[sci.space] space news from Oct 30 AW&ST

henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) (12/18/89)

[The latest Pegasus report is a short slip of the dress-rehearsal flight
test due to telemetry problems.]

Soviet Union definitively approves funding for the 1994 Mars balloon
mission.

National Space Council considers the idea that NASA may not be "structured
appropriately" to carry out Bush's Moon/Mars program.  One possibility is
more involvement from some of the national labs, e.g. Los Alamos.

Amroc cuts staff and seeks additional funding in wake of the Oct 5 launch
failure.  There would have been some staff reduction and need for more
money in any case.  The company is disappointed, but points out that the
failure was unusually mild:  both payloads survived and appear reflyable,
and pad damage has been estimated at $1000.  What happened was that the
LOX valve didn't open far enough and the rocket did not develop enough
thrust for liftoff.  The engine was shut down successfully, but hydrogen
peroxide used for thrust vectoring continued to flow and started a fire,
which in turn ignited both the fuel (synthetic rubber) and the casing
(graphite-epoxy composite).  An attempt to re-engage hold-down clamps
was unsuccessful, and the rocket fell over.  Amroc had considered a pad
water-deluge system to extinguish fires, but had decided against it
because of the elaborate environmental paperwork for the runoff water!
The cause of the sticking valve is not known with certainty, but a
strong possibility is icing:  Vandenberg is much more humid than the
test sites at Edwards, and before launch the valve has LOX on one side
and atmospheric air on the other side.

Amroc says that potential customers are "still talking to us" and no
financing has been withdrawn, although a successful launch would certainly
have made things easier.

First major test of SDI ground-based interceptor technology slips several
months due to problems with the destruct system (!).

Another Navstar goes up on Delta Oct 21.

Pictures of Galileo before and after leaving Atlantis's payload bay.
Atlantis came down two orbits early to avoid forecast high winds at
Edwards, after preparing for possibly staying in orbit up to three
days extra to wait it out.  Final approval for the early reentry came
only twelve minutes before retrofire, as fog at Edwards dispersed.
One of the APUs was started late during the reentry sequence, as it had
stuck in high-speed mode during launch and going easy on it was expected
to minimize repairs.

NASA faces some of the pre-Challenger problems again, as Columbia tries
to get up for the LDEF rescue as soon as possible after the Discovery
military mission.

ESA council confirms choice of Matra's design for the Columbus polar
platform.  The Matra design is based on the Spot-4/Helios bus.  This
is characterized as a "classic" satellite design rather than a "true
platform" design, avoiding the possibility of delays due to problems
elsewhere in Columbus.  The losing British Aerospace proposal was based
on other Columbus hardware.  The council has asked for a study on
incorporating some of the advantages of BAe's design in the Matra bird,
and on payload growth capacity, although this is considered primarily
a face-saving move for the British.  Ironically, due to ESA politics,
BAe is prime contractor for the polar platform regardless of the choice
of design.

Ozone-hole images from Nimbus 7; the hole is back despite its disappearance
last year.  NASA is worried that the ozone mapper on Nimbus 7 is 11 years
old, and indeed is one of only two instruments still working aboard N7.
NASA has arranged to fly a replacement on a Soviet Meteor 3 in 1991,
followed by a US replacement in 1993 and another mapper aboard Japan's
AdEOS in 1995.

NASA and General Dynamics strike deal:  GD gets parts and tools from NASA's
Atlas-Centaur and Shuttle-Centaur programs, in return for a commercial A-C
launch in June for the Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite.
-- 
1755 EST, Dec 14, 1972:  human |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
exploration of space terminates| uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu