EST.

NASA successfully test-fired a key component of its next-generation heavy-lift rocket today (Nov. 9), putting through its paces a rocket engine that could help propel astronauts to the moon and Mars.

The space agency fired up the huge J-2X engine for more than eight minutes at its Stennis Space Center in Mississippi during the afternoon test, which began at 4:04 p.m. EST (2104 GMT). The J-2X will serve as the upper stage of NASA’s Space Launch System, the $10 billion heavy-lift rocket slated to start launching astronauts toward deep-space destinations by 2021 or so.

The J-2X filled the humid Mississippi air with a deafening roar and clouds of billowing grayish-white vapor for the planned 500 seconds — the length of time it would burn during an actual mission.

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“Engine runtime 499.97 [seconds],” a test coordinator said when the rocket finally shut down, prompting applause from the engineers and technicians gathered in the control room at Stennis.

While engineers have only just begun analyzing data from the test, early returns suggest the J-2X did very well, officials said.

“The engine performed exactly as we expected it to,” Mike Kynard, NASA’s SLS liquid engines element manager, said in a post-test news conference. “The first look is, it ran great.”

This artist's concept shows NASA's giant rocket, the Space Launch System soaring of a launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The rocket is NASA's new booster for deep space missions to an asteroid and ultimately Mars.

NASA next big rocket

NASA unveiled the Space Launch System rocket design in September. The J-2X engine will power the booster’s second stage, while the first stage will use five legacy RS-25D/E main engines that helped launch the agency’s now-retired space shuttle fleet.

Both of these engines burn liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, and are built by aerospace firm Pratt Whitney Rocketdyne. The Space Launch System will also use some booster rockets to help it get off the ground, NASA officials have said. [Gallery: NASA's Space Launch System]

In its early incarnations, the SLS will likely be capable of lofting 70 tons of payload, but NASA eventually wants to beef it up to carry 130 tons of material to space. That super-hefty version would be 10 to 20 percent more powerful than the massive Saturn V rockets that launched astronauts to the moon.

Orion’s rocket ride

NASA plans to use the Space Launch System to loft astronauts into orbit aboard the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle, which is also in development.

The huge rocket won’t be ready for its first test flight until December 2017, but NASA recently said it wants the Orion capsule to take its first unmanned trip to space in 2014. So Orion’s first test flights will likely come aboard a different rocket, perhaps a Delta 4.

Since mothballing the shuttles in July of this year, NASA has been completely dependent on Russian Soyuz vehicles to get its astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit. The agency plans to rely on private space taxis built by commercial companies to ferry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit until the Space Launch System and Orion can be ready for their first deep space missions.

NASA hopes that at least one of the several private space taxi efforts it is backing will be up and running by 2015. That will free the space agency up to focus on getting humans to destinations in deeper space, such as asteroids and Mars.

Today’s successful test was a step toward making NASA’s exploration visions a reality, officials said.

“The future is bright for exploration, recognizing we do live in a constrained budget environment at this point,” said Daniel Dumbacher, NASA’s deputy associate administrator for exploration systems development. “This is an early step, but it’s evidence that we’re making progress.”

You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Article source: http://www.space.com/13567-nasa-giant-rocket-engine-test-j2x.html

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NASA ready to try for 500-second burn of its new J-2X engine

J-2X engineA test of the new J-2X rocket engine at Stennis Space Center in Mississippi (NASA photo)STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Mississippi – They know the new rocket engine works, but is it ready to fire long enough for a space mission? That’s the question NASA technicians and managers are trying to answer in a series of tests of their new J-2X rocket engine this fall at Stennis Space Center in south Mississippi.

The first J-2X, the latest in a series of American rocket engines capable of lifting humans into space, was delivered to Stennis this summer. It was successfully fired at 99 percent power for 40 seconds as recently as Sept. 28. See video of that test below.

This week, NASA engineers will fire the J-2X again and, if things look good, they’ll try for the first time to go the full 500 seconds considered long enough for a typical mission mission.

One motivation to try is the NASA brass scheduled to be at Stennis this week. Directors of several NASA field centers are visiting a series of centers, including Stennis, on a rapid tour. The directors will be at Huntsville’s Marshall Space Flight Center, Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., and Glenn Research Center at Lewis Field, Ohio this week, as well, for a series of closed “all-hands” meetings with center personnel.

They are expected to be at Stennis for the engine test scheduled Wednesday at 3 p.m., NASA spokesman Daniel Kanigan said. It will be televised live on NASA-TV. “It’s not an official test objective,” Kanigan said Friday of the 500-second burn. But it’s got to happen sometime, and Wednesday would be a good time.

The J-2X, a survivor of the now-defunct Constellation rocket program, will power the upper stage of the new heavy-lift rocket NASA is developing for missions to deep space. That stage holds the Orion crew capsule after it separates from the booster.

A second generation of even larger heavy-lift rockets, capable of carrying up to 130 metric tons into space, will also use the J-2X. Those rockets could end up with new core-stage boosters, too, depending on the results of planned competition. The first generation heavy-lift rocket will use solid-fuel boosters similar to those that powered the space shuttle and left-over space shuttle main engines for its core power.

The J-2X is being developed by Pratt Whitney Rocketdyne in Canoga Park, Calif., under Marshall direction. It burns liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen to generate 294,000 pounds of thrust.

Article source: http://blog.al.com/space-news/2011/11/nasa_ready_to_try_for_500-seco.html

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