1435819
story
falconed writes
"From the BBC, 'Nasa has given a final "no" to requests for it to change its mind and grant a reprieve to the Hubble Space Telescope.' Not much new info here; canceling the program due to safety issues. This has been discussed on Slashdot before."
Time it to go down in the middle of Utah...... (Score:5, Funny)
typical NASA (Score:5, Interesting)
If NASA was so concerned about safety then they would have learned from the original shuttle disaster.
The truth of the matter is that when you strap your ass to several kilotons of explosives with the intent of blasting yourself into orbit there is always the chance of fatality. Sure, the shuttles are old and rickety. We knew this 10 years ago. So, NASA. What have you been doing in the last 10 years about it? Answer: nothing.
The cost per shuttle in maintenance is amazing, but if you get rid of the shuttles in favor of something more efficient then you lose money and jobs. It's the same way any other monolithic government organization works - the more crap you put between yourself and the project = more money and jobs are created.
So, people. Are you willing to put people out of work to make a more efficient space program? Are you willing to get rid of the head of NASA because he likes his job and doesn't want to lose it? Would you do the same thing if you were in his position? Can you think of a way that you can maintain the job number and the influx of money while actually getting things done?
I'm not defending NASA, believe me. I work with people that work for NASA. They work 30 minutes a day and take 3 hour lunch breaks, just like the
Re:typical NASA (Score:2)
Yes. Loosen up the gov't monopoly on space flight and let the private sector take over.
Re:typical NASA (Score:3, Interesting)
I work for NASA myself, and I don't know who you work with, but the people who belong at NASA put in long hours. I put in 10 hour days on a regular basis. Admittedly I don't work at one of the major centers, but I find your generalization to be rather unfair to us folks who care. Sure there are poeple who do what you say, but I'd argue that's not the norm. Maybe it is for the pencil pushers, but the engine
Re:typical NASA (Score:3, Informative)
In the Challenger explosion, yes. The actual "explosion" made a big fireball but packed little destructive force. Other evidence, such as the use of emergency oxygen masks, indicate that the crew survived the initial blast.
For the Columbia, I haven't heard one way or the other, but considering the ship actually broke up (rather than just the fuel tank rupturing, causing a fireball)... And th
Why not give it to DoD? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why not give it to DoD? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why not give it to DoD? (Score:3, Informative)
Hubble could take pictures of the Earth, but the image quality would be extremely poor.
1. The problems are that Hubble has a fixed focus which is set for looking at the distant stars and galaxies. The Earth is way too close. An object about 2-3 meters across would be one fuzzy dot. This is not nearly as good as Hubble could do if it could be focused.
2. The surface of the Earth is whizzing by as Hubble orbits, and the pointing system, designed to track the d
Re:Why not give it to DoD? (Score:2)
The KH-12 satellite is reportedly a modified Hubble (that might even be the other way around) that IS designed to look at Earth, though, so it's been done already. Here's a picture [echelononline.free.fr] - tiny, but the resemblance is there. Notice that the dish antenna is in a different spot, if this picture is accurate.
Re:Why not give it to DoD? (Score:3, Interesting)
http://science.howstuffworks.com/question529.htm [howstuffworks.com]
http://www.astronautix.com/craft/kh11.htm [astronautix.com]
http://www.globalsecurity.org/space/systems/kh-1 2. htm
http://www.janes.com/aerospace/military/news/jsd/j sd011017_1_n.shtml [janes.com]
Actually, that's depressing. We have several Hubble-type satellites up there that our government just flings up there whenever the hell it wants and it won't save the one that people actually care about!? Argh. As if I we
Re:Why not give it to DoD? (Score:5, Interesting)
Hubble was not the first space craft to fly that size lens. When hubble was being built, Lockheed already had the equipment to test and validate the lens. As we all remember, when Hubble was put into orbit, its lens was seriously flawed and a shuttle mission had to go up and add some 'contact lens' to correct it. Now why would NASA fly an unvalidated lens when the equipment existed to validate it? Lockheed offered to do it for them, but the test equipment was in the Skunk Works, so lockheed wouldn't let any of the NASA people in without fairly hi level security clearance. None of the NASA people had the clearance and NASA didn't want to cough up the money or wait the time required to get the clearance, so they just decided not to test the lens.
I'm sure the DoD has had very high resolution stuff flying for decades. My guess is that they resolutions higher than 1cm. I went to a few technical workshops down at JPL a year or two back. There was a software contractor there who worked for the DoD on extensions to the TIFF/GeoTIFF image formats. He said they have added extentions to the TIFF format to be able to store 1PB (Peta Byte) images in a tiff file (through internally virtual images/referenced data). Multiple times he made the comment that the earth at 1cm resolution is about 1PB.
I've talked to people who worked on the Agena satelites from the 60s into the 80s. He said that though he never say the target imagery, he did see some calibration imagry in the early 70s taken over the beaches of Southern California. And yes, he could tell if they person on the beach was a man or a woman, and if a woman whether she wasy laying face up or face down. This was in the early 70s!!.
At this point I'd put money on the DoD having a constalation of satellites with far higher resolution than Hubble. On the other hand, I'm sure hubble has very different types of sesor equipment then the DoD sats.
It's N.A.S.A., dammit. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:It's N.A.S.A., dammit. (Score:4, Informative)
Anyway, this is hardly a surprise from NASA. I mean, the requirement for *every* shuttle flight to be in ISS orbit, so they can get off and crowd into the station if there's an emergency is nice, but not terribly useful. Then again, the shuttle itself is being repurposed as little more than a, er, shuttle (as in shuttle bus) to the station. Grumble...
Re:It's N.A.S.A., dammit. (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, when I spent my year in Europe I met a lot of Anglophone Europeans who said they had a choice when they learned English to learn American or British English, and most chose British simply because Britain is closer than the U.S.
But elsewhere in the world? I'm not so sure. Every single Latin American I've met who speaks English speaks American English. The vast majority of Asians that I've met do as well, in sp
Re:It's N.A.S.A., dammit. (Score:2, Informative)
They do seem to keep abbrevations capitalised (e.g. DNA in that article). Strictly speaking, an acronym is an abbrevation that is said as a word, i.e. you say Nasa not N-A-S-A, but you do say D-N-A.
I think I will write to them though because it can't be correct to remove the capitalisation
Re:It's N.A.S.A., dammit. (Score:3, Informative)
It goes on to say "Any all-capital proper-name acronym is, in some house styles, fashioned with a single initial capital if it exceeds four letters (Basic, Unesco, Unicef). It appears the BBC does this with acronyms that exceed th
Re:It's N.A.S.A., dammit. (Score:2, Insightful)
They should be able to keep Hubble going... (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.post-gazette.com/images2/RR012704.gi
Sell it! (Score:3, Funny)
What about the giant ants? (Score:3, Funny)
Will someone please think of the children!?
Makes no sense (Score:5, Insightful)
You're missing the point (Score:5, Informative)
It costs a not-insignificant amount of money to keep Hubble's support infrastructure at STScI [stsci.edu] running -- above and beyond the maintenance costs required to keep the telescope alive. This is the principal reason for the cut -- to save money.
The same economic reasons have been used before to cut space-based observatories; the International Ultraviolet Observer is one example.
Re:You're missing the point (Score:2)
Furthermore, if we can't service a piece of machinery in orbit, I don't understand how we are both going to the Moon and Mars. We even made it to the Moon with
Re:You're missing the point (Score:5, Informative)
The Hubble requires a due-east launch from KSC. The emergency landing sites in Africa are in the process of being shut down, so there'd be no emergency landing sites. (Setting them up again would be quite expensive.)
Return-to-flight rules for the shuttle include the ability to inspect the Thermal Protection System (tiles and RCC panels). As we speak the details of how this will be done are still being worked out. (I am personally involved in this process.) Right now plans include using both Canadarms (shuttle and ISS) to move a boom with a sensor package underneath the shuttle. Another task involves rolling the shuttle and viewing it from the ISS as it approaches. There is currently no inspection concept that would work for a Hubble mission, violating the CAIB requirements for flight. There are future plans for a free-flyer inspector, but that is years away. The ability to fix or patch damage would be even harder for Hubble than ISS.
Hubble is at approximately twice the height of the ISS. It is at the limit of where the shuttle can reach, so if there are problems they're essentially out of luck.
The shuttle can handle a fair number of failures on ISS trips, even including some engines. This is both because the ISS offers extra repair abilities and because of the lower orbit.
For large failures that can't be repair, the ISS offers a "lifeboat" for the crew who could survive there for quite some time until another shuttle or Russian spacecraft can retrieve them. On Hubble, they're screwed. Russians can't even reach them because of the orbital plane.
These are the jist of the safety reasons. But then come the technological and financial reasons. Why should Hubble be kept running? It may have been state-of-the art when it was launched, but there are now ground telescopes that are even better than it due to advances in adaptive reflector control. It's just not worth it anymore. It could probably survive and produce data for another 10 years, but at lower quality and much greater expense than we can get elsewhere.
Re:You're missing the point (Score:3, Interesting)
"It could probably survive and produce data for another 10 years, but at lower quality and much greater expense than we can get elsewhere." I'll thank you to tell me where else I can get my high quality infrared and ultraviolet observations (specifically on the wavelengths in which the atmosphere is opaque).
I am not in a
Re:You're missing the point (Score:3, Interesting)
No, I don't think so, I know so. (Well, as long as I trust people, papers, and reports who are the actual experts in the field.) Adaptive optics have generated ground based designs that are several times better than Hubble [eetimes.com] in infrared. It's not hard to find journal papers on the subject, though I haven't seen them reported much in the press. I'm surprised you don't know about them.
This may not
Re:You're missing the point (Score:3, Informative)
It is not true for much of the infrared range, because the atmosphere is opaque to some of it. The same goes for ultraviolet. Here's a graph of the infrared part -
http://www.coseti.org/atmosphe.htm
The webb telescope should cover some (all?) of that range when it's eventually launched. The Webb telescope will not cover the ultraviolet range that hubble covers. So your argument is that those ranges are n
Re:You're missing the point (Score:3, Informative)
> been state-of-the art when it was launched, but
> there are now ground telescopes that are even
> better than it due to advances in adaptive
> reflector control....It could probably
> survive and produce data for another 10 years,
> but at lower quality and much greater expense
> than we can get elsewhere.
Duh, wrong. Adaptive optics can, indeed, do marvelous things. But HST is above the atmosphere, and is used often in wavebands that are
Re:You're missing the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, I have been keeping up with state-of-the-art for quite some time, and I do know that HST isn't the best out there [eetimes.com] anymore for a lot of things. However, you are correct that I was wrong to make "sweeping statements", perhaps laziness on my part. There are still a few things Hubble is currently the best at, but much of its designed capabilities can now be done with ground telescopes, and in the near
The Three Biggest Lies (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Makes no sense (Score:2)
New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:4, Interesting)
And if so, does this not mean we are limited to low-orbits for telescopes we want to repair over time?
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:2, Informative)
The James Webb telescope will not be accessible by anyone - its going to be at the L2 point.
And the decision to situate the JWST at L2 was made primarily on economic grounds. With no possibility of sending a manned mission to service the telescope, you conveniently avoid any chance of having to meet the large costs which manned missions incurr.
From the economists' point of view, Hubble was a disaster in this respect: a huge amount of money was spent sending the shuttle to service the telescope (a shu
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:2, Funny)
You make an interesting point, though.
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:2)
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:5, Informative)
Really?
http://ngst.gsfc.nasa.gov/FAQ/FAQans.htm#anchor7 [nasa.gov]
Sounds like a good scientific reason to me.
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:4, Interesting)
And just below the information you cite (http://ngst.gsfc.nasa.gov/FAQ/FAQans.htm#anchor8 [nasa.gov]) :
There's your economic reason.
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:2)
My point is that its not the primary reason, which is a dumb assertion the first post.
Do you really need a reason not to go out and fix it? Why not just say "Usable for 1 year. If it lasts longer, its a bonus."
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:2)
I think that's stretching it a lot because you don't show a convincing causality. It doesn't show that the decision to go L2 was made because it avoids costs of upgrades vs. technical reasons which happen to avoid any chance of servicing.
The infrared noise issue is convincing enough of a reason because you want everything to be not just cold but damn cold to maintain the lowest noise floor. The telescope will not be able to measure temperatures that are below that of the me
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:4, Informative)
It's not a bad agreement and not all that uncommon.
Re:New Telescope in ISS orbit? (Score:2)
Disposable Satellites (Score:5, Informative)
However, we don't currently have a replacement for Hubble, and even if we are ready to launch one, there is no guarantee that it will surivive launch, or actually work once in orbit.
Re:Disposable Satellites (Score:2)
Foreign nation (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Foreign nation (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
New X-Prize Goal? (Score:5, Interesting)
Thoughts?
Re:New X-Prize Goal? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's space, but isn't it still a very hostile place to be, even for a space telescope? You've orbital junk, radiation, etc., so what is the "shelf life" of a space telescope, even in a higher, "safe" orbit?
So, how long can you wait to do maintenance, before it's just space junk?
Re:New X-Prize Goal? (Score:2)
A "safe" orbit refers to one that's not in imminent danger of reentry into the Earth's atmosphere. The HST was originally in a 600 km orbit, and truthfully I'm not sure that the orbit itself is an issue as much as the probable failure of gyroscopes and other equipment. Replacing equipment, however, is a
Re:New X-Prize Goal? (Score:3, Funny)
It would have to be a stealth project and include a plan to hijack Hubble's radio links, re-do the encryption and steal control away from NASA.
Shiver me timbers, Laddie! I be a Space Pirate!
At least I'm thinking this would be a far better definition of "piracy" than downloading MP
A low for a NASA manager? (Score:5, Interesting)
This one sentence bloew me away. A NASA manager faulting an engineer for being superficial is just so funny.
Virtually every NASA disaster (and certainly the most emotionally distressing ones, with a loss of life) can be traced to management and not technical decisions.
NASA is full of... well, you know (Score:5, Interesting)
The amount of money that will be spent on an automatic de-orbiting rocket for the HST to overcome a 1-in-700 (yes, that small) chance of some *property damage* (not even human injury) is going to be huge. Which would seem to indicate an obsession with safety, but really at its core it is an obsession with PR. I simply cannot believe that there aren't engineers capable of coming up with a last-ditch backup plan should a spacewalk inspection of the shuttle servicing Hubble show that there is damage. (And they're going to be spacewalking anyway if they're going to Hubble; not a big deal to go take a look at the bottom fo the spacecraft.) There are other shuttles...!
-Rob
Re:NASA is full of... well, you know (Score:5, Insightful)
They are engineers. Thats what they do. Talk to a professional engineer or read up on professional ethics. Public safety superseeds costs.
>Which would seem to indicate an obsession with safety, but really at its core it is an obsession with PR.
Spin and public impression is the obsession of PR. Safety is secondary for PR.
Re:NASA is full of... well, you know (Score:5, Interesting)
They are engineers. Thats what they do. Talk to a professional engineer or read up on professional ethics. Public safety superseeds costs.
Nothing is 100% safe. Otherwise we wouldn't launch the Shuttle at all. Otherwise you wouldn't leave your house every day.
If professional ethics prevented engineers from doing something that had a 1-in-700 chance of doing property damage, then no ethical engineer would design a road. I guarantee you that many people will die on highways in the next week. That's not a 1-in-700 chance of property damage somewhere in the world; that's a 100% chance of multiple human lives lost.
The risk of damage goes into the equation of costs. If any chance at all is unacceptable, then we can't ever do anything.
-Rob
Re:NASA is full of... well, you know (Score:2)
In capitalist Russia... (Score:3, Funny)
Well, that wasn't as clever as it first seemed.
Too much data? (Score:5, Interesting)
That said, could one possible reason be that the astronomical community at large simply doesn't have enough resources to interpret both sets of data?
Re:Too much data? (Score:4, Informative)
That said, could one possible reason be that the astronomical community at large simply doesn't have enough resources to interpret both sets of data?
Data management has been a problem in the past, but storage and computing power today are both so cheap that it is rare to run into a problem. Even on my el-cheapo Linux box (Athlon XP 2600+, $600), I can quite easily crunch through gigabytes of astronomical data.
Re:Too much data? (Score:2)
That said, could one possible reason be that the astronomical community at large simply doesn't have enough resources to interpret both sets of data?
Given that the Hubble Space Telescope is oversubscribed by a huge factor-- that is, there are many more astronomers wanting to use it than there is time-- this sounds pretty unlikely.
Plus, nobody's talking about having the HST remain online after the JWST is launched. At best, the HST will last until the JWST's ostensible launch date, and we all know tha
Re:Too much data? (Score:2)
Especially since data is generally so incredibly noisy it takes huge volumes of it to get a reasonabl
a pitty (Score:3, Troll)
but instead we have a prematurely scrapped Hubble, a disfunctional ISS that doesn't do anything anyway, and NASA with promises to fly to mars and build a "space plane" that is currently in pre-planning stage.
Re: a pitty (Score:2)
> but instead we have a prematurely scrapped Hubble, a disfunctional ISS that doesn't do anything anyway, and NASA with promises to fly to mars and build a "space plane" that is currently in pre-planning stage.
Looks like bye-bye for NASA... until a few years from now when it looks like some other country is on the verge of doing something great, and then we'll pour a trillion dollars into a deathmarch program, after all the remaining expertise has been dispersed and the physical infrastructure has dec
Re:a pitty (Score:2)
Because we don't have a space program for scientfic achievement. We have a space program for human and national accomplishment.
No good for the astronomical community (Score:3, Informative)
It's obvious (Score:4, Insightful)
Loss if credibility (Score:5, Interesting)
If saftey is an issue now, won't it stop them later from doing everything they're promissing for the next 20 years?
Re:Loss if credibility (Score:2)
Lagrange points (Score:5, Informative)
The Lagrange points are so far away from the earth that there are no reusable space craft that can reach them. This will make it next to impossible to service the JWST should something malfunction or fail (like the Hubble did so notoriously).
Take it international (Score:4, Interesting)
The knowledge gained from the Hubble is certainly not a US-only thing.. Open it up to all nations to maintain it. I'm sure that among Japan and the various European contries they could get enough $$ to run a repair mission.
Re:Take it international (Score:2)
And none of them pony up for the $500 million shuttle launches. That falls fully on NASA. Is kind of like being a teenager and having your parents not give you the keys to the car to go on a date on Saturday night. Your not getting very far without them.
Re:Take it international (Score:3, Insightful)
Do the Russians have a vehicle capable of this sort of rendezvous while carrying the necessary parts/supplies/tools/crew? Maybe they could provide a cheaper launch option.
The Russians could provide their valuable experience from the Mir.. Their unique brand
When did the US turn into such pussies? (Score:2, Insightful)
And people got killed in the WTC, and we do nothing but make it tougher to get on an airplane. It's all gotta be perfectly safe!
Don't worry, nobody lives forever... Take some risks while you can. Die on your feet instead of your knees.
pointy hair (Score:2)
Re:When did the US turn into such pussies? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's an excuse.
The idea is to cut costs by removing the large hubble ground support--and the $500 Million cost of a shuttle mission.
"Safety" is a bullshit reason to avoid the PR disaster of saying Hubble is too expensive while ISS continues to soak up money and produce no science.
Re:When did the US turn into such pussies? (Score:2)
In reality though, cutting a shuttle mission saves you at most about $150 million in per-flight costs, plus a few million in training costs. The shuttle program costs something like $3 billion a year to run regardless of whether a single shuttle flies, plus about $150 million on top for each launch, plus the costs of training and special equipment and payloads for each mission.
Why not REALLY sell it as surplus? (Score:5, Interesting)
Earth to NASA (Score:5, Insightful)
You're a publicly-funded, publicly-mandated government agency. If the public tells you to go to the moon, you go to the moon. If the public tells you to land on the sun, you'd best figure out some damn good materials that'll hold up.
If the public tells you to save a telescope that's told us more about the universe in the few years it's been active than we've learned in the previous 2,000 years, you save the damn thing. When you have 300,000,000 bosses, telling them all 'no' is not a good plan. The eggheads are saying safety isn't an issue, and the public is saying money isn't an issue. Hubble's budgetary requirements are infintesimal compared to its value to mankind and the three hundred million people who sign your damn paychecks.
Don't reconsider your decision, change it. Otherwise, you'd best get started calculating the trajectory for optimal burger flipping; got it?
MOD PARENT INSIGHTFUL (Score:2)
Re:Earth to NASA (Score:2, Interesting)
As posted elsewhere...
Cut foreign aid. Say, the $3+ BILLION per year that Israel gets. Go buy yourself a couple more Hubbles with that.
I won't bitch about that at all. Any more questions?
New Reality TV Show (Score:5, Funny)
Where cute incompetent teens try and rescue a multi million dollar space tellescope. Starting with 24 teens, the rigors of Network Space Training whittle it down to a crew of two, who use a decommissioned shuttle to retrieve the Hubble.
Note: Orbital Sex Scenes a must for ratings week!
NASA = safety or bust (Score:4, Interesting)
"He added that Hubble offers no "safe haven" for astronauts seeking refuge from a damaged shuttle, while the ISS does."
Oh good grief. What's next airbags and OnStar onboard the Shuttle?
It's space dammit. If you can't accept the risks then give the money to someone who does. Personally I'd fly to the freakin Hubble just so it can beam me back these bitching desktop images.
jim
Re:NASA = safety or bust (Score:3, Interesting)
Heh. Funny, but unfortunately, looks to be true. Crew safety should always be a high priority, but you can never eliminate risk.
Your car is a lot safer if you never leave the driveway, but you obviously won't get very far.
So when/if we go to Mars, are they going to be towing a little space dinghy behind them, or are we going to have to build a duplicate ship to fly alongside in case of an emergency?
what if columbus said no? (Score:4, Funny)
And we might drop off the edge of the earth.
Way staying home.
Someone else would have gone (Score:2)
Pitch it in a way Bush can understand.... (Score:3, Funny)
"Fundin' ahproved!"
NASA's priorities are confused (Score:2, Interesting)
it is a shame...Enjoy the pics while you can (Score:2, Informative)
Petition to save the Hubble (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.savethehubble.org/petition.jsp [savethehubble.org]
Such a shame... (Score:2)
Now it's scrapped.
How sad.
After using HST as a proving ground, this software would have been used to interface with many different hardware payloads... I don't know what will happen to their project now...
Now-Afraid-of-Space-Agency (Score:5, Funny)
...due to safety concerns? (Score:4, Insightful)
If we can't maintain a satellite (with no explosives or radiation or whatever) how can we be expected to start a moon-colony or anything else?
The Hubble's been one of the most successful programs we've had; other than a bug in the first mirror, we got it patched and it's show us things we never would have seen otherwise. (And it'd be very useful for spotting extinction-level asteroids.
My bet is that politics got involved and NASA's never been a PR-savvy organization. Shame, really. When you have problems and need to rally around something, you don't just dump a rare success.
The Russians, people really good at rock-simple boosting of many, many tons at a time, could use the business. Now that the whole cold-war thing is over, I'd see reinstatement of this program as big an event as all the detant meetings they ever held.
Back before Britian was attacked by Germany, someone was smart enough to do an "X-pize" kinda thing: they held a prize for making floatplanes to race. Political uproar was surprizingly vocal: "We might head into a war- why does the government want to mess with sea-racers?" Well, take the floats off and replace'em with bombs, and the fastest plane became the Supermarine Spitfire: a plane that very likely saved their lives.
I think the X-prize is a great idea. Maybe let NASA do the core research- let private companies compete on the transportation side. Then we'll be able to fix things like the Hubble and that industry can start making some real progress.
But if not, "Hubble, we barely knew ye."
combined with ISS (Score:2, Interesting)
Well if they must bring it down at least do this: (Score:2)
When did we start giving up? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because of these advances and the sacrifices made along the way, we made myriad technological advances in engineering, medicine, chemistry, electronics, computer science, and of course haberdashery (velcro).
The astronaut pool is full of folks brave enough to risk their lives in the name of exploration and science. We should be careless or reckless, but we shouldn't be a bunch of agoraphobic pansies either.
Slashrot. (Score:2)
So let's talk about it some more.
Does Maritime Salvage apply to space? (Score:3, Interesting)
Could PRC or Russia claim salvage rights?
dave
Is this the beginning of the end of Nasa? (Score:3, Interesting)
First you redirect the efforts into a direction that is going to be hideously expensive. In order to achieve this goal you abandon pretty much everything else. Then when the elusive goals of landing a man on Mars clearly are seen for what they are - an expensive boondoggle - you simply abandon that project and since there is nothing else left you can shut down all of NASA.
The problem with this future for mankind - one firmly planted on earth - like the proverbial ostrich is this:
There is a lot of energy in space and it can be harvested quite inexpensively. This has been known for decades, but with oil and gas cheap and plentiful on planet earth - space based energy systems really never were explored, much less exploited.
This is now changing. Is it really cheaper to fight wars in the middle east than to harvest energy from space? What of the lives lost? Is it really the case that anonymous teenage boys dying in a desert in Iraq is ok because:"----" You fill in the blanks. With enough creativity pretty much anything can be justified.
--------------
The nuclear program was set back decades through carefully crafted fear mongering. The movie "China Syndrom" is an excellent example of this. I wonder how much influence wealthy Texas oil barons had in this. Their oil would not nearly have had the value it has were a strong nuclear energy industry around. So instead of cheap reliable energy, we end up with such a regulatory mess that even huge corporations are afraid to propose a reactor. The latest example of this is Exelon (EXC:NYSE) who invested with the South African firm, Escom, in the development of the pebble bed reactor. Clearly they felt that the manufactured opposition to nuclear power would be great enough that it is not feasible in the USA to consider building a plant, so they dropped the idea.
I personally think it is rather sad that the USA considers fighting a war so they can grab Arabian oil and gas is preferable to building safe nuclear power plants. But then what would a Canadian know of USA politics?
Thankfully the rest of the world doesn't seem inclined to play along with these mad ideas and France and South Africa as well as India, and several Asian countries have vibrant nuclear programs.
But even this is twisted in the USA disinformation machine. Under the guise of nuclear non-proliferation it is suggested that since a power plant can produce Plutonium, that nuclear energy is inherantly unsafe. Then the USA goes off and builds reactors specifically designed to produce the plutonium. While the rest of the world is told to not use nuclear as a source of energy the USA meanwhile builds and deploys an arsenal of weaponry that boggles the imagination.
Of course while all this is taking place, the peaceful use of nuclear power is discouraged because of the "long lived wastes which take centuries to decay". Of course, there is no real effort to develope scintillation technology that will burn the wastes and turn them into electricity, and in fact, the vast majority never even hear that such technology is possible!!!
How is this any different than the politics that took place when DuPont brought out synthetic fibers and meanwhile Congress passed legilation that outlawed Hemp? They were so crafty back then that they employed the spanish word Marijuana rather than the common English word - because they bloody well knew that if the average joe sixpack knew what they were up to that they would never get away with it!
But since then, how many kids have been jailed and have criminal records because of these insane laws? How many kids have now lost their parents and are growing up in foster care and orphanages because of the antics of the DEA?
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Well - this story is about NASA and decommisioning the Hubble. I personally think we need to be very vocal about
exciting future (Score:5, Funny)
"We Live In Exciting Times"
I just heard that yet more funding is planned on being cut from NASA, the organization responsible for space flight, exploration and related technology.
All I can say is, "It's about time!"
Is all this NASA stuff really "science?" You people just don't get it.
Space is not the new frontier.
Creating new technology that can slice onions and potatoes into neat shapes, the ability to organize large quantities of neckties utilizing a single closet hanger, a hard taco wrapped inside a flour tortilla with ranch-flavored "Rio Grande Sauce", a new non-stick frying pan coating, penis enlargement vitamins, a chocolate-covered candy bar that will make you lose weight, a light beer "that doesn't taste like a light beer"... now THAT'S science! These amazing advancements immediately enhance the human condition(tm). But there's much more work to be done!
Why, why, why? Why do we insist on exploring the heavens when we have so many challenging frontiers upon us here in the real world? At least GW Bush agrees with me. It's time for the rest of the populace to take off their blue-blockers.
We live in an exciting time. I can't think of another time or place I'd rather be. While our parents and peers might have pondered the enigma of landing on the moon, we have much more pressing concerns: Will Richard get voted off of Survivor:All Stars? Is Michael Jackson going to jail for real this time? Will the seventh Harry Potter movie be as good as the sixth? What more can we learn about Janet Jackson's right breast? The Dukes of Hazzard is being made into a movie! Did you hear me? The DUKES OF HAZZARD! Will it be true to the original? We'll have to find out, but all I can say is, the anticipation is killing me!!
We've given a lot of "science" a try over the years. There's still no cure for cancer; clean-burning fuel technology isn't here; poverty and hunger continue to dominate regions and cultures. Surely after all this time, we should just admit that our resources need to be diverted to more immediate concerns that have the potential to reward us more quickly and efficiently?
Somewhere out there, a person still doesn't have the lowest interest rate on their fourth mortgage! In someone's backyard in Cleveland, there's a plant whose leaves may offer a slight reduction in hair loss among a small sampling of people in a clinical trial. And what are we doing? We're taking pictures of little spots of light millions of light years away. What's the point? If we still cannot produce a triple cheeseburger with "Swiss-flavored" cheese and "smoke-flavored" sauce for under 79 cents, something is wrong. Very wrong.
It's about time we got our priorities straight as Americans, the true superpower and leader of the free world and capital market.
We are wasting precious time and money staring into the heavens while other nations are rapidly approaching our advances in superior low-fat grilling technology. Somewhere out there, much closer than the moon or Mars, is the technology we need to make our clothes smell "winter fresh"; there's a new drink that's a cross between a Martini and Hawaiian Punch -- AND WE NEED TO FIND IT!
How much longer can we afford to spin our wheels with pointless interstellar pursuits when there are still movie scripts about rogue cops and cartoon characters that need to be green-lighted?
So we landed an RC car on Mars. Are you happy? Did we get any high-speed footage of this car in a chase sequence in which it flies into the air and explodes? No! What a total waste!
People, we need to get our priorities straight. Thank God for the Bush Administration!
Ok, ok, I do need to be fair to NASA. The organization did come up with the amazing "Contour Pillow(tm)", but I still sense that the NASA is being distracted with counterproductive ideals when an even more superior mattress technology is i
Re:elections? (Score:2)
sheesh