Morpheus Lab  
 
search





After a one-year hiatus, the Burning Rate Emulator (BRE) – an experiment that focuses on spacecraft fire behavior, currently aboard the International Space Station (ISS) – began again on September 3. The BRE experiment – first ignited on the ISS on February 8, 2019 and managed by NASA astronauts – will be run once each week through mid-November of this year.

The BRE uses gaseous fuels to determine the flammability of solids in microgravity. The BRE burners — flat, round and porous with embedded heat-flux sensors — allow measurements of burning rate, extinction characteristics, and radiative environments for a broad range of solids. The tests are offering information about how materials, such as paper and plastic, burn in microgravity.

"The biggest surprise so far is that these flames burn a long time," said FPE Professor and Co-Investigator, Peter Sunderland." Most people predicted they would go out quickly, but we've learned that isn't the case at all." The observations suggest that several materials previously thought to safe are in fact flammable in microgravity.

This experiment, supported by NASA and coordinated by Dennis Stocker of NASA Glenn, was launched into orbit aboard the SpaceX Dragon capsule on June 3, 2017. Additional team members include Parham Dehghani (ME Ph.D. student), John deRis, Liora Mervis (FPE B.S. student), James Quintiere (PI and FPE Professor Emeritus), and Anna Wright (FPE M.S. student).


Related media:

UMD Fire Researchers Ignite the First of Two Space Station Experiments, Feb 2019



Related Articles:
UMD Team Advances Mission Concept for 2029 Asteroid Flyby
Akin Receives 2025 ICES Award for Technical Excellence
Two UMD Teams Among Twelve Selected for NASA’s M2M X-Hab Challenge
Soliton Signatures: A New Strategy for Tracking Teeny Tiny Space Debris
Aerospace Engineering at Maryland Expanding Online Graduate Courses This Fall
Department Welcomes New Faculty Member Tam Nguyen
Alumna Blasts Into Space
Ask An Engineer: Space Travel
Hartzell Mission Scientist for NASA SIMPLEx Janus Mission
Two UMD Teams Take Best in Theme at NASA’s RASC-AL Competition

September 10, 2020


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

UMD Team Advances Mission Concept for 2029 Asteroid Flyby

Summer Interns Build Pro-Level Skills at UROC

Akin Receives 2025 ICES Award for Technical Excellence

Two UMD Teams Among Twelve Selected for NASA’s M2M X-Hab Challenge

Team “Crossfire” Advances to Phase II of XPRIZE Wildfire Semifinals

Soliton Signatures: A New Strategy for Tracking Teeny Tiny Space Debris

Gebhardt Named 2025-26 MWC ARCS Scholar

Rudolph Awarded Women in Defense Scholarship

Marge Donovan: Cooking Up Innovation in Rotorcraft Blade Design

Robot-Assisted Triage: UMD Team Answers the Challenge

 
 
Back to top  
Home Clark School Home UMD Home aero umd NIA NASA