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

henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) (11/30/88)

NASA to move the second 747 shuttle-carrier-to-be from Boeing Field to
Biggs Army Airfield in Texas temporarily.  The 747 is in storage,
awaiting the shuttle-carrier modifications, and if it stays at Boeing
Field, Boeing bills NASA for storage charges.  Biggs is fairly secure
and is used for some existing NASA activities.

Thruster firings to move the Gstar-3 comsat, currently stranded in a
somewhat-low orbit by apogee-motor failure, to Clarke orbit will be
delayed until January for better sun angles.  The delay will also
give more time for detailed planning.

USAF is once again examining the idea of using nuclear engines for
the upper stages of ICBMs.

Fletcher tells National Press Club that NASA needs more visibility
in the White House.  He says he discussed reestablishing the National
Space Council with Bush in 1986; at the time Bush said "perhaps a
good idea, but not now".  [It became one of Bush's election promises.]

The [pro-SDI] Marshall Institute claims that sophisticated discrimination
methods can reliably tell the difference between warheads and decoys in
space.  It claims that the Delta 181 test demonstrated discrimination
based on measurement of "the degree each wobbles in flight".

Soviet Union reverses previous stand, endorses French call for an
International Satellite Monitoring Agency to monitor arms control from
space.  The US opposes the idea, claiming that it would accomplish
little and would inevitably become politicized.  The technology-transfer
paranoids in DoD are worried about it, and the US also wonders who's
going to pay for the satellites.  The idea dates back to 1978, but
since then France, Israel, Japan, China, and Canada have started work
on relevant technologies, and the US/USSR monopoly is fading fast.
Many countries have at least considered using Spot and Landsat data
for military purposes.

Soviet Union also calls for a World Space Organization, another idea
the US dislikes on the grounds that it would become politicized.  In
this case they may be right:  in the past the Soviets have tied the
idea to anti-SDI proposals, and this time they are proposing that the
Krasnoyarsk radar become a major part of the WSO infrastructure!!
[For those not familiar with it, the Krasnoyarsk phased-array radar
is the one thing the Soviets have done that is almost certainly a
violation of the ABM Treaty.  It looks an awful lot like an ABM-system
radar:  its placement is wrong for a missile-warning or long-range-
surveillance radar, and it's too big and sophisticated for anything
else.  The Soviets appear to be embarrassed about the whole thing,
and nowadays claim it's a space-tracking radar, a claim that is
generally considered ridiculous.]

NASA is assessing a minor leak found in Discovery's number one engine
after its landing.  Engine work associated with the upcoming Atlantis
launch has diverted manpower from studying the leak temporarily.  The
engine will probably be replaced before Discovery is used for STS-28
in February, just on general principles.  The leak is in the bond line
between combustion chamber and nozzle, and fixing it would require
replacing the combustion chamber and rebalancing and retesting the engine. 

Atlantis is running behind schedule, with the processing team on a 7-day
work week [uh oh, an old bad habit returns...].  One unexpected problem
was the need to replace the left outboard elevon actuator last week.

NASA board to complete review of the Oct 17 electrical fire in the Magellan
Venus radar mapper.  Damage is believed to be minor, and it is not
likely to affect the late-April launch.  Repairs will probably take about
a week, mostly just to clean off soot and dirt.  Much of the spacecraft
was still in shipping covers, and major electronics packages had not yet
been installed.  The problem occurred when a technician inserted a
connector into the wrong socket on a test battery in an electrical-system
test.  The fire was small and was put out within a minute with a hand
extinguisher.  Test procedures will be reviewed:  the connectors cannot
be inserted all the way into the wrong socket, but apparently they can
be inserted far enough to make some contact.

NASA and Space Industries Inc have completed preliminary design review
of the Industrial Space Facility project.  Most of the engineering work
has been completed.  The project is now on hold, with construction not
yet started, pending customers.  SII is still financially healthy and
will diversify into related activities to keep itself afloat.

Martin Marietta signs deal with NASA for use of NASA facilities for
payload processing for Commercial Titan.

NOAA predicts that metsat GOES-West will fail within a few months, putting
the US back to a single Clarke-orbit metsat for at least 18 months.  G-W
is already past its rated lifetime, and three of the four encoder bulbs
in its imaging system have already failed.  Those bulbs are a notorious
weak point in the GOES hardware; the new GOES-East substitutes LEDs for
two of them.  There is a continency plan, much like the one used three
years ago when previous failures reduced NOAA to one GOES:  move GOES-East
westward in winter for winter storm coverage, and rely more heavily on
polar-orbit images and foreign metsats.  This will give barely adequate
coverage of NOAA's territory except for the easternmost Caribbean islands.

NOAA's headaches don't end there.  The GOES-Next satellites, intended as
replacements for the existing birds, are hitting huge cost overruns at
Ford Aerospace.  NASA is involved, since it was contract manager for
NOAA for GOES-Next, and there is a finger-pointing war in progress.
Ford and NASA appear to have seriously underestimated the development
costs, but NOAA is not entirely blameless:  it souped up the specs on
the instruments, and was in too much of a hurry to permit a competitive
preliminary design phase.  Competition for the bid appears to have caused
underbidding by both Ford and Hughes [the losing bidder], and NASA then
followed over the cliff by lowering its original estimates to match.
A formal investigation by the GAO and NASA's Inspector General is underway.
NOAA says Ford has finally gotten the message that the situation is not
acceptable, and is starting to shape up.  The first G-N will be about
nine months behind schedule, and will barely make its July launch date.
If Ford misses the launch schedule, NOAA is liable for $20k/day in
penalty charges for delaying the launch, as per the launch contract with
General Dynamics.  NOAA wants Ford to pay some of that if Ford is late,
but as yet there is no formal agreement about that.  Ford says it's all
NOAA's fault, because NOAA tried to combine next-generation technology
development with a tight delivery schedule.  This is the first time that
NOAA has actually done its own development contracting -- metsat
development was NASA's job until 1982.  NASA does not want to help pay
for the overruns, but OMB may insist:  NOAA's budget is much smaller
than NASA's and much less flexible in coping with such problems, and
NASA is not exactly blameless.

US, USSR, Canada, and France sign long-term agreement to continue
Sarsat.  Other nations are likely to join in.  The new agreement is
seen as crucial to convincing various national and international groups
that Sarsat is a stable system that can be relied on.  (This is of
importance because there is widespread thought about requiring Sarsat
transmitters on aircraft and fishing vessels.)  NOAA's Sarsat program
manager says the US should strengthen its commitment by giving it a
formal annual budget.  The US contribution is only about $3M/yr, but
it comes out of several agencies and there is no dedicated annual
budget, leading to doubts about US commitment to the effort.

Good sharp picture of Buran on the pad.  AW&ST says that Energia's
strap-on boosters appear to have been moved closer together to give
adequate clearance for the orbiter's wings.

[Flight International of 22 Oct, looking at the same pictures, draws
some interesting conclusions about Buran.  It does not appear to be
a blind copy of NASA's, despite overall similarities.  For one thing,
based on the photos, it appears to be about 10% bigger.  It may
nevertheless be lighter, about 70 tons, presumably because it lacks
the heavy main engines.  The thermal protection looks almost identical.
The shape of the wing is slightly different.  The rudder is in two
sections rather than one.  The crew access arm connects below the
cockpit, indicating a similar two-deck design.  The payload-bay doors
look very similar.  The rear-fuselage "body flap" is similar.  The
reaction-control thrusters are in similar but not identical places.
(And as most everyone knows, the maneuvering engines are differently
places since the Soviets have the whole tail section to play with
and hence have no OMS pods.)]

[Flight also observes that there are now 20 Soviet cosmonauts with
over 100 days in space each; the three highest US astronauts have 84.]

Glavcosmos completes talks with Austria on a paid flight of an Austrian
cosmonaut to Mir.  This is likely to happen around the end of 1991,
mostly because the Austrians won't be ready sooner.  A similar mission
is now being discussed with Malaysia; it could happen as early as late
1989.

Europe's Intospace commercial-microgravity group is talking to the US,
the USSR, and China about flying a superconductor-materials-processing
payload next year.

India declares Insat 1C comsat operational despite failure of half of
its one solar array.  The delay was due to wanting to put the bird
through one eclipse [a seasonal phenomenon in Clarke orbit] to be sure
that thermal management procedures were up to handling it.  Only about
half the communications payload will be operational, but nothing vital
has been lost.

Potential civilian Navstar users continue to be concerned about DoD's
control over the system, and in particular about DoD's ability (on the
forthcoming operational satellites, as opposed to the current semi-
experimental ones) to degrade accuracy whenever it feels like it.

Scott Science and Technology, a new company founded by former astronaut
David Scott, is negotiating to provide in-orbit delivery of up to 3
direct-broadcast satellites for Dominion Video Satellite.  SST will
buy the satellites from GE, obtain insurance, buy launch services,
and perform checkout in orbit before delivering to the customer.
Scott says that Long March is a prime candidate for launcher.
-- 
SunOSish, adj:  requiring      |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
32-bit bug numbers.            | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu