henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) (08/25/87)
[This one is rather long; there is a lot of news.] A Japenese construction firm is studying an oceangoing launch platform. Harvard Business School report on commercial space, not published yet, says the single biggest obstacle to space commerce is repeated changes in US government policy, with high costs and lack of access to space tied for second. Widespread discontent in NASA and aerospace industry with lack of leadership in civilian space program; Fletcher and Presidential Science Advisor Graham are particularly unpopular. "Numerous veteran NASA managers told AW&ST that Fletcher is regarded as inarticulate and uninformed..." House overwhelmingly approves $9.51G NASA authorization for FY88, after defeating amendments to ban weapons testing on station and to require NASA's top two positions to be held by civilians. Sally Ride's study team, assessing major new space goals, will firmly endorse a Moon base as the next step in manned space exploration. It will also recommend an aggressive Earth-observation program as a major priority for space science. The team's report will go to Fletcher early in August. It proposes return to the Moon by year 2000, with the shuttle, a heavylift launcher, and the space station as necessary tools. Mars is endorsed as a desirable long-term goal, but a manned lunar base should come first. Reviving planetary science will also be stressed, especially with reference to the vigorous Soviet program; CRAF (comet rendezvous asteroid flyby) and Mars sample return are identified as important, but Earth observation -- multiple shuttle and station payloads, plus a number of polar-orbit and Clarke-orbit platforms, some of them built by Europe and Japan -- is given the #1 spot in planetary science. The Clarke-orbit platforms would be assembled at the space station. Michael Collins [Apollo 11], who chaired the NASA Advisory Council group that recommended Mars, disagrees that it is necessary to go back to the Moon before Mars. However, he notes that his group was divided on this issue, and that its final recommendations left open the possibility that the Moon would be a useful intermediate step. Ride: "We do not really have a strategy for human exploration in NASA. We have the shuttle and the station but they are not a strategy for human exploration... the correct approach is to move slowly and responsibly from low Earth orbit and to first explore the Moon. There are a lot of good reasons to go back to the Moon... The US did not finish the job we started during the Apollo project. There is still a lot of lunar exploration, lunar science, and research on advanced technologies to be done..." She says studies are underway on what effects this will have on the space station design. "We need a much more robust space trans- portation capability than a four-shuttle fleet." A shuttle-derived heavylift launcher would suffice to get things started, although a bigger one might be needed later. The "Pathfinder" technology effort should be started at once to make the necessary new technologies ["Necessary" new technologies? Nonsense. Try "useful". -- HS] available in time; this may take a fight, because the Office of Mismanagement and Beancounting is against major Pathfinder funding in FY89. "Starting Pathfinder is something we can do now... It does not require billions of dollars. Until we start Pathfinder and other key technologies we always are going to be 10-20 years from completing these goals." Additional work on closed-cycle life-support and human response to free-fall are particularly important. [HOORAY! For once, a NASA committee says something sensible! -- HS] US and USSR will cooperate in September launch of Soviet Vostok biosat, carrying rats and monkeys to study free-fall and radiation effects. NASA team is in Moscow to straighten out details. US dosimeters will be on board the satellite, and US investigators will participate in dissection and analysis of results. The spacecraft is the same type that Yuri Gagarin rode in 1961. Indonesian delegation to visit Moscow to discuss launching future Indonesian comsats on Soviet boosters. NRC review team raises doubts about NASA's space-station cost estimates. It says that the bill for the phase-one station will be $25G, not $14.5G, including support and launch costs. NASA says this is silly, since other NASA programs do not have support and launch costs charged against their budgets, and that the station cost estimates stand. NRC says the full phase-two station would total $33G; NASA notes that phase two has not been approved and probably won't be. The NRC numbers are going to cause trouble in Congress, though, with Proxmire already taking note. NRC notes several serious uncertainties in costs: the stations's total dependency on the shuttle, the policy of providing minimal backup hardware (there will be spares for on-orbit maintenance, but no real coverage against loss of an entire launch's payload), and complicated and messy management structures. NASA asks Congress to approve use of $3M in station funds for a detailed look at a crew-rescue vehicle, another thing that NRC noted the lack of. Costs for such a vehicle are estimated at $1.5-2G. [Micro-editorial: two billion for a crew-rescue vehicle is ridiculous. What is needed is a couple of Apollo command modules -- the contingency rescue plan for Skylab put five people in an Apollo -- and some minor bits of extra hardware. This would involve some new development, since the leftover Apollo hardware is undoubtedly no longer spaceworthy, but there is no reason to start the design from scratch. -- HS] Japan's Space Activities Commission issues report calling for major funding for various projects, including the Hope spaceplane. Japan's seven largest companies form Pacific Spaceport Group to look at spaceport sites in the Pacific. The Australian state of Queensland is a prime candidate, as is the Japanese island of Hokkaido. Congress gives NASA and USAF $75M more for heavylift launcher work, with a stipulation that it not be used for early SDI deployment in 1993-4. NASA's responsibilities in the ALS project are ill-defined, but its role has been boosted because it got $38M of the $75M. The early-90s interim ALS idea was specifically not funded. Eutelsat confirms order for a fourth Eutelsat 2 comsat from the European consortium that is building the earlier ones. Inmarsat is providing capacity on its Atlantic comsat free for a Canadian experiment in providing reliable communications for air ambulances. Canada approves [at last! -HS] development of the Radarsat remote-sensing satellite, for launch in 1994. It's cut down a bit from the original idea, but remains a synthetic-aperture radar with resolution of 10-100m depending on operating mode. Radarsat has until the end of the year to reaffirm US and British participation, both of which are a bit less than certain due to the delays in starting the program. Britain would provide the spacecraft bus and possibly a couple of experiments, but the muddled situation of the British space plan and changes in British space leadership makes this no longer a sure thing. The US would provide the launch, but NOAA no longer wants to fly an instrument on Radarsat and the aftereffects of Challenger make the US role uncertain too. German participation is a possibility. The new Radarsat plan is for a non-refurbishable satellite (the old one was to be shuttle-serviceable) with a lifetime of five years (was ten) and a launch in 1994 (was 1991). Wide-beam coverage will be a swath of 500km at 100m resolution, narrow-beam will be 55km at 10m, medium-beam will be 100km at 25m. Medium-beam can be pointed anywhere within Radarsat's 700km ground track. The combination will give complete daily coverage of ice conditions in the Canadian Arctic, an important application not possible with Landsat or Spot (even ignoring clouds, which won't bother Radarsat). AW&ST tours Chinese Xichang launch facility, noting new facilities under construction. Three more Long March 3 launches are set for next year, two with US commercial payloads if US government approval can be had. New facilities are a big spacecraft-prep building with clean-room areas (for foreigners, the Chinese don't bother keeping their satellites antiseptic), data relay systems, a spacecraft propellant-loading building, a building for storing and preparing satellite solid-rocket motors, a chilled-X-ray facility for final checkout of solid motors, a clean room at satellite level in the servicing tower on the pad, and other odds and ends. "The scene in the last mile of road leading up to the pad was unlike anything that would ever be viewed at the US, Soviet or European launch sites. Villagers were leading donkeys, young girls strolled with sun umbrellas and water buffalo waded in rice paddies, all within the immediate vicinity of the booster service tower... Two PLA guards were stationed under a multi- colored beach umbrella at the entrance to the pad... Chinese children were swimming near the pad..." The locals *do* get evacuated before an actual launch, and are taken to a nearby town for a movie or equivalent. Things are kept as simple as possible. The water-flood system for the pad is by gravity from a tank on a nearby mountain. The launch pad is set to the proper azimuth using a laser measuring system and hand cranks! [Is it any wonder their launches are half the price of anyone else's? --HS] Germany and Italy are proposing Topas, a recoverable microgravity capsule launched by Scout from the San Marco platform off Kenya, as a way of getting microgravity experiments into space soon, aiming at first flight in 1989. GE's off-the-shelf reentry capsules would be used. Flights would last 2-14 days and would be available every few months. Capacity is 100-120kg. Cost-effectiveness would be secondary to schedule. There is also a tentative agreement to fly European biological microgravity payloads on the Soviet Biocosmos spacecraft, with negotiations underway on materials science. NASA is facing a choice for the FY89 new science start: CRAF or the Advanced X-Ray Astronomy Facility. There is thought to be no hope of getting both. Fletcher is generally pessimistic about major new funding for anything in the near future. Processing of Discovery for STS-26 will start in September and end in March. SRBs will arrive in December and stack in January. Rollout will be in March and the flight-readiness firing in April or May, for launch in June. NASA safety office is starting projects to study microgravity fires, space debris protection, and software error detection and prevention. Miscellaneous quotes from the letters page: "It took 10 years to reach the Moon; it should not take 20 years to return there." "...the Soviet Union has won the space race as far as there has been any such." And the letter of the week, responding to an AW&ST article expressing various reservations about the mediasat idea: "...The article expressed views I expect from Soviet and US intelligence authorities protecting their information turf. The interests of the common man are quite different... "'Satellite images could... deprive US troops of... surprise.' Also, anyone else's troops. Surprise benefits the aggressor... "'News... organizations could... reveal sensitive information about other countries, provoking an attack on the US...' Trans- lated, it would be more difficult for foreign leaders to lie to us. Good. As for the attacks, that's what we pay DOD $300 billion a year to take care of. "'Mediasat images could provide intelligence to countries that do not own reconnaissance satellites.' Good. See the first point. "'Images... could reveal facts about an unfolding crisis...' Again, it's more difficult to lie. Good... "'The news media may misinterpret satellite images in such a way as to precipitate a crisis.' Granted. So could the intelligence community..." "Al Globus, California" -- "There's a lot more to do in space | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology than sending people to Mars." --Bova | {allegra,ihnp4,decvax,utai}!utzoo!henry