[sci.space] space news from July 23 AW&ST

henry@zoo.toronto.edu (Henry Spencer) (08/29/90)

The 21st anniversary of Apollo 11 passed completely without comment in
AW&ST.  Sigh.

GAO report says that the advent of Brilliant Pebbles has disorganized
SDIO's deployment plans sufficiently that there should be no FY91
funding for full-scale development of Phase 1 hardware.  This will
hurt the Boost Surveillance and Tracking Satellite project, which
wanted to start f-s-d this year.

Truly to lead review of what organizational structure would be best
for managing large space projects in the 21st century.  [Why do I get
the feeling that it will be very much like the current one?]

Space station in technical trouble:  at last count, the station is
22% overweight and housekeeping power demand is 25% over allotment.
The less said about EVA, the better.

Space Frontier Foundation calls for cancellation of the space station,
arguing that doing it commercially would cost far less and get results
sooner.

Gramm-Rudman storm warnings go up.  If nothing changes, the deficit
will be $100G over the G-R limit even if you don't count the S&L bailout.
This would mean enormous automatic cuts in defence, space, and aviation
unless something is done by Oct 15.  In particular, it would almost
certainly kill the space station and put the shuttle fleet practically
into mothballs for years.  General feeling in Washington is that the
purpose of these (White House) predictions is to try to get some action
in the two-month-old "budget summit", which hasn't been doing much.
The White House insists that it *will* let the automatic cuts happen
if Congress can't get its act together, but admits that this is meant
to force Congress to do so.

Senate Armed Services Committee approves a Defence spending plan that
kills a bunch of things, including the Milstar strategic comsat and
the DoD share of NASP, and cuts a bunch of others hard, including SDI.

Solovyev and Balandin run into trouble during Soyuz-repair EVA, pushing
the limits of their suits' life-support duration and damaging an airlock
hatch on the way in.

NPO Energomash, the Soviet big-rocket-engine "company", offers the RD-170
engine for sale to Western civilian users.  This is the engine used by
the Zenit first stage and the Energia strap-ons.  It comes with engineering
services to customize it to the customer's launcher.  The engine is
noteworthy for being designed for re-use, and for having relatively
gradual thrust buildup and die-down to reduce stresses on the launcher.
The technology-transfer issue got raised, but they think standard
commercial trade-secret agreements will suffice to protect the innards.
[Once again, the Soviets are acting a whole lot more reasonable than
the Americans...]

James Beggs, ex-NASA admin, claims to Senate subcommittee that military
secrecy hampered NASA oversight of the Hubble mirror production, and
implies that the USAF assured NASA that everything was fine and thorough
testing would be done.

Rockwell gets design contract for the next-generation US antisatellite
system.  DoD had originally planned to fund two contractors at this stage,
but money is tight.  Some skepticism has been expressed about the program,
given that at any time there are circa 150 active Soviet satellites, most
of them military, and the antisatellite RFP specified a probable production
run of only 60-75 interceptors.

NASA concludes that the Columbia and Atlantis hydrogen leaks are unrelated,
despite the coincidental timing, and tries tightening the bolts on Atlantis
in hopes that two missions can still be flown before Ulysses.  [Didn't
work, so Atlantis got rolled back and will not fly until after Ulysses.]

Chinese launch the first Long March 2E, a stretched 2C with liquid-fuel
strap-ons.  This will be the configuration used for the Aussat launches;
lift capacity is comparable to Ariane 4.  The test launch orbited the
first Pakistani satellite (Badr-1, a 50kg "experimental scientific"
satellite) and a "second, simulated satellite".

Caltech selection committee unanimously picks Ed Stone -- chief scientist
for Voyager since 1972 -- to succeed Lew Allen as JPL director at the
end of this year when Allen retires.

Substantial article on Lawrence Livermore's proposal to use a 1500m gas
gun to launch small hardened payloads into orbit quite cheaply ($600/kg
if traffic volume is about a kiloton a year for ten years).  It could
not launch people or delicate equipment, but would be fine for things
like fuel, building materials, and bulk supplies, which would be a large
fraction of the total mass of (say) a Mars expedition.  LLNL is working
on small prototypes independently, but would need funding from somebody
like NASA or SDIO to build a full-scale system ($2G+).  The big unknowns
at present are not gun performance, but atmospheric effects on a 6km/s
projectile (higher velocities are possible, but atmospheric effects
scale with the square of velocity, so lower velocities are preferred).

[My reaction to this proposal is the same as my reaction to the Sandia
coilgun:  it's a fine idea that will not get built, because the traffic
volumes needed to justify it are not there.  A kiloton per year is twice
what the *Soviets* launch!  The gun schemes also suffer from working at
only one launch azimuth, meaning that all your payloads had better want
similar orbits.  Congress is not going to fund full-scale SDI deployment;
quite apart from the easing international situation and the technical
doubts, they see it as an impossibly contentious decision that is best
postponed indefinitely, and one way of doing that is to refuse to fund
the launchers that could make it a realistic possibility.  And a multi-
kiloton Moon/Mars plan is not even contentious.  No big launcher project
is going to be carried out -- as opposed to studied -- in the US until
better customers appear.]

Arianespace issues new manifest, starting with a two-comsat launch July
24 [successful] and continuing a brisk schedule to recover from downtime.
The downtime after the February launch failure *has* permitted some
major maintenance to be done without schedule impact, which is useful.
-- 
TCP/IP: handling tomorrow's loads today| Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
OSI: handling yesterday's loads someday|  henry@zoo.toronto.edu   utzoo!henry