NASA Will Have To Wait For Mars 154
mattg writes, "Auntie is covering NASA's timetable for recent explorations of Mars has been called "wildly optimistic". Dr. Carl Pilcher, leader of NASA's planetary exploration program (whose sweater at the time said "Obey gravity: it's the law") has admitted that they do not know if they have the technology to bring rocks back yet.
The report into the loss of the Polar Lander is due out at the end of the month.
"
Re:Theres stuff we need to do before Mars... (Score:1)
The really neat little tidbit from that story: Eros contains more raw mineral tonnage than has been mined from the earth to this point, and more than ever could be mined from the earth's crust.
Screw Mars! Let's go get that other rock!
Re:Sounds good to me (Score:1)
I'm hoping the private launch firms can push reduced costs, and make a Mars trip possible, but so far the only one that looks like it has funding is Beal.
Regarding NASA, I don't know. They've been waiting for the second coming of Apollo for so long they can't conceive of doing business any other way. Thus were the gains of Apollo squandered and the funds going to the shuttle's massive operations budget more or less wasted.
Re:Today's Costs for Apollo (Score:1)
Re:The "physical" problem (Score:1)
Re:Maybe they should just fake it (Score:1)
Like the 1978 movie Capricorn One [imdb.com]?
What do you expect? This is NASA. (Score:1)
Mars Infrastructure (Score:1)
With such a system the cost of sending a probe drops incredibly. You don't need to design earth contacting hardware from the surface of Mars. Instead the hardware need be little more powerful than a headset and still have good data rates.
Instead we send a spattering of probes which we must get full scientific data out which serve communications only as a second purpose. The loss of these communication satellites wouldn't bee a big deal as we can always send other to take its place.
--Karl
Re:Look Maw...I'm Bing Crosby !!!! (Score:1)
If the Nasa doesn't do it someone else will (Score:1)
http://theotherside.com/dvd/ [theotherside.com]
Set Backs are bound to happen (Score:1)
http://theotherside.com/dvd/ [theotherside.com]
NASA needs an anal flush (Score:1)
The idea that we don't have the technology to get to Mars is utter pap. We had the technology in 1970, for Pete's sake!!!
What we lack is the national will to do it. Fine. I've been saying for years now, that if our government offered a $1.5 billion bounty (I started with $1 bil five years ago) to the first commercial entity that successfully landed humans on Mars and settled them there for, say, one month, would get the money. No enough of an incentive? Ok, how about if we say that the first company to do it gets to run the planet for ten years, no questions asked. That means that ALL revenues, entertainment-related and otherwise, go to this company.
Sheesh, there's enough investor money running around in the economy now that if we pulled together a company called 'Mars or Bust', and IPO'd it as an entertainment outfit, we'd probably attract $4 billion in capitalization.
This talk of lacking technology to get to Mars is crap. Here is a whiny NASA-crat who is forced to live in a dwindling NASA budget.
Re:The "physical" problem (Score:1)
moderation haikus (Score:1)
instead, hit "underrated" --
not used to mouse wheels
(clicked "troll" on the menu,
kept my pointer over it,
wheeled down -- voila!)
the true point of this
is to post a message that
clears my errant mod
--
Re:Theres stuff we need to do before Mars... (Score:1)
On the other hand, if there's a lot of titanium, that's a metal with some use.
Re:Mars is gay anyway (Score:1)
asteroid belt
the mars-jupiter asteroid belt contains litrally millions of times more resources than planet earth.
Eventually, we will need a mars presence, even if its only for a mining colony with some kind of docking station in low orbit.
And anyway, those moons your on about are alot further away than mars.. lets do one thing at a time
Re:Do we have the capability to eliminate NASA? (Score:1)
Re:Sounds good to me (Score:1)
To get laid, of course.
Re:The "physical" problem (Score:1)
I'm sure we could find more than enough volunteers to goto Mars on a one-way trip. I would almost consider it myself.
Re:The decline and fall of the Space Age (Score:1)
no (Score:1)
--
ba-bu-ba-ba-baaa, da-da-dum. Re-boot the ser-ver.
ba-bu-ba-ba-baaa, da-da-dum. Re-boot the ser-ver.
Funny, I didn't think Mars had a sexual preference (Score:1)
Re:What a moron! (Score:1)
nasa is dead. (Score:1)
'sheeple' (Score:1)
Re:war (Score:1)
Here's one... (Score:1)
Details about the campaign are sketchy. (www.jerrydoyleforcongress.com [jerrydoyle...ngress.com] is a placeholder right now.) My guess is, he doesn't have a chance. But it's a pretty safe bet that he'd be one of NASA's loudest supporters if he made it.
Re:If we ..... (Score:1)
Re:Who is the most pro-Mars candidate? (Score:1)
Well, they are. The shuttles' boosters do rather large amounts of damage to the ozone, and I'd think (anyone got numbers/data?) that the air quality around Canaveral's probably not well balanced for the area's population.
Re:Here's one... (Score:1)
Re:Here's one... (Score:1)
Re:If we ..... (Score:1)
Re:If we ..... (Score:1)
"Them" has to be mysterious, barely known beyond "not like us" to really work the same way as communism did. There's too much basic knowledge in America today for basic propaganda campaigns about an unknown enemy to really work. Some mysterious alien menace might do it, but I don't think anything terrestrial will. Even then, the propaganda's going to have to be a lot more sophisticated. I suspect 12 year olds would just point and laugh at the idea of hiding under a desk or newspaper to protect oneself from nuclear destruction...
Re:It won't be us. At least, not now. . . (Score:1)
I meant "conquer the stars" as a figure of speech, you stupid dumbass. Jeez, people like you--who flame at the drop of a hat and have nothing intelligent to say--are the reason I abandond USENET. And *this* get's a Score: 1?! Guess I'll have to raise my threshold to 2. . .
Re:It won't be us. At least, not now. . . (Score:1)
Well, now, I wouldn't go *that* far. ^_^ Besides, just because we're not interested in space *now* doesn't mean that future generations won't have different ideas on the subject, especially if the private companies or other nations really start making a profit out there. Besides, I've noticed that historically for Americans it's usually a crisis (Slavery, the Great Depression, Pearl Harbor) that provides the pin in the bum necessary to get us going.
Re:The decline and fall of the Space Age (Score:1)
Re:war (Score:1)
Haven't there been studies that talked about war being the source of most major technological booms and accomplishments? Directly or indirectly.
Re:Theres stuff we need to do before Mars... (Score:1)
zurk is dead. (Score:1)
_________________________
I touched the moon! (Score:1)
NASA is about SCIENCE (Score:1)
The space program put people on the moon in the 60s. Today, NASA has satellites in orbit which are providing us with fascinating insight into the nature of the universe.
Sure, if everyone really wanted to, NASA probably could send people to mars in the next few decades... but if they did so, they would have that much less money to spend on real science.
I for one consider the Hubble space telescope and the Chandra X-ray observatory to be far greater achievements than placing a few people on the moon was, or placing a few people on mars would be.
Today's Costs for Apollo (Score:1)
According to this link [cjr.org], $95 is around $112 in 1998 dollars. Assuming 2% inflation for the last two years, that would put the cost around $116 Billion dollars.
Point of comparison, the Defense Department budget for 2000 is around $290 Billion.
Flamebait? (Score:1)
Why the hell is it flamebait just because someone dares to have a right-wing point of view? I didn't realize that Slashdot was so incredibly left-wing that a moderator felt he had to warn the rest of the site when someone posted a right-wing comment.
Or maybe the moderator was just an idiot.
Re:A question for the astrophysicsisisisicsissts(s (Score:1)
However, I can tell you that even with the exponential advance in technology and computing power the cost to go to Mars is surely much greater. It isn't so much new technology that is required to go to Mars, but the vast amount of resources. Mars is a similar size to the Earth. We've all seen what it takes to escape earth's gravity. Imagine having to transport the equivalent of a Saturn V to Mars.(The space shuttle wouldn't be practicle as it only reaches low orbits.) It isn't that I high level of technology would be required to get it there, it's just that it would take a lot of rocket fuel. That rocket fuel translates into money. That would be the real cost in going to Mars.
Wigs
--I just got skylights put in my place. The people who live above me are furious.
Re:The World Won't Wait For NASA (Score:1)
One problem for NASA is the current demand for it to launch satellites. It's rocket science, which makes it a difficult and expensive mission. Currently NASA's manned vehicle program includes the Space Shuttle. For interplanetary space travel, NASA needs a new vehicle. Unfortunately this just isn't included in the current budgets. The demand for NASA to assist in sattelite launches and other earth bound tasks with the Space Shuttle is big. This costs NASA money, movey that could be spent elsewhere.
Hopefully some of the other companies that have been mentioned(Cerulean [nvinet.com], Pioneer [rocketplane.com], Kistler [kistleraerospace.com]) will help lift this burden. The other company mentioned, Kelly [kellyspace.com], is one that I think has the greatest chance for success. Their website demonstrates their towing concept. This has many great advantages over traditional launch methods. For one, the craft can carry a payload approximately 7 times greater than one carried in a rocket. The cost to get that same payload up in the air with the 747 isn't that expensive either. Kelly has realistic goals to be flying their first craft in a few years.(There are three crafts, each becoming progressivly larger.) I only glanced at the website, but I believe it fails to mention that this is a proven concept. They successfully modeled a test and then actually had several test flights. A C-141 [af.mil] towed an F-106 [nasa.gov]. I was fortunate enough to see a video of this. It was pretty impressive.
Wigs
--Why do you press harder on a remote-control when you know the battery is dead?
Re:So where are the private launch pads? (Score:1)
Nonsense. Government funding of railroad construction amounted to 10% of total cost. What's more, those railroads that recieved federal funding were the most likely to go bankrupt. Three continental railroads that were built with government assistance went bankrupt within 20 years. James Jerome Hill built the Great Northern from the Great Lakes to Puget Sound without a single penny of government money and the railroad didnt go belly up.
Most of the original stretches of roadway in the US were built with private funds, collected by members of car clubs, like the AAA. The problem with privately funded highways is that there is no means of collecting a return on the investment without exacting tolls. Besides, as Adam Smith wrote in Wealth of Nations, there are some projects that are worthy of great nations in encouraging development. The building of roads, airports, public utilities, etc are direct benefits to everyone, and contribute to even more indirect benefits.
Public expense to support private profits is bad? Do you live in a major city? Ever think how that milk got to you? Ever thought how much you'd be paying for it if it wasnt for the highway system? Have you ever gotten a package from UPS or the USPS? Ever consider how long it would have taken that package to reach you if it wasnt for the highway system or federally subsidized airports? What anti-capitalist flamers like yourself always seem to forget is that companies get their profits from individuals forking over their cash for products they want. Greedy evil companies provide a service, if they dont provide a service that someone is willing to pay for, they arent in business anymore.
Derek
Re:This country sucks... (Score:1)
If you dont do anything, you have no grounds to bitch.
PS: corporations are run by people. corporations have an interest in not having the government tax them out of existence just like you. Obviously the people on Boards of Directors are a lot smarter than you, because they make their voice heard.
Love that Freedom of Speech thing.
Re:This country sucks... (Score:1)
Corporations dont vote.
If you dont like the way your representative is doing things, vote him out. Try the next schmuck politician on for size. Or, run for office!
Too many Risks (Score:1)
Nathaniel P. Wilkerson
NPS Internet Solutions, LLC
www.npsis.com [npsis.com]
The stars. (Score:1)
Nasa Keen on Crashing things... (Score:1)
Here's where we get the funding. First off we make the mission GPL. Then we take all the command protocols and run them from Linux. We'll use a whole bunch of Alphas and just stack them together and then we'll get RedHat to be a sponsor for it. So now we've got Compaq and RedHat as sponsors. Now let's get AT&T to provide the communications for it. Hmmm then we need to televise it. And who better to televise something that is "out of this world" than Fox networks. Then of course we could have people pay $10K to have their name engraved on the side in extremely small letters. So now we have the whole Linux community behind it. Simpsons fans behind it. Long distance callers behind it. Simple computer users. And rich people with way too much money. And what's best ... NASA. Then of course we'd have to make sure NASA promised not to intentionally crash it so we could see how big of a cloud it would make. (though we all know the scientists had a poll going).
Re:It won't be us. At least, not now. . . (Score:1)
distrubuted mars project? (Score:1)
Re:What a moron! (Score:1)
Anyways, I was referring to public or private undertaking where it wasn't incremental, wasn't assured, and wasn't a random outgrowth of something else. The Hoover Dam and the Interstate system were designed and built for the purposes they are being used for.
The Internet is something completely different, being the accidental outgrowth of another project. It didn't start out as a way to connect everybody and allow an unprecedented level of expression and communication, or whatever its supposed to be doing today. It doesn't detract from the 'awe and majesty' of the whole thing but its a different way of accomplishing something.
The Hoover Dam? They wanted a big dam. They built one. It was big and hard and took lots of time and money. They built the dam.
As somebody else mentioned on this topic, you don't explore and expect no failures. You don't send mechanical things (or humans, I'd bet) any significant distance and expect things to always go right. Triple redundancy on triply redundant parts, backup plans for those, and a jigger factor of about 2-3X... And you get prepared to do it more than once. You are a long walk from a repair... And screwups on the way to Mars are usually gonna be a bit difficult to correct.
All that being said, I volunteer... I'll take a one way ticket, I'll take that risky ride to Mars. Why? Its something new and exciting, and you need fools for that sort of thing... All the smart ones stayed home... (Having been said all through history, why leave Africa (or where ever they say the migrations started), why leave Europe? Why Leave Earth?..)
A death of the pioneer spirit... But thats nothing new, its as old as man.
Re:Sounds good to me (Score:1)
"Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats." - H.L. Mencken
Re:nasa is dead. (Score:1)
I'll volunteer to replace 'em... Gimme da budget! *chuckle*
I think the answer is private money. We already have private companies working on good workhorse lifters to orbit. Get the heck out of LEO as a place to work, add a decent space station for a handy orbital construction and operations base, get your hands dirty with some good "no immediate payoff" research... Lets get the ball rolling... Anybody willing to ante up 5% of their aftertax income to fund a startup? We'll add a dotcom and make a mint on the IPO...
A few Hollywood flicks and a good advertising campaign later, I'd have me a fleet of Mars bound Space Winnebagoes...
"If he is a smart and enterprising fellow, which he usually is, he quickly discovers there that hooey pleases the boobs a great deal more than sense. Indeed, he finds that sense really disquiets and alarms them - that it makes them, at best, intolerably uncomfortable, just as a tight collar makes them uncomfortable, or a speck of dust in the eye, or a the thought of Hell. The truth, to the overwhelming majority of mankind, is indistinguishable from a headache." H.L. Mencken lecture at Columbia University January 4, 1940
Re:I can see it coming (Score:1)
You are absolutely correct. Much of the rank and file of NASA is highly competent, particularly the folks at JPL and others behind the unmanned exploration probes. But the middle and upper management do things for truly bizzare reasons.
My favorite example: Back before they got bought, Macdonald-Douglas put together a small team who did an absolutely crack job on the DC-X program. It was fast, it was cheap, and it did what it was designed to do and built hardware that worked. So when it came time to select the contactor for the next phase of the program, NASA in its infinite wisdom ignored the proposal from the MacDonald-Douglas team (which would have built on the things they had learned and done already) and selected the X-33/VentureStar program proposed by Lockheed. Why? Because the Lockheed proposal provided the greatest technical challenge and involved developing the most new technology.
Last time I checked, the X-33 was grossly overweight (including 5000 lbs of lead ballast in the nose, to balance out the engines, which were too heavy), has had its speed envelope reduced by nearly half, was way behind schedule and over budget (of course), and was having a host of fabrication problems (primarily with their "revolutionary" new tank technology).
Sigh. It's things like this that have convinced me that NASA is not the place to look for cheap space access, or much of anything else except the occasional really cool spaceprobe.
As an aside: if your interested in cheap space access, check out the Rotary Rocket Company [rotaryrocket.com] to see how it might of happened (if they hadn't run out of cash). And then check out X-Cor Aerospace [hughes-ec.com], which is all that's left of Rotary Rocket that's actually doing anything.
Must be Friday night (Score:1)
Re:=( (Score:1)
Re:Mars is gay anyway (Score:1)
Re:It won't be us. At least, not now. . . (Score:1)
Re:Who is the most pro-Mars candidate? (Score:1)
Re:Who is the most pro-Mars candidate? (Score:1)
The RTG's that are used in spacecraft aren't nuclear reactors, those would be much too heavy.
What they use is the energy released from decaying radioactive elements.
--
Re:Sounds good to me (Score:1)
What he's talking about are great government-funded projects to give everyone 'go fever' towards a specific challenging task.
--
Re:Sounds good to me (Score:1)
--
So where are the private launch pads? (Score:2)
Re:war (Score:2)
The Soviets also put the 1st man into Earth orbit. This was also a major bummer as far as the US was concerned. How do you top this? Kennedy promised a man on the moon, and NASA was more than willing to comply. Take that back, the military-industrial complex that Eisenhower warned about was more than willing to comply. Flashforward to today. International Space Station? Money to Lockheed-Martin, Boeing, and their subcontractors. Money for science? Here's a dime kid, go buy a candybar.
The amount of money that was spent to win the Cold War is difficult to comprehend. As Sagan used to say, billions and billions. But to me at least, the Cold War came to an end as the US bankrupted the Soviet Union. I have no idea how historians will view this, but to me the Cold War probably was unique in it being more of an economic war instead of a major blood thirsting conflict. Note: I'm not saying that economic sanctions will win a battle. No, I'm talking about no holds barred, spend, spend, spend.
Some ppl have said that the proposed SDI (Star Wars missile defense) was the straw that broke the camel's back. I don't necessarily agree with this, but I can't disprove it.
Back on topic. When space exploration returned to the realm of science, the funding level dropped to a level commensurate closer to other scientific projects. If funding for space exploration increases, then you have to suspect lobbying efforts by the prime contractors will be of some significance.
Re:The "physical" problem (Score:2)
Zero Gs is really harsh on the human body (bone loss, and worse), there are little if any plans to deal with a medical 'situation' in space (how do you perform even basic medicine when blood turns to aerosol?)
Easily solved, don't do the trip in zero G. Get the upper stage of your booster, tether it to the habitation with a piece of cord, and set it spinning. Artificial gravity.
and the problem of background radiation is even worse given that shielding is heavy and fuel is scarce.
It's just not that bad - the maximum probable dose is about 50 rem over a two year period. This is not lethal over the short term, and poses only a slight additional cancer risk in the long term. Robert Zubrin, a vociferous and convincing advocate of Mars exploration, suggests using smokers for the crew, but keep tobacco out of their cargo. Quitting smoking would reduce their cancer risk far more than the radiation dose!
Check out The Mars Society [marssociety.org] or read Dr. Zubrin's book The Case For Mars for more information.
Maybe they should just fake it (Score:2)
I'm wondering if even the recent March MM (that's 2000 in arabic) issue of Scientific American's article on MM (that's Mission to Mars) was also tied into the M&M movie (sponsored by the 'Mars' candy company) in an attempt to drum up taypayer interest, ala Sputnik in '57 CE. Even the first photo says, "FIRST WALK on Mars would be even more dramatic if dust storms were swirling nearby", which to me sounds dangerous, like saying, "FIRST WALK on the moon would be even more dramatic if Neil Armstrong stepped out and got pelted to death in a meteor shower".
Re:Here's one... (Score:2)
Now translations, of course, are a different story...
Re:If we ..... (Score:2)
The "physical" problem (Score:2)
The people this article interviewed, including a NASA human physiology expert, said that they were actually less put off by the 'hard' technology obstacles of a mission to Mars (not that they're trivial) than they were the human physiology obstacles.
Sounds good to me (Score:2)
--
A question for the astrophysicsisisisicsissts(sp) (Score:2)
Re:Theres stuff we need to do before Mars... (Score:2)
Ah, yes, good, old-fashioned Capitalism.
Isn't there a company that was trying to buy Mir so that it could be used for tourism? This might be the way to go with Mars -- get a bunch of long-sighted VC firms and invest in a large scale tourism plan for Mars. There are many countries on Earth who exist solely on tourism revenues; there is no reason that missions to Mars can't be funded in the same way.
I'm only half kidding, by the way.
darren
Cthulhu for President! [cthulhu.org]
Re:Who is the most pro-Mars candidate? (Score:2)
I can't think it is my party, the Libertarians, because NASA is part of the government. (Incidentally, NASA is one of the few things I like about our government, but I expect other Libertarians to say "privatize it!")
Republicans won't want it because they never want to increase the budget for government programs. (Unless it was turned into part of the military or law enforcement.)
Democrats probably want to take the money out of NASA and put it into social programs.
Greens would probably be afraid that rocket exhaust was damaging the atmosphere, and environmentalists would certainly object if a nuclear reactor was used to power the craft.
Socialists would probably be similar to Democrats in their thinking.
So, I was wondering if anyone, in any party has said, "Mars before 2035!" or something similar.
We need a pro-tech lobby in Washington.
Re:war (Score:2)
Actually, it was the commies who started the space race with Sputnik. (In Danse Macabre Stephen King pointed out that that was a pretty scary that the Russians had gotten to space first when he was a kid.) So maybe we don't need a war or a cold war, just someone to show NASA up and really rub our faces in it.
Of course, I'd rather it didn't take national humiliation to get us to Mars...
Ready for mars in 1970 (Score:2)
Re:The "physical" problem (Score:2)
There are major political problems with that. Remember, so far, no human has yet died beyond Earth's atmosphere. I think Wernher von Braun said it pretty well shortly after the launch of Sputnik II:
"With existing IRBM hardware we could put a man into orbit in a year. But don't ask me how we'd get him back. If a man would be ready to sacrifice his life by being fired into orbit it would answer some of the questions about space flight, but even if one volunteered we probably couldn't find anybody willing to shoot him up there." (source [lifemag.com])
--
war (Score:2)
I didn't say it made sense.
Lack of technology? (Score:2)
For crying out loud, there are people that admit to using their Palm pilot while they're on the toilet.
And as an aside - if we did send people to Mars, it could get pretty boring on the trip - better get a couple of those IBM drives [slashdot.org] stacked up with MP3s
"Oh, I got me a helmet - I got a beauty!"
Re:election year (Score:2)
You might expect that Gore might say some pro-Mars stuff, given the VP's involvement for the space program (or has that changed now?) as well as his supposedly tech-friendly record. I guess Bush Sr. did this after becoming President, trying to drum up enthusiasm for a manned Mars mission in 1989, but nobody much cared ...
Re:Sounds good to me (Score:2)
You seem to imply that the space program is not going to help problems on Earth... You mean like the fuel cell and solar technology bringing clean water, food, and power to remote areas, communications technology helping us tie the world together, plastics (need I say more?), etc etc etc. The space program has generated so much more in the way of advances in earthbound applications than it ever consumed in funding.
As for club swinging, speak for yourself... I've moved up to the axe.
"Nature abhors a moron." - H.L. Mencken
A good SSTO craft would help (Score:2)
--
Getting to Mars (Seriously) (Score:2)
Do we have the capability to eliminate NASA? (Score:3)
If you believe the most die-hard grassroots space advocates, the controversial question is no longer "Are expenditures on NASA programs more beneficial for space development than money going directly to tax breaks on orbital R&D and industry?" the controversial question is "Are expenditures on NASA programs more beneficial for space development than setting money on fire?"
It's horrifying that we're spending billions of dollars per year on Space Shuttle "operations", and a billion dollars on the worst submission (currently falling behind schedule, over weight, and over budget as you read this) for the X-33 [nasa.gov] project, while companies like Kistler Aerospace [kistleraerospace.com] and Rotary Rocket [rotaryrocket.com] are stalling on creating the world's first truely reusable orbital rockets because they can't raise a fraction of that money in investments.
It's shameful that they never bothered to even build a second DC-X [nasa.gov] rocket after NASA took over the program and crashed the first one.
On the one hand, NASA keeps lots of aerospace engineers employed doing something; on the other hand that something is arguably much less efficient than what they would be doing in more dynamic private companies.
On the one hand, NASA is a nice customer for the big commercial aerospace companies' rockets; on the other hand, the government is a hell of a competitor to explain to potential investors in aerospace start-up companies.
And now NASA says we don't have the technology to put an Earth Return Vehicle on Mars capable of lifting a few pounds of rocks, less than a month after Scientific American [sciam.com] spent an article detailing plans (specifically Robert Zubrin's Mars Direct [nw.net] Plan outlined in The Case For Mars [isbn.nu] and NASA's Mars Semi-Direct modification) which would put humans on Mars (and leave infrastructure there, unlike Apollo) in this decade for less money than we spend on the Shuttle and ISS.
Reuse the damn designs! (Score:3)
I say GPL NASA. Can't hurt.
-davek
Re:Government Programs (Score:3)
Of course, this is the exact opposite of a desire to economize, people will try to come up with anything they can think of to use up their budget to use it up. I won't say they waste money, exactly, but let's just say they always have enough office supplies.
I think, therefore, that the reason why NASA has been economizing is the fact that the axe had already fallen on the budget, the people at NASA knew it, and they wanted to put the best face on it. So, my question is, do you think the desire to do thing on the cheap is coming from within NASA or primarily from forces outside NASA who are putting the screws on it?
I figure its the latter, because i can't imagine anyone in any government department wanting to have budgets which shrink every year.
Re:Sounds good to me (Score:3)
Pollute space with ourselves? Excuse me, what do you thing is out there? Heavenly angelic beings? As far as we know all of it within reach is a barren wasteland without life at all. Exactly what would you be polluting?
Take your human hating vitriol and your cynicism and crawl deeper in your hole if you wish. The rest of us can find something better to do.
It's the Infrastructure, stupid.... (Score:3)
Consider:
Now, I know I am preaching to the choir here, but most sheeple think that the Space Program is a huge waste of money, even while they are talking on their cell phone in their car with radial tires and checking their stress level with their pulse-detecting watch. What we in the pro-space community must do is tirelessly try to educate these downers (read Larry Niven's Sprials for the reference) about why spending money on the Space Program is A Good Thing.
If we ..... (Score:3)
The way our country and society is heading I would volonteer to be the first to go. Let the MPAA try to serve me with a warrent on the moon.
The interplanatery lag would suck but I wouldn't have much competition for bandwidth.
The World Won't Wait For NASA (Score:3)
Our space agency has become an outdated dinosaur, capable only of ponderous movement, when it isn't mired in the swamp of bureaucracy. A number of up and coming private companies (including, but not limited to Cerulean [nvinet.com], Pioneer [rocketplane.com], Kistler [kistleraerospace.com], and Kelly [kellyspace.com]) are working on inexpensive launch systems. One or more is certain to manage it in the next few years.
Once we have this cheap access to space, there are any number of Entrepeneurs waiting to exploit it. Most well known is Bigelow [bigelow-aerospace.com], but there are others.
Space, and our activities therein are popular with a lot of people. The growth of such private organizations as Permanent [permanent.com], The Mars Society [marssociety.org], and Artemis [asi.org] is strong evidence of this.
NASA may not be prepared to go fetch some rocks from Mars anytime soon, but they may find others already there when they do.
Gonzo
election year (Score:3)
is voting for the most "pro mars"
candidate, I think it is important
to note that Mars is a very big
issue in the geek community. I would say
it's probably number two right now,
with crypto legislation being number
one.
This is an election year, folks. Who is
the most "pro mars", anyway? I can picture
the dirty campaign ads -- accusing Al Gore
of inventing the Iridium system.
Three cheers for earth!
NASA does a better job than (Score:3)
I saw this on the Discovery channel. (Score:4)
--
ba-bu-ba-ba-baaa, da-da-dum. Re-boot the ser-ver.
ba-bu-ba-ba-baaa, da-da-dum. Re-boot the ser-ver.
It won't be us. At least, not now. . . (Score:4)
But the U.S.A. isn't the whole world. Even if we over here remain too fat and lazy to get out there and conquer the stars, other nations may not. China and India are just getting their space programs off the ground, for example, and later they may decide that mining Luna and the asteroids for their minerals or building a solar power satellite to beam solar energy to earth would not be a waste of money at all. Also the Russians could always put themselves back together down the road--never count Ivan out for long! And of course there's Japan, the European Space Agency with their Ariane (sp?) booster, and last but certainly not least, all of the privately run space organizations that an above poster mentioned (Rotary Rocket, XCOR, etc). So I'm not giving up hope just yet--you'd be surprised how fast things can change.
The decline and fall of the Space Age (Score:4)
The only way to acquire the technology to bring rocks back from Mars, is to stop talking about it and actually try to bring rocks back from Mars.
The year after I was born, we walked on the moon. Now, 31 years later, it's considered an impressive feat of science to grow tomatoes in low Earth orbit.
It may be about time for us to disband NASA entirely. If we aren't going to give them the money, resources, people, and most important of all, the popular mandate to do the job right, there's no sense in pretending to do the job at all.
Re:I can see it coming (Score:5)
When NASA issues a request for proposal (RFP), the bidders have a good idea of what the proposed cost should be in order to have a competitive proposal.
In the old days, programs were "cost plus fixed fee" (CPFF). In other words, whatever the cost of the project in the end, the customer (NASA) would pick up the cost, and the contractor would get an additional fee on top of that (gotta make a profit, of course). But there were a lot of abuses of CPFF proposals, so there are few left (mostly DOE nowadays - check out the Savannah River operating contract). I never had the leisure of working on such a program, but I have heard some "war stories" from the older engineers, and some of the abuses were astonishing.
So nowadays, programs are fixed cost. The original idea was to force the contractor to agree to a fixed payment for the program, and that price would have to include any profit that the contractor hoped to make. That lead to problems not with overbidding, as one might think, but to "no bids" and failed contracts due to cost overruns. So it was tweaked and the current policy is a fixed price contract, plus performance awards based on the programmatic, technical, and financial performance of the contractor. The cost of performing the work is agreed upon, and then NASA establishes another amount as a "carrot" to induce the contractor to perform well. If NASA doesn't like the contract performance, they can withhold part (or all) of the carrot.
It works pretty well for NASA, so far, so they haven't changed it in the past 6 years or so... but on the contractor end, it leads to two things: underbidding on contracts to insure some profit, and overworking the engineers to maintain performance.
The underbidding almost always comes in the labor category. In the task estimation process of the proposal, one "chunks" the project into small tasks like "design dunselhickey firmware," "design dunselhickey electronics," "design dunselhickey mechanical and packaging," "integrate and test dunselhickey," where the dunselhickey is an attitude control subsystem, or a sensor instrument, or something. (And I'm ignoring the contractor/subcontractor/vendor hierarchy to keep this somewhat short.) For even the simpler systems like Deep Space 2, these task estimates are huge efforts, and whole forests are sacrificed to them. Anyway, the point is that the contractor management knows ahead of time how much they want to quote for cost, so if the estimators (the engineers) don't come up with a small enough number, the managers (accountants, lawyers, and engineers with 30-year-old training) take a chainsaw to the estimate to trim it down to their target cost. When it comes time to perform the contract, the engineers find that there's not anywhere near enough money budgeted to perform the labor that needs to be done.
Which leads to the next problem: overworked engineers. The contractor who wins the project faces a dilemma as work begins to fall behind schedule. Contingency was never a part of the budget, so any delays or technical problems, even in the early phases, directly impact the bottom line/delivery date. And in almost every contract, there are several areas where the budgeted money to perform the work is grossly inadequate. In order to avoid cost overruns and keep their performance award, management puts more and more demand on the engineers to take shortcuts and work overtime. Unpaid overtime, of course. Which leads to fatigue and the resulting errors and oversights, as tesserae described. And of course, they're always the engineers' fault. (As I like to say, "parts are derated; engineers are berated.")
Faster, Better, Cheaper has only made this problem worse. There's less money budgeted for any given doowidget, but more performance demands. The leadership is out of touch with the technical demands of the performance requirements, and promise more for less. The technology only does what we tell it to do; if we take shortcuts in design and testing, we don't know what we're telling it to do. Engineers want to do things right, and know they can do things right the first time, but the available time (e.g. money) has been shrinking steadily.
But at times like this, when I'm feeling most cynical, I can still take solace in the fact that I'm not working in a competitive commercial environment (like application software) where the situation is even worse. When I see that Win2000 shipped with 64,000 "issues," I know exactly what's going on... the politics and jargon may be a bit different, but it's still management's fault for promising more than they can deliver.
MTV's the "Real World-Mission to Mars" (Score:5)
At least we would have landed humans on Mars.
I can see it coming (Score:5)
The Climate Orbiter was lost because two people (one NASA, one from the contractor) were handling the entire trajectory; they were completely overworked (to the point failing to implement the backup planning which was already on the timeline, and which by itself might have saved the mission), with no one to even do basic sanity checks on their work -- and they missed not only the critical units conversion, but also the fact that their trajectory corrections weren't having the desired results. A college kid on a work-study internship, working ten hours a week, could have saved the mission. But it was faster-better- cheaper , so they didn't hire the kid...
The Polar Lander appears to have been lost over communications failure between two test groups: when the lander legs were dropped, they apparently rebounded and triggered a ground-contact sensor in each leg; this set a bit in the computer, so that it "thought" the vehicle had already touched the ground, and it killed the engine as soon as it took control. The rebound happened regularly during testing, but the group testing the leg deployment didn't look at the bit's value at the end of the test (after all, it wasn't on the ground yet, so it wasn't their job...); and the group testing the final powered descent didn't bother to look at the contents of the register before they started the test -- they just reset the bit, so they'd have a clean test. All it required was some warm body to look at the test sequence as a whole, but no one had the time. Again, that single college kid might have saved the mission... but NASA was too cheap.
What concerns me is this: they're going to spend their time and money worrying over the hardware issues:
rather than pay attention to managing what they've already developed. It's a bit like the aftermath of Challenger, where they went nuts on the hardware instead of looking at the fundamental problem, which was the prostitution of the program for political reasons. The outcome of that is that we now have a NASA which is completely paranoid about public opinion and afraid of its own shadow when it comes to safety, but which still won't look at the whole picture, and still twitches to the political beat.
It just really pisses me off! Pathfinder worked beautifully (despite a scary airbag system, which was what I figured would fail), and probably did so because of the long hours and very hard work everyone did; I know I did my share of 14-18 hour days on the little piece of it I had. It was so successful that NASA said, "Wow! That was really cheap! Let's see how much more we can cut out of the budget..."
So here we are: decent, low-cost hardware, and crappy, low-budget management. But guess which one is going to get the tarbrush?
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Theres stuff we need to do before Mars... (Score:5)
I think we should first mine Eros (that's a near earth asteroid.) Estimates indicate that it has 20 TRILLION dollars [bbc.co.uk] of ore on it- its 3% metal! It has everything, gold, plutonium, platinum...
There's nothing wrong with money. Money makes the satellites go around, and the sort of capabilities that you need to mine Eros will help get to mars- and probably pay for it.
And besides we need need to be able to stop the next dinosaur killer asteroid [nasa.gov]... living on Mars won't help much with that. Chucking around lumps of asteroid will.