NASA Considering Early Retirement of Shuttle Program
Rei writes "While publicly assuring the public that it has no plans to do so, leaks have indicated that NASA has been quietly investigating plans to get rid of the Space Shuttle as soon as possible, and finish the International Space Station with disposable rockets, even as NASA works on achieving Return to Flight in 2005."
And i do mean finally!
.. But are the reusable rockets rated for manned space-flight?
Online Starcraft RPG? At
Dietary fiber is like asynchronous IO-- Non-blocking!
Aren't Saturn Vs just magnificent? They're magnificent! I reckon it's time for them to make a come-back. Please?
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Why rely on several decades old tech for long term dependancies? Some R&D never hurt anyone (except the budget, but that's a separate discussion).
How are they supposed to get down again?
I'd be appaulled if they DIDN'T consider retiring the fleet as an option. To NOT do so would be pig headed. There could very well be a better way, regardless of how great the shuttle program has been, and how much it means to me as someone who grew up having the best "show and tell" pictures because my dad worked on the shuttle.
There's alot of brilliant people over there that don't make it a habit of ignoring all the options, and all the possibilities. Thats what lets them acheive such great heights. I'd be sorry to see it go though.
There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
...outsource it to India? :-)
if the retirement (what a lovely euphemism) is in lieu of a new program, great.
If the scrapping is in lieu of nothing... that's not so great.
I do think a vehicle capable of re-use is important to the goal to get us off the planet; if they need to use rockets to get the ISS done while a new vehicle is built, so be it.
-- james
Hey, let's face it. Who has money for new technology or updating technologies in existing space shuttles? The nation has much more important priorities, like conquering other countries and pissing off the rest of the world.
Besides, the pursuit of science is useless unless it can serve a political purpose, right?
could the recent privatization of space travel have something to do with this?
would it be cheaper to use disposible rockets to finish the iss? or are they worried about the possiblity of long term failure of the aging shuttle fleet...
"Publicly assuring the public" is rather redundant, don't you think?
Finally. What welcome news. I just went to a presentation by Burt Rutan and he was making fun of the shuttle throughout. It's the most dangerous and most expensive orbital vehicle that this country has ever produced.
What ever happened to the supersonic spaceplanes that they were working on that were to eventually replace the shuttle? I seem to remember reading about them years ago...
NASA is irresponsible if they DON'T do this occasionally (just not constantly) and such an investigation doesn't mean anything with regards to the formal "plans". If you have any knowledge of a strategy team or executive in a large company, you'll know just how often weird things that are "out of plan" are considered and subsequently dismissed... I guess it gives the rumor mill something to do.
Like this.
+++ATH0
I'd much rather my tax dollars were spent with Burt Rutan and Scaled Composites...
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At risk of getting facetious replies from all the Trekkies/Trekkers out there, does anyone know anything more about this "Constellation" class ship they mention in the article?
They've been constantly considering the viability of the Shuttle program since it began in the 70s, and it's always been under the threat of having the plug pulled at any moment.
I don't know why it's so "hip" to hate the shuttle program around here. If you look past the cost, the shuttles are pretty damned cool, and have a better safety record than any commercial passenger jet.
It's just so sci-fi. The shuttles are honest-to-god spaceships, everything else is just strapping a tin can onto a big bottle rocket.
They just needed to shoot lasers and have a socket to mount an R2 utility droid and they'd be teh coolest EVAR!!!1!1!!!
I find your lack of faith disturbing.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
Not necessarily a bad thing... the Soyuz does just fine sending things up and down.
NASA can focus on more far-reaching projects and crafts.
Still, I group up with the shuttle and will miss it.
All the more reason to develop the space elevator.
The simple truth is that interstellar distances will not fit into the human imagination
- Douglas Adams
They should have got rid of it as soon as it got off the assembly line. The Shuttle Programme was supposed to create an inexpensive, safe, and reusable rocket. Unfortunatly, they got ripped off. Not only that it is not safe, but it is also highly expensive. And if it explodes/implodes, it is not reusable.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Althought "+1 Insightful" or "+1 Funny", I really can't say :). Cool post, man!
Why reusable? Every kilogram of the craft that is "reused" is a kilogram of payload that it couldn't take up and leave in orbit.
What?? How dare you question the scientific value of blasting 60 year old men into ???
Would there be any benefit (time/safety/cost-wise) in converting one or more shuttles for robotic operation, and create a smaller, man-rated vehicle for transporting personnel?
Really.
They rocked the world back in the 60's and early 70's.
They still rock the world with their unmanned space exploration.
But for about the past 20 years it seems that their manned space flight plan consists of very expensive (and sometimes deadly) joy rides.
I say we (US Tax payers) Give Burt Rutan 500 Million (the cost of a *one* shuttle mission) and stand back.
note to self...ALWAYS check the preview before submitting! :)
It's about time an American leader took the reins and firmly directed everyone's eyes at their feet rather than the stars. How dare we run around sending up multi-million dollar spacecraft when there are health care programs and social security to complain about and whine over?
After all, there's clearly no future in space.
+++ATH0
But like it or not, I think scrubbing the shuttle program without a clear choice for a reusable replacement is a bad idea. Yes, disposable rockets might be more cost-effective in the short-term, but I don't trust NASA (as a bureaucratic US gov't agency) not to turn any project into a bottomless pit of money over time - even a rocket program built on a combination of proven technology (the type of rockets used for Mercury or Apollo missions) and modern tools would still carry the temptation to slowly inflate pricetags if the corproate architecture of NASA doesn't change - not to mention the everpresent risks of death due to, as they so coyly put it, a "mishap."
Disclaimer: IANAAOA (I am not an astronaut or astrophysicist).
This is where private spaceflight (like SS1) would come in handy, once it matures enough. NASA could simply outsource the actual launch and mission control to these companies so they can concentrate on development. In any case, they should keep the ability for manned flight until they find a suitable replacement.
US businesses that currently accept chip and PIN/signature
What would really be a great thing would be for NASA to get out of engineering, and just let contracts for delivery of pounds or people to orbit. Let the vendors figure out the details.
See what I've been reading.
Why do we need to travel faster than light? In a space society, a large number of people could be traveling from one end of the universe to the other in one day. So what if everything planet based ages a few billion years in the meantime? They should've gotten off their asses and hopped on a .99c space ship!
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I don't know how old Kerry is but he would look good in space....one-way trip and all....
- Manned - requires 99.999% success rate EXPENSIVE(think aircraft / ICBM building)
- Unmanned - requires "only" 99.9% (99%?...) less expensive (think ship building. No, really, that's how the Soviets looked at it.)
Obviously, need a two-tier system, not one do-everything, do nothing well system.As far a reusable/disposable, for the time being, whichever is more economical. Be sure to show your work calculating continuing program costs for reusable designs.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
The shuttle will still be worse, but the difference will be much smaller.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
While SS1 is a great undertaking, it just achieved the capabilities of the X-15 of 1963. Orbital flight requires a ship that can withstand rentry stresses of Mach-20 heating. Suborbital flight only reaches Mach-5.
This is a Godsend. The Shuttle was a tarbaby from the get go. In my opinion, they should just halt plan to get the remaining 2 (or is it 3) back in space and work on plans to put them in museums.
But what about all the skilled labor wasted? Well, there are multiple plans I've heard of to build a new class of rocketry largely based on the shuttle launch stack (or bundle). That whole workforce would still be valuable and employed and the shuttle derived vehicle could be capable of launching to Mars directly without pointless pit stops at the ISS, L5, moon or wherever: Mars Direct
Blaze a trail to the New World
I misread this as: and furnish the International Space Station with disposable rockets. ie. to plunge it into the atmosphere for end-of-life
Kerry has made it pretty clear that space exploration is not a part of his vision for our future. The money from the space program could be redirected into social programs that are sorely needed.
This is cool. It costs about $3.26 billion total and yields amazing scientific results
This is not. It costs about $2.4 billion / year and kills a few people occasionally.
...seeing how they have to practically rebuild the shuttles after each mission. We can get to orbit much cheaper with non-reusable technology. We don't need "reusable" craft to get to orbit, we need reusable craft for going from orbit to the moon, mars and beyond.
All the plans I've seen for L5 colonies assume a lunar base shipping construction materials.
Those people have to get to space somehow. Currently, it's cheaper for them to be born there. (Err, raising / educating them until they're useful may sink that assumption...) So yeah, a spacestation isn't currently needed, but it's basic infrastructure for further development.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
"..and finish the International Space Station with disposable rockets ..."
I thought this meant destroying the station with rockets, which I thought would be sort of moving backwards. After RTFM, it all became clear.
shame on us / for all we have done / and all we ever were / just zeroes and ones
60% (60 tons at $10 Million/Ton) of the weight of the shuttle is in the wings, total shielding, and landing gear. All of that can be dumped (the shielding for a small crew re-entry vehicle has very little weight)
We need a space elevator.
in bed.
I think a mix of craft, with different mission designs, some re-usable and maybe some not, some cargo and people haulers, and some pure passenger craft should be our new approach. It would allow for greater mission variety. IE. if you need a people hauler with camping capability, you get an RV, if you need a cargo capable system, you get a pickup truck or moving van, if you need just a small team car pool system you buy a honda civic.
In some ways I feel that President Nixon's mandate that a reusable spacecraft be used has hurt all spaceflight for the last two decades.
If there are cost effective and performance effective single use space craft, should they really not be an option?
reusable, exactly? The astronauts? Thinking about expendable, then you could include astronauts.
its insightful.
.
India has the neccesary "intellectual" labour and which it doesn't, the US can easily transfer the skills; and technology
The cost definitely can be lower.With good discussions, I'm sure the Indian government can be easily persuaded to chip in.
Make that with any discussions,which country does not want the glamour of "space pioneers".
Timang tinggi tinggi
parang sudah asah
alang alang mandi
biar sampai basah
Seeing that there are lots of replies about giving Burt Rutan 500 million or what ever and see what he can do...kinda silly. No disrespect to Mr.Rutan but he just did was NASA had done 50 years ago. Their sub-orbital flight went what 328KM? Sorry can't remember the exact figure. Some one care to look up the elevation of the orbit of ISS? I don't think even Burt Rutan can make that leap on $500 million....but I do have to admit it would be cool to watch him try. Anyways, I say let NASA do its thing. Atleast they are looking at all the options..
Let the flaming begin.
Insert funny smart-ass comment here.
You're all just a bunch of anonymous cowards!
I wonder if the shuttle has taken this into consideration. Is the shuttle program fully ready to draw funds from a reduced 401(k) plan? I would hate to see the shuttle end up in some old age home, obsolete, and unable to pay their bills. Oh wait...
Yeah, because if we posted from our logins all you Bush-loving trolls would screw our karma!
It's not our fault you guys are so intolerant!
I'll take one!
- Kevin
The less confident you are, the more serious you have to act.
Oops. Self-LARTed. I'm a dumbass sometimes ^_^
as a society that we won't take ANY risks to explore anymore? What pussies we've become, christ.
PLUS, IF ALL OUR MIL-IND COMPANIES ARE BUSY WORKING TO PUT US IN SPACE, WE"RE NOT FOMETING IDIOTIC, WASTEFUL FOREIGN WARS TO KEEP THEM BUSY. Think of it as UN resolution 35397, "The US Aerospace full employment act so they stop bombing the rest of us" act.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Well there are otehr ways of getting into space now as well all know, it doesnt have to be a rocket, so msot likley NASA is putting there efforts into finishing that up. Cuz once thier spaceplane is done they will be laughing.
Ok I get it, a few people died publically, caused a media stir but cmon people. They died for a cause more nobel than shooting a fucking iraqi defending his home. How is that nobel but not death in the pursuit of science.
Ask any astronaught if they want the program retired. If the risks are unacceptable to them. You'll get a resounding no.
I mean ffs we have people risking their lives to fish for crab in the north pacific. A whole lot more chance of dying as a crab fisherman or a warzone doctor, but people do it.
Lets stop making policies based on a few lives. I for one would happily die in the pursuit of science.
Funny the russians always had this figgured out. Maybe thats why we're talking about using their dilapidated technology.
I pose, if two russians died to make it safer for one american, is it better or more ethical than two americans.
This administration seems to think so.
Love in an elevator... livin' it up while I'm goin' down...
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Take a look at this article about Kerry's official position on space. Or better yet, see what Kerry's web site says about NASA.
General outlines:
- More NASA funding for research
- More balanced priorities (read: less spending for operations, less human spaceflight, more research)
- Probably no Human Moon/Mars program -- he claims Bush can't pay for it either, which I agree with.
- More aeronautics R&D
- Continued international cooperation
- NASA management reforms
So in short, it seems Kerry endorses more science, more R&D, and less Buck Rogers. While I like the Buck Rogers stuff, I have to agree that unless we're going to do it in a radically different manner, we've reached a dead end with Shuttle and ISS. I would rather park Shuttle and halt development of ISS, instead of spending another $50B to complete construction. I've posted comments to this effect on many occasions... so I won't bore you with it again.
What do you do when you need to bring up 20 metric tons on one flight, because it's a pre-fabricated module that took years of development on Earth? Can't exactly reassemble everything in space.
read for comprehension, I know 3rd graders that have better reading skills than 99% of the slashdot posters!
the article says "DISPOSABLE" which is much different than "reusable"
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Oh, sorry. I thought you said:
I say we (US Tax payers) Give HalliBURTon 500 Million (the cost of a *one* shuttle mission) and stand back.
My bad.
If the shuttle wasn't the only ride around, they wouldn't get ANYONE to ride on it. Damn things a deathtrap...
Howsabout we just say... "Build it like your kids gonna ride it, cause we're gonna send em on the first flight for a little field trip..."
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To follow the space election political discussion including the fate of the shuttle from both sides, read this thread on NASA Watch.
The astronauts? That doesn't count.
That's pretty much all that counts.
Everything else in a space program is "faster, better, and cheaper" if it's disposable.
I'll just point out that I believe the Shuttle should be retired as soon as possible, but there must be a viable domestic replacement vehicle in place ASAP.
"Named after the situation NASA is in, Consternation Systems is responsible for developing the Not Another Shuttle Again (NAMBLA) and related exploration architecture systems. Consternation Systems is the combination of large and small systems that will provide Congress the capabilities necessary to cook up pork barrel politics for decades to come. Consternation Systems will be made up of artists' impressions, low-budget animations and constantly slipping schedules and a budget that expands and contracts according to the performances of DC's most expensive hookers and assistants."
Till we can buy a space shuttle on eBay? This space for sale.
Even it's computers are too ancient. And that is why the shuttle should be abandoned. As much as I admire older technology, the shuttle is the most overengineered piece of hardware in existence.
Sending buttloads of cash into orbit on rockets everytime we want to go up is just a waste. Let spend a really obscene amount of cash to build a space elevator once. Then we can go up and down all we want for relatively pennies a trip.
That really isn't a fair comparison between the Cassini program and shuttle program.
A much more accurate comparison would have been between the Apollo program and the Shuttle program, both of which involved manned spaceflight.
The Apollo program achieved an incredible goal, namely that of putting a crew of two on the moon, and was both an incredible engineering accomplishment as well as accomplishing some very useful science that is still being sorted through to this day.
While you can cite some very good references to useful science that was produced on the shuttle, there is another very important comparison that needs to be made:
Skylab vs. The ISS
Skylab + Apollo did an incredible amount of pure scientific research, and the internal volume of useable lab space was almost identical to what is now available on the ISS.
The Shuttle + ISS program is incredibly expensive, and while they have proven the ability to do major space construction projects with the ISS (needed if we ever get L-5 going), there has been comparatively little actual science.
If the Chinese are invited into the partnership, they also can transport personnel aboard their Shenzhou manned spacecraft, whose second orbital flight is expected next year.
This is absurd speculation for a country that has recently hijacked an American surveillance plane from international airspace. The US has already balked at space collaboration with China. It is unlikely to make gratuitous gestures like this until they institute democracy and stop threatening to invade Taiwan.
As for retiring the shuttle, it would be moronic to do this without identifying the new launchers and spacecraft to take its place. The point wasn't addressed in this rather superficial article. I don't think a repeat of the 6 year stand down from manned spaceflight that occurred between Apollo and the shuttle is acceptable.
an ill wind that blows no good
Isn't a Saturn V type rocket a little much for finishing the ISS. You don't need to achieve escape velocity just to reach the ISS.
NASA has been studying for years setting up enough automation to launch and return the shuttle unmanned. We know we can get people to/and from the ISS using the Russian hardware -- if we used the heavy-lift capability of the shuttles without having to worry about losing people, it would seem to be a good solution to the problem. We would just have to worry about getting the flight ops automated and how to maneuver into close proximty to the station remotely without slamming into it.
It's got to be cheaper to run the shuttle on autopilot then to figure out how to repair them in space.
-- Gary Goldberg KA3ZYW 301/249-6501 AIM:OgGreeb Digital Marketing Inc., Bowie, MD
What are you doing posting on a forum hosted on the internet - whose infrastructure is supported mostly by US Government funded institutions? Using HTML, created in an institution ( CERN ) funded by many governments. Dialling in on a telephone/ADSL line, the infrastructure for which was created by the Govt.?
For that matter, why are you using a computer? Stick to your log cabin and complaining about the new railroad : )
And I suppose you'd be happy with Chinese spy planes flying off the coast of the USA???
Specalized craft are always the better option from an engineering standpoint, and usually from an operational standpoint. Unfortunately, there will be people who insist on evaluating this from a pure cost perspective, and to them an N-ship fleet of do-it-all birds will always look better than N ships of X different specalizations. Starting with a nominally smaller design budget.
I must disagree with the requirement for a reusable spacecraft has set back spaceflight. NASA went that route with Skylab, which despite it's achievements relied heavily unused hardware from the Apollo program. Yes, disposable manned rockets are cheaper on a per-flight basis at the moment. They are also a derived from ICBMs, which were mostly a mature technology by 1960. Reusability imposes more difficult engineering requirements, yes, but to paraphrase Michael Collins it also implies maturity. (He also likened the shuttle to the DC-1.5, which should say just how mature the shuttle really is.) Would air travel be commercially viable if the 757 was built so that it had to be extensively inspected and refurbished after each flight?
The shuttles may have been flying since the early eighties, but they have required extensive upgrades, refittings, and maintainence to keep flying. All of these point to a design that, for all of it's capabilities, is not yet technologically mature. Something NASA - and Congress - should have been well aware of even before Challenger, let alone Columbia. The fact that they've had several programs to replace the shuttle suggests that at least part of NASA knows this fact. All of which have, on paper, required less operational overhead than the shuttle.
A second generation shuttle, using prior experience and more durable materials from the start, should be more reliable and at least as capable. Ideally, to the point where it is no longer cheaper to use throwaway rockets. Maybe not as good as the promises on paper, but that's nothing new. The shuttle was originally supposed to have a manned, fully reusable booster stage. Which was scrapped because someone decided it was too expensive compared to SRBs. Yet we're still stuck with the same, expensive prototype space "plane" for carrying bigger loads.
I'm sure most of us know the Dilbertism of how managers will waste money on frivolties to make sure their department's budget doesn't get cut next year. I submit that part of the reason we haven't seen any progress beyond the design and prototype stage in reusable craft is the same kind of self-serving logic.
Here is my humble opinion of what NASA should do:
... billions saved and better repair/upgrade options.
1. Use the shuttle to bring the largest components of the space station. The remaining components use rockets. Retire the shuttle once we meet international goals. Shuttle done.
2. We have a space station now. Worthless? No! The next space ship we create is reusable. The point is when your done with a mission dock to the station. Take small capsules back to earth. Take capsules up to the station. The capsules are soley designed for orbit insertion of human cargo and the safety of that cargo. Each new crew reuses the station and the ship docked to it. Possibly even refuel the new space ship from the station if it is safe enough.
3. Since the new space ship does not have to reenter the earth's atmosphere make it modular. So, for each new mission snap in removable modules that can be stored at the space station. Maybe some modules could be for storage, fuel, habitation,robotics module, moon base modules. Since there is no reentry tiles ( mention in another post ) we can have an even larger space ship to replace the shuttle.
4. Now, with the new ship docked to the station: undock with crew and modules and fly over to the moon or other orbits.
5. Built a large observatory on the station to give the station more value. Need new telescope parts send it up with the next cargo shipment. The ISS crew will upgrade it no problem. OK, it does about 90% of what Hubble does
6. If you get the vehicle far enough from earth go nuclear.
7. Throw any space junk at the sun.
Moral of the story: If you put something in orbit leave as much of it in orbit as possible. Getting humans into orbit and back to earth is a special problem with safety being number one. Solution for Humans: Capsules. Solution for stuff: Cargo ships. Seperate human cargo from non human mechanical cargo. Furthermore, with cargo and humans seperate there can be a disconnection of the humans with the profit motives of puting up cargo.
I don't think I've ever seen such a happy message from Nasa as: There's a hurricane a coming, and it may break some of our stuff. If it does, we may not be able to replace it. I know this was a bad year for Florida hurricanes, but this message was passed on before the first one of the year hit. Sounds to me like they were praying for the Shuttle Processing Building to get whisked off to the land of Oz.
I am Sp0r, Scourge of the Cosmos!
I don't disagree with your post. But the Space Shuttle Main Engines capabilities far exceed the Saturn V J2's in total thrust, specific impulse, reliability, and durability. It is hoped the the successor to the shuttle will intelligently mine this great technology.
an ill wind that blows no good
So the Shuttle's been screwing up other programs before it was even built!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
The delta could probably be fitted with a payload module that mimics the shuttle's cargo bay.
"I'm not impatient. I just hate waiting." - My Dad
Limit the remaining time to building the ISS and the repair of Hubble.
On the ISS missions limit the crew to 3 people, a pilot, the commander/co-pilot and a payload specialist.
On the Hubble missions only the necessary crew, a pilot, co-pilot, 2 people to carry out the repairs.
Then lets restasrt work on the Venture Star. The design is sound, we need a bitmore work witht he material science but it should be completed in under a decade.
Once complete, land the shuttles, decom them, and divy them up between the great science museums of the US.
The next generation "disposable" can supply the station, launch probes, and satelites.
And finally NASA, reduce the bean counters.
It is better to be the hammer than the anvil.
The shuttle has some good capabilities, but never really lived up to its promise of quick turnarounds and cheap flights. It is now 30 year old technology.
I was first going to pose the question about to whom they could sell the assts and program. But then I realized that no one would want to buy it because it couldn't be made profitable, even if one got the assets for $1.
Contrast this with Scaled Composites winning the X Prize and Branson investing to sell public commercial space flight in 3 years. Yes, this is suborbital and low capacity, but it does show that it is time to retire the old birds and develop something new.
http://www.nuclearspace.com/a_liberty_ship.htm
And I want mine red, with go faster stripes on it.
RegardselFarto
NASA will, I think, start to change into something more akin to the FAA. Now that we've seen suborbital flights by private companies (such as the Ansari X prize winner SpaceShipOne by Scaled Composites) I believe that NASA will take on a more regulatory role in space.
Money from NASA should be put into private industry.
GJC
Gregory Casamento
## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
The problem is that the initial design and construction costs come from a different "barrel of money" than operations costs, so NASA engineers were forced to change the design because of congress. The original design would have been much less to launch and maintain, but cost more up front.
As it was, funding was so tight that NASA had to look for more customers...eventually enlisting parts of the military. They wanted a larger payload capacity, which complicated things further.
You can read more about it here:
http://www.tsgc.utexas.edu/archive/general/ethic s/shuttle.html
I think we need a plan to someday deflect a large asteroid that is on a collison course with earth. The best way to deflect asteroids would be to arrange a collison with another object of mass. I propose that we station the remaining shuttles in orbit. Fill them with more weight to achieve more mass. Equip them with remote control so they can be navigated from earth. Then, when the bad asteroid is detected, place one or more on a collision course.
worst idea evar...
I mean really, who comes up with this shit...space elevator, so we can fucking crawl our way into space like children.
I'd love to see the disaster when that thing comes crashing back to Earth...maybe it'll kill all the dumb fucks that come up with this shit.
In 1986, one shuttle at a time.
Actually, if you had bothered reading the article you linked to, you'd see that he was 77 years old when he went up in the shuttle.
Dumbass.
attached to the end of the payload for things like the iss, you will have what is basically a couple of huge empty, sealed containers.
rather then throw that empty and useable volume away. use it on the space station. same with that huge orange tank that the shuttle keeps throwing away, at least on the runs to the space station.
one of the practical problems the iss seems to be having is a lack of internal volume. imagine what could be done with that much additional space and a couple of ikea shelving units.
We can use the Shuttle boosters assembly and replace the shuttle wiht an unmanned cargo hauler. It can haul over 123 metric tons to orbit for a rather low price remeber most of the shuttle cost relates to the orbiter and the ungodly level of perfection nasa requires for manned space systems. We should just spends a a few million developing a unmanned cargo container to replace the orbiter with I mean loose the tail and wings make it wider and longer and totaly hollow it won't even need sheilding since it would jsut burn up on re-entry or woud lcoudl even develop an unmanned reusable body. I mean the booster section if almost perfect in design. It's only had one failure and that was caused by neglect more then anything. This would also allow us to if need be keep one orbiter at kennedy for an emergency to boost to the ISS. The shuttle is so expensive becuase it has to ahve a life support and a ultra low chance of failure loose the manend part and it jsut need a realatively low failure rate on renetry anyways.
if we simply retrofitted it as an unmanned vehicle and kept flying them as a robotic space truck? The hardest thing to replace about it is its heavy lift capacity. If it was prepared to unmanned instead of manned standards and life support was stripped, it seems possible that we could get some more use out of it for a lot less cost.
http://www.nasawatch.com/archives/000323.html#more
Read that for the official response from NASA.
I like a viable healthy space program
However, the shuttle has done all it's going to do. If the Columbia hadn't flamed out it was going to be retired to the Smithsonian after the upcoming hubble mission. The only purpose left for the shuttles is to visit the station.
The station has done all it's going to do. To "save money" its been understaffed like a cheap I.S. department. There are almost enough people in the station to safely support the station. Not enough left to do any science or discovery. So the only purpose of the station is to be a destination for the shuttle.
Basically they're two pork barrel programs that exist to support each other.
I'd much rather seen the billions spent on something useful like x-prize part II or whatever.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
how much protesting arises, and by whom.
Keep "leaking" these stories, and that process itself prepares John Q Public for the early retirement of the shuttle fleet, when the real announcement is made.
The US manned space flight program is dead. Exploration will continue via inexpensive, and increasingly intelligent robots, as the Mars Rovers have demonstrated.
The shuttle was a crap design and chosen for the wrong reasons. It never achived it's original goals, cheap reusable space travel.
Have people forget we are sending the US treasury to Iraq? We have NO bucks for RandD on a new system. We cant keep the current Shuttle going. So scrap it. But dont kid yourself into thinking we are going to replace it. It is going to be a long time before this country gets ANY good RandD going.
Buck Rogers or Duck Dogers? Is there a difference, or is it all the same once the bureaucracy gets hold of it?
Sorry, couldn't resist.
In other news, 3D Realms considers an early release of Duke Nukem Forever.
-- If it aint broke, fix it till it is. --
Until then, let's not throw away our space program on the basis of a pipedream.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
--Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
In 1986, one shuttle at a time.
No, they actually made a replacement for the Challenger. There hasn't been the first peep about a replacement for the Columbia.
Tag lost or not installed.
NASA needs to continue developing human space exploration. This is what keeps the public interested in space. When the rovers landed on Mars earlier this year, do you think people were excited because they wanted to learn about the scientific wonders of the red planet? Maybe a little, but I bet the majority of people were excited because of the prospect of this being the groundwork for human exploration to Mars someday.
And that is just it, isn't it? Why do we do all of the scientific, robotic missions that we do? People that are for this type of work seem to be interested in science for the sake of science, but what does all of this add up to without an end-goal? The end-goal, the reason we do ANYTHING we do in space, is to eventually become a species that is not limited to living on one planet, counting down the millenia until our geological clock stops ticking. If evolution has taught us nothing else, it is that the human species is one that thrives on survival. We've pretty much got terrestrial survival down at this point, but take our Terra away, and all of that survival, all of that evolution, is for naught. If we can find a second planet on which to inhabit ourselves, we have now doubled our chances of species continuity.
This is why we do everything we do in space, with an eventual goal of being able to leave this planet, this system, this galaxy, and not only see what lies beyond, but BECOME what lies beyond as well. It will take a long time. I will never see this eventuality. My children will likely never see it either, but somewhere down the line, the human species will accomplish this goal. It is our destiny, and the sooner we lay the groundwork, the sooner we achieve this destiny.
P.S. You propose that we "halt development of the ISS". I have to think this would rather anger any number of countries that have signed on and invested quite a bit of time and money in the ISS. And as we know, John Kerry believes in national coalitions. We wouldn't want to endanger that, now would we?
16 years of republican control during the last 24 years have brought about the typical bourgeois short-term thinking that has resulted in the virtual annihilation of the USA's space capability.
More englightened leadership would have started working to ensure the developmnent of a more up-to-date alternative.
But it may be too late now, the aerospatial talent is either retired or scattered thanks to the aerospatial industry post 9/11 debacle, and there is definitely no replacements for those lost talent, as the bourgeois shortsightedness send bright students into law school rather than engineering.
There has been so much success with the Mars rovers and Cassini. Hopefully Hubble will be serviced by robots.
Proposition: automatic control of reusable spacecraft. This will allow more flights as well as improve space robotics.
Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
According to
d 18 0_specs.shtml
http://www.spaceandtech.com/spacedata/engines/r
The RD-180's thrust is 860k lbs, about 57% of the 1.5 million lbs of thrust of each of the Saturn V's F-1 engines.
That said, it looks like a damn good engine. And using the shuttle tank is a good idea, but it would require a new design. The shuttle tank is for hydrogen and oxygen. The RD-180, like the F-1, is a kerosine fueled rocket. But changing the tank would be easy, plus kerosine is cheaper than liquid hydrogen.
If you built such a rocket with the shuttle tank and a side moutned payload canister, you could put the RD-180 engines behind the payload, use the shuttle SRBs, and use the same pad.
You would lose some lift, as the kerosine has less energy than hydrogen, but you could add an upper stage, perhaps using the RS-68.
Longer term, a new booster using RD-180s on the first stage, and RS-68s on the second stage could approach the Saturn V in capacity. With two shuttle pads, one could be modded for the new booster while the other is used for the derivative.
Retire the vessels to deep space , and make the complex machines do something useful on the slow trip out . $500 million is a valid golden drop kick .
If we are really serious about staying independant as a nation, then we will want to go to space. We will want to do it as cheaply and dependably as possible. We do not do this by building huge disposable boosters.
The developement of space will require dependable shuttle craft to ferry men and equipment to orbit and return. It will have to be so dependable that it would be routine. This is not done with a chemical rocket that falls apart from the impact of a piece of foam, or one that is literally covered with glued on bathroom tile. I mean c'mon fella and gals, be serious! We need nuclear propulsion, we need it soon. The Chinese are certainly not delaying. Sooner or later they will see this fact as well, as if they have not already done so and are doing black projects with nuclear thermal rocketry out of the sight of ordinary citizens even if not the governments of those citizens. Other options are around as well, like the space elevator and the program using balloons from JP Aerospace. The Chinese sponsored the last large exposition and call for papers on space elevator designs. A Michigan outfit has already made single walled carbon nanotubes of any arbitrary size or length and of a strength rapidly approaching what we would need for the elevator. There ARE replacements for the shuttle, and they are not too far off and they are not chemical.
Define "better," please.
The clearance system sounds logical. It is not. It is completely arbitrary. -- John Bolton