[sci.space] space news from April 15 AW&ST

henry@zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer) (06/07/91)

NASA formally approves extended mission for Magellan.  The original
basic-mission goal of mapping 70% of the surface was met on 2 April,
and coverage at the end of the basic mission on 15 May is expected
to be 84%.

Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory gets NASA contract to do the
ground science center for AXAF.

NASP officials estimate $4-8G for construction and flight testing.
This is the first public cost estimate from senior people.  A more
precise estimate will go to Congress next year.

Astronaut Manley Carter killed in airline crash 5 April.  No word yet
on who will replace him on the International Microgravity Lab mission
next Feb.

Dept of Serious Unhappiness:  Galileo attempts deployment of high-gain
antenna but it doesn't.  The spin rate *did* slow somewhat, but the
antenna-deployed sensor did not report success.  [In fact, it seems to
have deployed partially.]

NASA and DoD expected to present NSC a proposal to build a new heavylift
booster resembling Energia, using a shuttle tank and SSME-derived engines
plus ill-defined solid boosters.  They are "reasonably comfortable" with
predicting $500-1000/lb for this, and say that ALS's claim of $300/lb
"never was realistic".

DoD approves development of a new early-warning satellite to replace the
current DSP series.  Full-scale development to start circa 1994.

Bureaucratic fun and games with the Topaz 2 space reactor that the Soviets
loaned to the US for display.  The NRC is blocking the return of the reactor
to the USSR on the grounds that exporting a reactor to any nation which has
not signed peaceful-nuclear-energy treaty (the USSR has not) is illegal.
Various people, notably including SDIO (which is planning to buy a Topaz 2),
are pushing for an exemption.  Meanwhile, the Air&Space Museum is asking for
Soviet permission to display the reactor until it is cleared for export!

Atlantis, carrying the Gamma Ray Observatory, launched 5 April after a
model countdown in which everything went right.  This is the first flight
for the new uprated shuttle computers.  The only noteworthy aspect of the
launch is that the forward skirt of the left SRB was found to have buckled
around a fair bit of its circumference; this is thought to have happened
at sea impact, rather than during ascent.

First shuttle spacewalk in over five years, and an unplanned one at that,
to free GRO's stuck antenna.  The antenna failed to deploy despite power
on the actuator and latch showing "open".  Attempts to shake it loose
were unsuccessful, so Jerry Ross and Jay Apt were sent out to do a manual
deployment, a procedure practiced earlier underwater.  Ross freed the
antenna boom, removed a bolt to disengage the actuator, unlocked the
boom linkage, moved the boom to deployed position manually, and locked
the linkage again.  Total elapsed time about 45 min.  They took the
opportunity to run some of the tests scheduled for their later spacewalk,
and then waited in the airlock until GRO was ready and released.  The
cause of the antenna problem may never be known for sure, although the
prime theory is that thermal insulation shifted during launch.

ESA's ERS-1, carrying both optical sensors and radar on a Spot bus,
readied for launch.  There is some concern about whether ERS-2, whose
construction start was delayed somewhat by funding holdups, will be
ready in time for the end of ERS-1's lifetime; various aspects of ERS-1
are considered to be pushing the technologies and the expected lifetime
is only 2-3 years, which will make things tight for ERS-2's scheduled
launch in 1994.

Story on Langley project to develop endothermic fuels to cool engine
components in hypersonic aircraft.  Such designs normally use cryogenic
fuels for cooling, but the Navy does not want to handle cryogenics on
aircraft carriers and is funding investigation of alternatives.

The NASP materials-development consortium will shut down later this year,
as it appears to have achieved its objectives of sorting out manufacturing
processes and testing large components made with suitable materials.
-- 
"We're thinking about upgrading from    | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
SunOS 4.1.1 to SunOS 3.5."              |  henry@zoo.toronto.edu  utzoo!henry