[sci.space] space news from Sept 24 AW&ST

henry@zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer) (11/21/90)

NASA study underway on possible countermeasures for the fluid loss that
affects all astronauts in early exposure to free fall.  Most astronauts
lose 3kg or so of water in the first few days, and get it all back within
a similar time after return to Earth.  It is not clear whether this is a
normal and healthy response to free fall, or cause for concern.

Agenzia Spaciale Italiana contracts with General Dynamics for the launch
of the Italy/Netherlands X-ray astronomy satellite, project currently
underway.

Astro mission goes on hold once again due to hydrogen leaks.  Morale is
hurting at KSC.  The problem is definitely not considered a matter of
aging of equipment; the most likely cause is an elaborate inspection
done early this year after traces of corundum/calcite abrasive were found
in Columbia's filters after the LDEF retrieval mission.  The abrasive was
almost certainly left from cleaning and polishing operations done as part
of the reactivation of Mobile Launch Platform 3, first used for the LDEF
mission.  A lot of Columbia's plumbing was opened up to inspect for
abrasive contamination and clean suspect areas, and 50-100 connections
in the hydrogen system in particular had to be opened and then reclosed.
One botched one has already been found.

There is some feeling among the contractors that NASA is being far too
conservative about hydrogen levels:  the old limit was 300ppm, Crippen
raised it to 1000ppm, and the Sept 17 launch scrubbed at 4000ppm... but
10,000ppm is considered safe and hydrogen is not flammable until about
40,000ppm.

NASA studies, in a small way, the idea of building a small winged spacecraft
as a crew ferry and lifeboat for the space station.  It generally resembles
the small Soviet spaceplane flown in four unmanned tests in the 1980s, which
in turn resembles earlier NASA experimental lifting-body designs.  The new
design is called the HL-20; a university-built mockup was unveiled.  It
would weigh about 24klbs and its wings could fold to fit in the shuttle
payload bay.  It could also go up on an expendable, although it is not
clear whether a new one would have to be developed:  only Titan IV is big
enough, and NASA is now unenthusiastic about manned launches using solid
boosters.  The HL-20 is primarily a crew carrier, although it could carry
perhaps 500kg of urgent cargo if it flew with a crew of two.  Design
mission length is three days or less.  Total spending on the concept so
far has been $3M over 6-7 years.

Magellan starts radar mapping after recovery from its troubles.

Intospace (a German private venture) launches another materials experiment
on a Soviet Resurs-F spacecraft; the Casimir payload is looking at growth
of zeolite crystals in microgravity.  Intospace also thinks it now knows
what went wrong with its Cosima protein-crystal experiment last May:  some
changes were made to the experiment after two earlier flights, and revised
seals leaked before or during launch.  Intospace plans to re-fly Cosima
next year.  [Note the message here:  if you fly on Soviet spacecraft, you
can get several debugging flights done before your US counterparts can
fly their experiments even once.]

Aerospatiale-led consortium wins the contract for Turkey's Turksat project.

Picture of Ulysses being installed in Discovery.  [Actually, if I'm not
mistaken, the picture shows part of the IUS, with Ulysses not visible.]
-- 
"I don't *want* to be normal!"         | Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
"Not to worry."                        |  henry@zoo.toronto.edu   utzoo!henry