Japan Controls Rocket Launch With Just 8 People and 2 Laptops
SpaceGhost writes "Sky News reports that the Japanese Space Agency (JAXA) has launched an orbital telescope on a new generation rocket from the Uchinoura Space Centre in Kagoshima, in southwestern Japan. The Epsilon rocket uses an onboard AI for autonomous launch checks by the rocket itself (launch video). A product of renewed focus on reducing costs, the new vehicle required two laptops and a launch team of eight, compared to the 150 people needed to launch the previous platform, the M-5. Because of the reduced launch team and ease of construction, production and launch costs of the Epsilon are roughly half that of the M-5. The payload, a SPRINT-A telescope, is designed for planetary observation."
...to control Fukushima.
Japanese efficiency wins again.
Meanwhile in America... 45%? Please... Don't make me laugh!
From 150 people to 8! That's almost 94.7% gone. See that, America? That's how you do it...
It now takes less people to launch a Japanese rocket than to maintain a Windows server in the data center....
The epsilon rocket is a) tiny and b) entirely solid fueled. This kind of high level of automation might not translate well to more complex and larger rockets. Bear in mind also that this is just the launch crew. Manufacturing the rocket is likely still labour intensive.
The Epsilon rocket is three stages of solid rocket booster, like an ICBM. So there's no fueling on the pad, no plumbing, no cryogenics, and no turbopumps. The launch team has a lot less to do than with liquid-fueled rockets.
No, that sounds like a normal programming project to me:
2 laptops, 2 programmers
1 Supervisor
1 Project Manager
1 Finance Manager
1 Product Manager
1 Personnel Manager
1 Quality Manager
Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!