[sci.space] space news from Feb 26 AW&ST

henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) (03/21/90)

[Aviation Week & Space Technology subscription address is 1221 Ave. of
the Americas, New York NY 10020 USA.  Rates depend on whether you're
"qualified" or not, which basically means whether you look at the ads
for cruise missiles out of curiosity, or out of genuine commercial or
military interest.  Best write for a "qualification card" and try to get
the cheap rate.  US rate is $68 qualified, higher for unqualified.
It's weekly, it's thicker than Time or Newsweek, and most of it has nothing
to do with space, so consider whether the price is worth it to you.]

Langley investigators are happy with the results from the Shuttle Infrared
Leeside Temperature Sensing experiment (the pod on the fin, an infrared
camera viewing the orbiter topside during reentry) on Columbia.  With good
results now in for the orbiter wing, the next run will look at the upper
fuselage.

UCAR and NASA tentatively agree to consider thinking about possible future
joint ventures involving external tanks. :-)  Well, actually, they signed
an agreement for NASA to provide five tanks to UCAR, but only after details
are sorted out and feasibility and safety issues are settled.

Dismantling of LDEF underway at KSC.  This will take several weeks, and it
will be summer before even preliminary results are in.

NASA decides to appoint a manager of space station utilization, basically
to give future users a voice in decision-making.  Lenoir says the intent
is "to set up a somewhat adversarial role so that, every time space station
design has a little bit of a problem, utilization doesn't get squeezed".
[This sounds like a good idea, except that it should have been done five
years ago, about the time when the design *should* have been solidifying.]

Lenoir tells House subcommittee that NASA is considering revising shuttle
schedules so that, once the station is capable of man-tended operation,
what would have been Spacelab missions become station visits instead.
This would affect perhaps three missions a year.  The station would have
more room, more power, and better equipment than Spacelab.  [If it's
ready on schedule, that is.]

ESA slips formal go-ahead decision for Hermes six months, to July 1991,
although first flight is still set for 1998.  This is partly to settle
some technical issues, partly to assess design changes resulting from
the latest space-station upheavals, and partly so it doesn't become a
political football in West Germany's elections late this year.  The
final approval must be a "double two-thirds majority", with consent by
two-thirds of the nations involved, both as equals and weighted by
financial contribution.  France, at 43.5%, is the only nation with what
amounts to a veto on the project.  Major design decisions made so far
have included use of ejection seats (rather than an ejection capsule),
direct insertion into orbit by Ariane 5 (rather than a final kick by
a Hermes propulsion system), structure of aluminum rather than something
fancy, and inclusion of an expendable "resource module" on the tail to
hold support equipment (although some of that equipment has moved back
aboard Hermes).

Picture of major assemblies of Endeavour under construction at Rockwell.

Orbital Sciences files for approval to sell stock publicly, the first
commercial-space startup to go public.

Frederic d'Allest (Arianespace head) and Jean-Claude Biget (Arianespace
marketing director) to leave Arianespace for Matra.  The double departure
is pure coincidence.  [Update: d'Allest, at least, will probably defer
his move until Ariane's latest problems are cleared up.]

[Speaking of which...]  After 17 straight successes, Ariane #36 explodes
about two minutes after launch.  Initial indications suggest a problem
with one of the first-stage engines.

Viktorenko and Serebrov return to Earth after 22 weeks aboard Mir [not
a long stay by Soviet standards, although it's nearly twice the US record].
Also on board their Soyuz was Payload Systems Inc's commercial protein-
crystallization experiment.

West Germany's Rosat X-ray satellite arrives at the Cape for launch by
Delta in late May.
-- 
Never recompute what you      |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
can precompute.               | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu