Slashdot Mirror


Texas Lawmakers Press NASA To Base Lunar Lander Program In Houston (arstechnica.com)

Eric Berger writes via Ars Technica: The Apollo missions that flew to the Moon during the 1960s were designed and controlled by what is now known as Johnson Space Center, the home of the famous "Mission Control." Moreover, the astronauts that flew to the Moon all lived in Houston. It would stand to reason, therefore, that as NASA gears up to return to the Moon, major elements of this program would likewise be controlled from the Texas metropolis that styles itself "Space City." Times change, however. In recent months, the politically well-positioned Marshall Space Flight Center, in Huntsville, Alabama, has been quietly pressing leaders with NASA Headquarters for program management of mid- to large-size landers to the lunar surface, which would evolve into human landers. Sources indicated this effort was having some success.

However, Texas legislators have now begun to push back. On Tuesday, both of Texas' senators (John Cornyn and Ted Cruz), as well as three representatives with space-related committee chairs (John Culberson, Lamar Smith, and Brian Babin), wrote a letter to NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine. "We support NASA's focus on returning to the Moon and using it as part of a stepping stone approach to place American boots on the surface of Mars in the 2030s," the Texas Republicans wrote. "As NASA reviews solicitations for lunar landers, we write to express our strong support for the establishment of NASA's lunar lander program at the Johnson Space Center." The letter reminds Bridenstine of Houston's strong spaceflight heritage.

70 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. Johnson? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    The Johnson Space Center is a fitting name for something as phallic as rockets.

    1. Re:Johnson? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 3, Funny

      And it seems that Texas lawmakers want to expand it further into the Big Johnson Space Center...

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    2. Re:Johnson? by The+Original+CDR · · Score: 1

      LBJ nicknamed his johnson as Jumbo. So it really should be called the Jumbo Space Center.

  2. Keep NASA "control" in Houston? by FlyingGuy · · Score: 1

    If they still have the talent and facilities in Houston, leave them there.

    --
    Hey KID! Yeah you, get the fuck off my lawn!
  3. Want space money? Defund military by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There's plenty of interesting stuff to do in space, enough for multiple mission control centers spread all over the country. But as long as the NASA budget is so tiny, you're all squabbling over breadcrumbs at the table.

    If you want Houston back in the thick of space missions, start voting for a reduction in military budgets and a transfer of funding into the sciences. It'll be a hard sell given the current anti-science political climate, but if you're looking for a serious injection of public money, it's the only way. Taxation is a finite cake.

  4. Boots on Mars?!? by rtb61 · · Score: 1

    Why the nuts boot on Mars thing, so last millennium. You know what counts, who made the hardware, who cares whose pair of feet are there, tens of millions of people are quite capable of filling those boots, what counts is who designed and built the space craft, that is all that counts. Space craft to get to the moon, space craft to get to Mars and space craft to get to the stars. That is all that really counts, that space infrastructure to, well, it the most barest of capitalist terms, the infrastructure required to invest in and benefit from, well, as much of the galaxy as is we are able and is of greater benefit.

    Commercialising space means competiting space craft, not some idiots, first boots on the ground, dominate space, conflict. Bugger off with the silly shite. Make space real means providing competiting access to space. Who can provide the greatest lift capacity, at the lowest price, safely and over the long term, probably quangos https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... to start with and than more commercial space craft over time (each stage sort of thing, moon stage, mars and asteroids and then other star systems).

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    1. Re:Boots on Mars?!? by gtall · · Score: 1

      The Stars are like pink unicorns. They are very pretty, but they exist on the edge of our imagination because you cannot get there from here. We can do wonders with astronomy, we cannot do wonders with space travel. Space is big...really really big...so big you cannot imagine how big. It also tends to be filled with radiation fields.

    2. Re:Boots on Mars?!? by religionofpeas · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Cody shows how far the stars are: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    3. Re:Boots on Mars?!? by blindseer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is nothing nearby due to current propulsion/distance limitations. We don't have any rationale for going to Mars right now except bragging rights and it would inevitably cost lives to achieve. What's the purpose now?

      Because it's there. The same reason go to climb mountains or dive in the sea. Mars is just a higher mountain or deeper ocean.

      A smokescreen for other things.

      I'm sure that it is. I'm not sure how that makes any difference on people wanting to try. In fact some hidden motive only makes more people want to try, and do so with greater vigor.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  5. Re:Want space money? Defund military by blindseer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you want Houston back in the thick of space missions, start voting for a reduction in military budgets and a transfer of funding into the sciences.

    Or, talk to the DOD about building a US Space Force facility in Houston.

    Or, Texas can fund it's own space program. If that sounds silly to you then consider that Texas has more people and money than many nations on the planet, and some of those nations smaller than Texas sent stuff into space. The government doesn't have to fund everything, just make some deals with private companies to get them to launch from there and use Houston as a base of operations.

    Just voting money out of the military and into space exploration won't necessarily make missions to the moon orbit around Houston. If they want to be in on the deal then they need to make an offer that NASA cannot refuse. I'm thinking that means government spending on the state, county, and municipal levels, not federal. Texas is a big state but they don't have enough votes to divert federal funds on their own.

    When it comes down to it the REAL money isn't in the budget for NASA, or even in the total budget for the federal government. The real money is in the private sector. Get private businesses interested in missions to the moon, make Houston a good place to do business, and people will be standing in line to hand out money.

    --
    I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  6. paying for your lack of vision by sheramil · · Score: 3, Funny

    ... the Moon, which is rocky junk lets face it. You can invest to build a moon base there, for some unknown purpose, over the course of decades, sure. Why now?

    Iron, massive amounts of solar power, experience in vacuum-proofing things and a low-G place to retire when you get to the age where you need a scooter to get about. Also if the Americans get uppity, you can throw rocks at them... what do you mean, you haven't read that book?

    1. Re:paying for your lack of vision by religionofpeas · · Score: 2

      We have more than enough iron and solar power on Earth, and more applications for those things as well.

    2. Re:paying for your lack of vision by jythie · · Score: 1

      Not only do we have all the iron and solar power we could want, we also have all the foundries and factories for working with it and the shipping costs are much lower.

    3. Re:paying for your lack of vision by Daemonik · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and lifting all that to other sites in the solar system is expensive as hell. Earth to Moon, Build Infrastructure, Moon to Solar System.

    4. Re:paying for your lack of vision by religionofpeas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let's worry about that when we actually have a need for iron at those other sites.

  7. Re:Want space money? Defund military by religionofpeas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or, Texas can fund it's own space program

    The senators want to receive federal money, not spend their own.

  8. Remember folks by quonset · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The government doesn't create jobs. We're told this over and over. The Cato Institute says so. And they're not alone. A quick search shows a multitude of people all saying the government can't create jobs.

    So why the big fuss over where a non-job producing venture is to be placed? It's not like anyone is going to get a job out of this.

    1. Re:Remember folks by gtall · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I see you are joking, but just to sharpen the point a bit, that damn interstate highway system never created one job, damn them for building it. And that science government funds, nothing ever comes of it, it should be scrapped because the private sector will create all the science we'll ever need. And DARPA, imagine creating things like the internet, nothing of economic value will ever come it and certainly no jobs.

  9. Snouts in the trough by ishmaelflood · · Score: 2

    Texans don't believe in space unless they get nice juicy FedDollars.

    Oh we all like FedDollars,
    They seem to be free,
    We'll bend over for FedDollars,
    Just give them to me.

     

    1. Re:Snouts in the trough by gtall · · Score: 1

      ..and building a new space thingy in Houston when they cannot manage a nasty hurricane is...economically viable because then it will need to be rebuilt after Houston screws up again with the next big hurricane.

    2. Re:Snouts in the trough by Daemonik · · Score: 1

      Whenever people complain about waste in Government, I point to the private companies shoveling Government money into their pockets and paying off Congresscritters to keep the flow coming.

      Any private company that doesn't immediately double their prices at the first whiff of a government contract should get a medal. And then be audited out the wazoo because something is going on there.

  10. Only if it makes economic sense by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they still have the talent and facilities in Houston, leave them there.

    Only if this results in the most economically effective outcome. If it makes economic or functional sense to have it elsewhere then move it where it needs to go. I that happens to be Houston that's fine but all reasonable options should be considered first. We definitely should not do what we did 50 years ago just because some well connected political leaders want to pander to their constituencies.

    1. Re:Only if it makes economic sense by ArhcAngel · · Score: 2

      If it makes economic or functional sense to have it elsewhere then move it where it needs to go.

      I doubt that either of those things will factor into the decision. The real factor is even mentioned in the summary "the politically well-positioned Marshall Space Flight Center, in Huntsville, Alabama". Any politician with a NASA facility in their constituency will be fighting for this.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    2. Re:Only if it makes economic sense by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      If they still have the talent and facilities in Houston, leave them there.

      Only if this results in the most economically effective outcome. If it makes economic or functional sense to have it elsewhere then move it where it needs to go. I that happens to be Houston that's fine but all reasonable options should be considered first. We definitely should not do what we did 50 years ago just because some well connected political leaders want to pander to their constituencies.

      Houston is also in a geologically precarious position, so placing it there would be more of a political decision than a sound one.

      Besides, I though that Texas was going to secede from the Union again.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    3. Re: Only if it makes economic sense by dj245 · · Score: 1

      Geologically perilous? Houston hasn't had anything over a 4.0 in the last 30 years from what I can tell.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    4. Re: Only if it makes economic sense by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Geologically perilous? Houston hasn't had anything over a 4.0 in the last 30 years from what I can tell.

      Geologically was about the best choice of wording. Earthquakes are not the issue, but subsidence. Houston is sinking - some places at a 2 inch per year rate. https://www.sciencedaily.com/r...

      Right off the Gulf of Mexico and with rapid subsidence is not a good scenario. I surely wouldn't buy land there.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  11. Not sure what the issue is here by kenh · · Score: 2

    Is there some element of this story that is controversial?

    Should Houston sit back and give some other city a chance to host Mission Control?

    Is it inappropriate for Texas lawmakers to suggest re-establishing mission control in Houston, where it had been for the previous half century?

    Is the two Senators sending a letter to NASA supporting this idea somehow unusual?

    This is basic politics, nothing even slightly inappropriate is hinted at in the story, and no better suggestion is made. This strikes me as a 'Dog bites Man' story, not the other way around.

    --
    Ken
    1. Re:Not sure what the issue is here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How about letting NASA decide where it is best to do things, regardless of political desires. This would allow them to select the best site based on personnel availability, existing resources, potential expansion costs, and a host of other factors.

      Keep in mind that the space shuttle Challenger was lost in part due to congressional delegation pressure from Utah. Its Solid Rocket Boosters (SRBs) were manufactured in Utah which required the SRBs to be built in segments due to the maximum length of a rail car. It is possible to build the SRBs near the ocean thereby avoiding the complications of segmenting the SRBs. This would have reduced the weight and complexity of the SRB as well as improved its safety.

      NASA has a history of being used as a cash cow for states with political clout. Just keep in mind that this can have impacts that go beyond getting the best value for the taxpayer.

    2. Re:Not sure what the issue is here by jythie · · Score: 1

      Well, even if there is no controversy, the process of NASA deciding where to build a facility and the politics that go into it are still newsworthy.

      But beyond that there is always discussion about the value of going back to the moon, the value of public space travel, the value of private space travel, and of course the irony in Texas politics being so anti-NASA most of the time, but now they are pro-NASA for this project.

    3. Re:Not sure what the issue is here by gtall · · Score: 2

      Hell, most of Texas is anti-science. They are big believers in Federal dollars, just as long as they don't have pay taxes.

    4. Re:Not sure what the issue is here by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      Well, the last time it was based in Houston we had a problem.....

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    5. Re:Not sure what the issue is here by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Only out in the boonies. Texas is rapidly urbanizing and already is 40/40 republican/democrat, with 20% swing votes. In 20 years largely democratic hispanics will outnumber republican leaning whites by a measurable degree.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    6. Re:Not sure what the issue is here by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that the space shuttle Challenger was lost in part due to congressional delegation pressure from Utah. Its Solid Rocket Boosters (SRBs) were manufactured in Utah which required the SRBs to be built in segments due to the maximum length of a rail car.

      That's the theory that ill-educated idiots keep pushing... But the fact is that three of the four bidders on the SRB proposed segmented boosters.
       

      It is possible to build the SRBs near the ocean thereby avoiding the complications of segmenting the SRBs.

      Again, that's the theory pushed by ill-educated idiots. In reality, the tests of large monolithic boosters had decidedly mixed results - mostly attributed to the great (and unsolved) issues with mixing and casting such a large grain. The tests were cancelled after rough burning due to those issues severely damaged the nozzle. (That is, mixing and casting a single motor. Mixing and casting the matched pair the Shuttle required would have been even more problematic. Yet another reason for choosing segments.) Another issue is how to handle huge monolithic boosters... The test motors were all cast in place because nobody could figure out how to handle them without damaging the grain. Even with today's technology doing so would be a tall and expensive order.

    7. Re: Not sure what the issue is here by kenh · · Score: 1

      How about letting NASA decide where it is best to do things, regardless of political desires.

      It has never been that way. Do you think it is a coincidence that NASA facilities are located in the states/district of powerful politicians in the 60's?

      I'd love to hear the case for picking up mission control from a Houston and moving it somewhere more suitable? What, particularly is so awful about Houston that keeping mission control there would be detrimental to future space programs?

      --
      Ken
  12. Lack of perspective by sjbe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There is nothing nearby due to current propulsion/distance limitations.

    Currently true but so what? 100 years ago I could have said the same thing about traveling by air. Now I can be almost anywhere on the globe within 48 hours whereas 100 years ago the trip would have taken weeks if not months. I'm not about to bet against our ability to develop technology to get us to Mars and beyond. It won't happen overnight but I could easily see it being semi-routine within another 100 years.

    We don't have any rationale for going to Mars right now except bragging rights and it would inevitably cost lives to achieve.

    You could have made the same argument for crossing the Atlantic ocean 500 years ago. Here's the thing about exploring. You don't know what you are going to find so you cannot say that there is no rationale for going. We might find and incredibly valuable reason for going but the only way we will know that is to go and look. Yes it will cost lives but those lives will be volunteers who understand the risks they are taking. Exploration always comes with a body count and that HAS to be acceptable for us to progress as a society. The reliable airplane you board today was made so by brave people risking their lives in pursuit of larger goals.

    What's the purpose now?

    There are many to choose from. Pick the one that suits you. Protecting the species, economic gain, scientific curiosity, because it's there, protecting your tribe, advancing technology, etc. If you cannot find a purpose that matters to you, don't worry about it because other people have already found theirs. I don't have any interest in sailing across oceans myself but I'm grateful we have people who do.

    1. Re:Lack of perspective by gtall · · Score: 1

      Well, years ago there were people saying one cannot travel faster than the speed of light. Errmmm...I guess people are still saying that.

      If you want to play that game, then pick anything impossible or claimed to be impossible. Then claim it won't always be so. Then declare you've logically proven that it can be done because one day it will be done. Wow!!! This is an amazing new logical rule you've discovered. Anything, anything is possible!!

    2. Re:Lack of perspective by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      You could have made the same argument for crossing the Atlantic ocean 500 years ago. Here's the thing about exploring. You don't know what you are going to find

      Except that we pretty much know exactly what we'll find on Mars. A place far more inhospitable than the worst place on Earth.

    3. Re:Lack of perspective by CaffeinatedBacon · · Score: 2

      Except that we pretty much know exactly what we'll find on Mars.

      Except for all the unexpected things we keep finding now and then.
      How will you know what is there unless you look properly?

    4. Re:Lack of perspective by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

      Unmanned rovers are good enough for that. Much cheaper and quicker. Also provides incentive for better AI to do autonomous exploration.

  13. No such entity (yet) by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Or, talk to the DOD about building a US Space Force facility in Houston.

    Ummm, there would need to be a "Space Force" first. There is no such entity currently regardless of whether or not there should be.

    1. Re:No such entity (yet) by blindseer · · Score: 1

      There's a US space force already.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      With the possibility of a new branch of the military comes the possibility of new facilities for it. Houston might be a good place for that.

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
  14. Anywhere but by petes_PoV · · Score: 2

    Moreover, the astronauts that flew to the Moon all lived in Houston. It would stand to reason, therefore, that as NASA gears up to return to the Moon, major elements of this program would likewise be controlled from the Texas metropolis

    This line of reasoning makes no sense.

    The Moon landings were over 40 years ago (the first one will celebrate 50 years, next year). It is unlikely that any of the staff, equipment or "know how" that contributed to those few missions still exists in Houston - or has any relevance now.

    What would make sense would be to spread the largesse around. Find some other place that hasn't benefited from the NASA pork barrel and build the new centre there.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
    1. Re:Anywhere but by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      The Moon landings were over 40 years ago (the first one will celebrate 50 years, next year). It is unlikely that any of the staff, equipment or "know how" that contributed to those few missions still exists in Houston - or has any relevance now.

      That makes sense, but only so long as you cling to the ludicrous notion that since all of that is gone... it's acceptable to start from a completely blank slate. A much less ludicrous notion is to take advantage of the existing infrastructure and experience pool of Shuttle and Station controllers - all of which is in Houston.

  15. Prior art by Big+Nemo+'60 · · Score: 2

    In his novel From the Earth to the Moon - Wikipedia Jules Verne wrote a whole chapter about the struggle between Florida and Texas, to host the location for the "Columbiad" gun that would shoot a projectile to the Moon.

    Verne's portrait of representatives from Texas and Florida arguing on this is... humoruous.

    (Florida won the match, and IIRC the location chosen by Verne was not that far from Cape Canaveral.)

    --
    In the long run we are all dead. - John Maynard Keynes (1883 - 1946)
  16. Horrible idea by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    Houston is not just hot, but it is going to see major storms. AGW will only make storms worst

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Horrible idea by CaffeinatedBacon · · Score: 1

      Mission control will probably be indoors with AC...

  17. Longitude and latitude matter by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 2

    It looks like Cape Canaveral is a degree closer to the equator. That makes a real difference in the delta vee needed to achieve orbit, and even more of a difference in fuel costs and workin gpayload for a launch that must reach escape velocity to achieve a lunar landing. Even small differences in fuel use are critical for such a large launch. It would seem to make no sense to use an even slightly more off-the-equator launching pad.

    1. Re:Longitude and latitude matter by Anubis+IV · · Score: 2

      You do realize that no one is talking about launching rockets from Houston, right? They’re talking about design, production, and mission control work. Houston is the fourth largest city in the US, built on top of a giant swamp. It’s in no way suitable for launches.

      ...but if do want to talking about launching rockets in Texas, Brownsville is further south than Cape Canaveral, the land is cheaper and easier to build on than coastal Florida, and private companies are already conducting launches down there, so there’s infrastructure already in place.

    2. Re:Longitude and latitude matter by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      No, I actually said almost the complete opposite of that, but since you're asking, the Port of Houston is the second largest port in the nation (first is Boston Harbor) and is one of the largest hubs for freight trains in the US, which together played a large part in why it was selected for this sort of work in the first place by NASA.

      But, really, it makes more sense to use Houston for mission control and design work (as it's been used up to this point) while launching from Brownsville or the like. At that point, you could just float whatever you need down the coast to the launch site, do final assembly down there (just as is already done at Cape Canaveral in the VAB) and then proceed without as many of the concerns that come from launches in heavily populated regions.

  18. Plausible technology by sjbe · · Score: 2

    If you want to play that game, then pick anything impossible or claimed to be impossible. Then claim it won't always be so.

    Spare us your misplaced snark. Sending a spacecraft to Mars has already been done. Sending a human into space for long periods has already been done. Sending a human to the moon and back has already been done. It's not a significant stretch of the imagination to envision us sending a human to Mars and possibly beyond. Cripes if we weren't overly concerned about them surviving the trip we could do it today. The only thing really holding us back is that we're still developing the life support systems - we already know how to do the rest of it to a reasonable approximation. I'm not talking about some Star Trek level of science fiction here or intergalactic travel. I'm talking about plausible levels of technology advancement within the next several decades and the rationale for doing so.

    1. Re:Plausible technology by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      It's not an enormous stretch of the imagination. It's an enormous leap in the amount of payload needed, and the net expenditure of energy, an increase of at least 100 in payload requirements and of roughly 1000 in propellant requirements. It's not merely the changes in kinetic and potential energy of the payload, changes which cannot be recovered efficiently by any spacecraft in the foreseeable future. It's the changes in kinetic and potential energy _of the propellant needed_ for Mars landing, Mars take-off, and a return to Earth orbit.

      The cost and difficulty of launching such a mission from Earth's surface are so large that I do not see how a manned Mars mission is feasible without a permanent station in Earth orbit, one at which large scale construction is possible, to build the spacecraft already in orbit.

  19. Texas is a has-been by gavron · · Score: 1

    Saying "In the 1960s we wuz where y'all got y'all's ast-er-nerts" carries only dead weight.

    Texas is not the soul of modern astronomy or flights to space. GSFC and KSFC are.

    Sorry, Texas, you, and your corrupt politicians (why don't you go elect another Trump, to show the world how inbred you are)
    have nothing to contribute.

    Kindly be quiet... stop killing immigrants... and electing racist a-holes...and STFU.

    E

    1. Re:Texas is a has-been by Luke+has+no+name · · Score: 1

      This is such a stupid, insulting, and discriminatory reply that I don't know where to begin. Thousands of top engineers still work in the Clear Lake area. Millions of Texas voters voted for !Trump. Liberal strongholds in the North are far more corrupt than Texas.

      You're just a bitter fool.

  20. Re:Want space money? Defund military by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you want Houston back in the thick of space missions, start voting for a reduction in military budgets and a transfer of funding into the sciences.

    Or, talk to the DOD about building a US Space Force facility in Houston.

    Before we sink money into the modern day equivalent of the atomic airplane or SLAM, we might want to figure out what to do with all of the 20 some thousand miles per hour debris that will be orbiting earth when out intrepid space cadets start making things go kablooey (technical term) in earth orbit. When they inevitably do this,ARES (apparently NASA is recycling Initialisms) will show a fairly solid shell of areas to avoid. I've always said that our first war in space will be our last for possibly several hundred years, until the debris de-orbits. Then we can blow up more and start the process all over.

    Or, Texas can fund it's own space program. If that sounds silly to you then consider that Texas has more people and money than many nations on the planet, and some of those nations smaller than Texas sent stuff into space.

    Hold on there Sparky. This will involve state taxes, and all taxes and regulations are bad, amirite? Texas is happy to take taxpayer money at the federal level because a lot of it comes from out of state people, but the concept of using their own money is a real non-starter.

    Really, although the space program can be a great source of inspiration, Texas actually just wants the money.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  21. Not yet by sjbe · · Score: 1

    There's a US space force already.

    No there is an Air Force which has a space focused command - not the same thing and certainly not an integrated service. The Navy also has a similar command. Plus various other defense oriented federal agencies have their own capabilities. There is no Space Force branch of the military at this time - just a bunch of capabilities spread across a variety of federal agencies.

    With the possibility of a new branch of the military comes the possibility of new facilities for it. Houston might be a good place for that.

    Certainly possible

  22. Texas by sjbe · · Score: 2

    Besides, I though that Texas was going to secede from the Union again.

    We could only hope... ;-)

    Old favorite joke of mine. A delegate from Texas was holding court at a political convention and bragging about how big everything in Texas was. Eventually the delegate from Alaska tired of listening to this and told him he should shut up or Alaska would cut itself in half and Texas would only be the third biggest state.

    1. Re:Texas by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Besides, I though that Texas was going to secede from the Union again.

      We could only hope... ;-)

      Old favorite joke of mine. A delegate from Texas was holding court at a political convention and bragging about how big everything in Texas was. Eventually the delegate from Alaska tired of listening to this and told him he should shut up or Alaska would cut itself in half and Texas would only be the third biggest state.

      HA! Burnnnnn!

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  23. Why not base it all at once site at KSC by Eravnrekaree · · Score: 1

    Operationally it could be better simply to base everything out of KSC and the Orlando area so the control center and the launch site are not separated by 1000 miles. You could also say manufacturing should be based in the KSC/Orlando area so you are not forced to truck in big components halfway across the country. Just put everything around the launch sites. Orlando even has UCF which was set up for training astronauts and engineers to supply the space program
    `

  24. Re:Want space money? Defund military by chispito · · Score: 1

    Or, Texas can fund it's own space program

    The senators want to receive federal money, not spend their own.

    The Senators and (especially) the US Representatives trying to steer this toward Texas don't "receive" federal money, they spend it.

    --
    The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
  25. Base in Hollywood by PPH · · Score: 1

    Closer to the sound stage.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  26. Any state whose constituents and politicians consistently pushes anti-science political agendas that use as their justification the existence of a magical being should be excluded.

    1. Re:No. by hyades1 · · Score: 1

      I was just going to write almost exactly that, with the corollary that states with a strong record for supporting science and education get preference.

      --
      I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  27. Much still to discover by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Except that we pretty much know exactly what we'll find on Mars.

    No, we know SOME things we will find on Mars. There are undoubtedly countless things we are completely unaware of and will be amazed. It's an entire planet that we've barely explored. Heck we haven't discovered everything there is to find here on Earth yet and we've had thousands of years to look. Your argument is akin to flying to another country and snapping a few photos in while on a short vacation and then declaring that you've seen everything there is to see.

    A place far more inhospitable than the worst place on Earth.

    I assure you that there are places on Earth that will kill you (or anything else) dead just as fast as anyplace on Mars. We're better adapted to most of Earth but not all of it.

  28. Both robots and people by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Unmanned rovers are good enough for that.

    Not always and in many ways they are slow and limited.

    Much cheaper and quicker.

    That's only true currently because we haven't yet developed the life support systems to sustain a human on Mars. A human geologist on Mars could accomplish multiple orders of magnitude more useful work per unit time than any robot we are in danger of developing any time soon. The argument that we shouldn't go anywhere we could send a robot is a flawed argument. The bottom of the ocean is incredibly hostile but there still are good reasons to send people there, not the least of which is simply because we want to go. There are many good reasons to send a robot and there are also many good reasons to send a person. This is not an either/or proposition unless we needlessly make it one.

    Also provides incentive for better AI to do autonomous exploration.

    Human missions of that sort of duration will require robotic support so this simply isn't true. Plus much of the best technology we've gotten out of the space program has come from the manned programs. If we want it to be more than an academic exercise sooner or later we need to go in person if we possibly can.

  29. Re:I don't care where they launch from... by hyades1 · · Score: 1

    My parents let me stay up past my bedtime to experience the establishment of Tranquility Base and Armstrong's "one small step".

    As someone who isn't American, I regard that moment as the greatest in your country's history. It changed everything for everybody on Earth.

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  30. FFS by ilsaloving · · Score: 1

    Heaven forbid NASA decides what it should do based on facts and which location would give them the most favourable result.

    But no, all the state politicians care about is making sure they get the pork.

  31. Mission design by sjbe · · Score: 1

    It's an enormous leap in the amount of payload needed, and the net expenditure of energy, an increase of at least 100 in payload requirements and of roughly 1000 in propellant requirements.

    There is nothing about the payload requirements for a manned mission to Mars that our current technology cannot manage. It's not going to be done on a single huge spacecraft so I'm not really clear what you are worried about. Supplies and fuel will be sent via separate missions (probably multiple) most likely and the craft to ferry the humans very likely would be built via multiple launches similar to the ISS. The limitations on such a mission are really just budgetary and life support. The former is a matter of political will and the later is the one major technical hurdle we have yet to overcome though it too probably is just a question of budget. If the mission design requires generating propellant on Mars then that is an additional technical hurdle to address.

    The cost and difficulty of launching such a mission from Earth's surface are so large that I do not see how a manned Mars mission is feasible without a permanent station in Earth orbit, one at which large scale construction is possible, to build the spacecraft already in orbit.

    I guess you don't work at NASA then because the people actually working on the problem don't seem to regard that as a problem. If you are talking about colonizing Mars you might have a point but to just get boots on the ground is a FAR simpler task and certainly doesn't require building an orbiting factory. Most of the heavy launch capabilities should be available via SpaceX BFR and Falcon Heavy (and similar) long before any manned mission would get off the ground. Even with a crash program we're not sending people to Mars sooner than the mid 2030s unless we make it a one way suicide mission and more realistically it would be 2040s or 2050s probably.

    1. Re:Mission design by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      A colony would certainly multiply the complexity. NASA became accustomed, in the 1960's, to simply overpowering the limitations. It's feasible if you're willing to expend the resources. SpaceX has established what modern manufacturing and more precise manufacture can do. But a Mars mission, and return, demand far more. I'm working from: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.... The delta V from earth to LEO can be estimated at about 10 kilometers/second, including drag. The delta V from LEO to Mars is approximately 4.3 km/s. Then landing on Mars is roughly 4.1 km/s. Then taking back _off_ from Mars is about 4.1 km/s. Then returning to Earth LEO is roughly 4.3 km/s. The return to Earth from there, I'll assume is an entirely distinct, much smaller system, essentially passengers, and can use aerobraking.

      There are economies available: the payload landed on Mars would be much smaller than the payload sent to Mars orbit, and much of the payloads can be discarded at various steps. That is the basis for multi-stage rockets and multi-stage missions of many types. But our experience with moon landings need not apply well to this. The numbers for a moon landing are much less demanding. From Earth to LEO is still 10 km/second. From Earth LEO to the moon's LEO is only 1.31 km/s, and from there to the moon's surface is only 1.87 km/s. And all the fuel, both for propellant and the energy to expel the propellant to gain thrust, still has to be lifted to LEO. One has to build the equivalent of Saturn V's in space, to launch to and return humans from Mars.

      There are many approaches to deal with the numbers. The simplest, as you've mentioned, is not to return the astronauts from the surface of Mars. That is an enormous simplification. If we can assure them a supply line, it need not even be a suicide mission. Another is to do the spacecraft manufacture, and possibly even fueling, from LEO on top of an existing industrial infrastructure. Water for propellant and energy stored as fuel is the issue there. This brings us very rapidly to solar sail technologies. Solar sails could, in theory, provide propellant payload free interplanetary missions, with _much_ faster flight times, on the order of 2 months. A very good NASA study in 2004, at https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/..., laid out the broad requirements. The most efficient rocket propelled orbits, Hohmann orbits, give flight times of roughly 8 months.

      If I may say, I do _not_ understand why NASA is not more actively pursuing solar sail technologies. Not only for space missions, but as solar mirror energy sources. They can be in orbits that do not obscure sunlight, they do not produce ecology destroying waste, and they could easily outproduce all of Earth's current energy production. There are very real difficulties harvesting the energy, and preventing them from being focused as weapons against Earth targets, but it can _scale_ in ways that wind, solar cell, or biofuels simply cannot. Optical astronomers will hate them, but the stable technologies for solar mirrors should provide very reduced cost for orbital telescopes, as well.

  32. Re:Want space money? Defund military by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

    Taxation is a finite cake?
    Not when there are federal workers to steal from!
    No cumulative COLA in order to pay for the 1.5T tax cut, 88% for the top 1%?
    No problem

  33. There's a reason Astronauts live in Houston by bheerssen · · Score: 1

    The astronaut training program is based at JSC and the nearby Ellington Air Force Base. Therefore, astronauts have to live nearby. The location of Mission Control doesn't really affect that.

    --
    (Score: -1, Stupid)