NASA Satellite Stranded 167
Account 10 writes: "BBC News has a story about one of NASA's newest and most sophisticated satellites. Launched a couple of weeks ago, it was supposed to have moved itself up into the correct orbit . Once there, one of its roles would be to route data between the ISS, other satellites and the ground as aprt of the TDRS (Tracking and Data Relay Satellite) project. However a fuel tank is leaking and it cannot reach its orbit. One suggestion is that it maneuver itself into an orbit where the shuttle can reach and rescue it - to repair it and send it on its way, or bring it home to be launched again."
So sad (Score:1, Troll)
Re:So sad (Score:1)
Silly Putty and Spit (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Silly Putty and Spit (Score:1)
PC-Sat (Score:1)
Some Suggestions for NASA... (Score:4, Funny)
2) Get Tommy Lee Jones and the rest of the crew from Space Cowboys to give it a good kick.
3) Replace the leaking fuel cell with a new one filled with Nitro Glycerin.
4) Mass-produce the same satellite and sell it in hobby shops under the name, "My First Satellite Set".
5) Sell it to the US Miltary as a target for the new missle shield.
6) "Fuck it, we're going to Mars now."
7) Call AAA for a tow. (or at least a jump-start)
8) Tell the monkey inside it to peddle faster.
9) Make up some ridiculous excuse to explain why you've wasted several million dollars on something that doesn't work - like a fuel leak from a damag... wait a minute...
10) Pretend everything's going as planned.
Re:Some Suggestions for NASA... & Taco Bell (Score:1)
This just in.....Taco Bell believes that this will be the one. Free food for all if there target finally gets pasted.
Dangerous? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Dangerous? (Score:2)
The cargo bay is actually air tight. The problem would come later in the descent when the preasure release vents are opened.
Will Boeing take the $825m hit? (Score:2, Interesting)
Who launched the thing? If they can't recover it will Boeing have to take the hit? Not a good year for the airline industry.
Re:Will Boeing take the $825m hit? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Will Boeing take the $825m hit? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Will Boeing take the $825m hit? (Score:2)
A great comfort to the 23,000+ people who are slated to get laid off by Boeing's commercial aircraft business this year, as a direct result of all the brain-dead Bush administration's "security" hysteria preventing the traveling public from... traveling.
Re:Will Boeing take the $825m hit? (Score:2)
This seems like revisionist history to me. Putting aside that it may or may not be true that current administration generated hysteria is actually holding down the traveling industry to some extent, Boeing announced those layoffs within a few days after Sept. 11th.
As I recall, the travel industry was suppressed at that point due to all flights being grounded. A sensible move to hold down hysteria actually seeing as nobody wanted to fly anyway - people were cancelling reservations right and left anyway - and it probably was good that security was completely reviewed before starting up again.
It was a cynical move by Boeing to announce layoffs so soon. Boeing was trying to feed into the general hysteria and line up for bailout bucks themselves.
Re:Will Boeing take the $825m hit? (Score:1)
With everyone worried about the effect the Sept. 11 had on an already-faltering economy, and the fact that Boeing could count on their Defense Business to boom to compensate to some extent, they could have waited a few weeks to announce their definite plans.
Didn't they announce layoffs before the week was out? I'd say they were trying to push Congress that was already debating the Airline Bailout bill into action.
It's all conspiracy theory level observation, sure, but I still think it looks fishy.
Re:Will Boeing take the $825m hit? (Score:1)
Without a real space station we just pedestrians (Score:1, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:1)
I don't like you or the government assuming that I am incapable of allocating my own money.
To assume that is basically arguing for socialism.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:2)
Well, my counter-argument to that would be that the program is not as important, if people really don't care about it.
Part of the problem with our current government spending is pork barrel programs that only benefit a tiny subset of the population in the reps district. This wouldn't happen anymore, and elected reps couldn't use such de facto bribes to get reelected.
If the cause was important enough, a small minority has a way of being vocal, that would draw attention to them nationally, and get them funding.
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Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:1)
There are a few exceptions to this rule, but I'd say 99% of it the free market can take care of.
Besides, you seem to have way too much faith in your legislators. They don't have staffers doing research into anything except getting reelected. They don't give a fuck about anything but that.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:1)
Power, kickbacks and bribes.
That's also the motivating factor of the "last-term" legislator.
So people who can't afford home heating oil will pay the cost of a program to give them money to buy home heating oil?
No, they will get a job and contribute something useful to society like everyone else has to do.
If they can't, then it is up to their community and family to support them. It doesn't justify stealing my money, and leaving me no recourse.
I may well end up in such a situation at some point in my life. If that happens, I wouldn't expect big brother government to steal hard working people's money to support me. That's just irrational.
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Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:1)
Sounds like someone just got dumped.
Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:1)
It's interesting you picked this example. I think that, more than any other human being, Kennedy is responsible for our ABSENCE of presence in space.
When Kennedy came to office, the space program was operating under Werner von Braun's plan, which was
1. Build a reusable surface to low Earth orbit shuttle (all stages were reusable).
2. Using that, build a permanent manned orbiting station.
3. Using that, build in orbit a lunar shuttle that travels between Earth and lunar orbit.
4. After observational missions, the shuttle carries a lunar orbit to lunar surface vehicle.
This was projected to get us to the moon in the late 70s, but with the road paved, developed, and settled all the way.
This wasn't good enough for Kennedy. He sold the future for the sake of getting there first and substituted the Apollo program, and dead-end effort with no purpose beyond stepping on the moon once. The Apollo program was doomed by design.
By the way, in the American system of government, the President does not decide what gets funded or not. That decision is made by the Congress, and both the House and the Senate were run by the Democrat Party during the entire length of Nixon's term in office.
++PLS
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Blame the guy they appointed President. (Score:2)
If you care about actually advancing "space exploration and science" get the feckless retards that work for the government completely out of it! There has never been anything that gubmint does better than the private sector and capitalism.
If it weren't for the government's monopoly of incompetence (created violently at the point of a gun) we would be vacationing on the Moon today.
But I expect this tripe from someone who has nothing better than traffic [slashdot.org] to bitch about in his journal.
Read a non-government approved book. (I recommend "The Federalist" as a start.) Then you'll be qualified to comment on the pathetic political situation in this country.
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Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:4, Interesting)
The first choice, Re-entry, is just to give up on it (in otherwords, send it back into the atmosphere and hope it doens't hit anyone, or hit a target so we get free tacos). I doubt they will do this considering the astronomical (pun somewhat intended) amount of money they would have wasted on the whole thing.
Retrieve and Relaunch is probably unlikey too, because not only do they have to pay to send a shuttle up (although they can just do it on a regularly scheduled mission), but then they have to pay to launch it again. It would be pretty hard, IMHO, to snatch a sattilite, return it to earth, and relauch it without further damaging it. Plus, I'm sure it is more dangerous to land a shuttle with all that extra weight in the cargo area.
That leaves us with repair, the most reasonable option. Send up some guys on the next shuttle mission with Duct Tape (about $1.50 a roll, depending on store and brand). Voila! Problem solved!
Shuttle designed for it (Score:3, Insightful)
The shuttle is designed [nasa.gov] to be able to bring satellites back. From the link:
The space shuttle is the world's first reusable spacecraft, and the first spacecraft in history that can carry large satellites both to and from orbit.
Now, whether it's more dangerous to bring back a satellite leaking fuel is another matter! I figure that they'd drain it before bringing it back though.
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:1)
Abort, Retry, Ignore?
I know that last one doesn't line up, but it's early and I thought I would try.
--------
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe, maybe not. From the original BBC story it sounds like those at mission control don't know whether it has enough fuel to make it back to an orbit where the shuttle can retrieve it. I am going to speculate that if they don't have enough fuel to make it back to an orbit where the shuttle can retrieve it, then they don't have enough fuel for re-entry either.
Obviously, Boeing had already started moving it up to geosynchronous orbit, or there wouldn't be any question of moving it back to an orbit where it could be retrieved -- it would still be in an orbit where it could be retrieved. This means it is much less of a problem leaving it in place. Unlike Mir, and Spacelab, if it is partway to geosynchronous, above where the shuttle can retrieve it, its orbit isn't going to decay to an altitude where it might crash for eons.
How do you figure this? Matching orbits won't be a problem. NASA, and the Russian space agency, must have done this thousands of times by now. Heck, didn't the tugs that supplied Mir do it by remote control? (-8 And they only crashed one once. 8-)
Isn't the robot arm strong enough, yet gentle enough to grab it, once it has matched orbits? Maybe they wouldn't be able to roll the photocells back up. What other problems did you anticipate?
Yeah, we'll send Red Green. (whose movie, "Duct tape forever" [imdb.com], opens up any day now. And my buddy who wins stuff [chezcomfy.com] won us advance tickets for the local sneak preview.)
Seriously though, my question is, if Boeing has to wait for a next generation shuttle to retrieve it, how many years should they wait, before the satellite last its value? Two years? Five years? Ten years? Whose next generation shuttle will be ready first?
If the Soviets could make robot frieghters dock with Mir, why can't someone make a robot tug just large enough to fly to high orbit satellites like this, and tow them down to where the shuttle can retrieve them?
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:2)
It's easier to achieve re-entry than to get back to a low orbit. They just need to make the orbit more eccentric, and it'll graze the atmosphere at perigee. It'll be going way too fast for the shuttle to catch it at that point. Slowing it down safely would take lots of fuel. (The atmosphere will slow it down, but the satellite is not likely to survive the experience!)
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:3, Informative)
I fear this post has missed an essential point -- as the article makes clear, this isn't NASA's problem, it's Boeing's problem. NASA doesn't pay for the thing and doesn't own it until it's in the right orbit.
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:2)
NASA buys all sorts of hardware from private industry, and federal purchasing regs mandate that the deliverables must satisfy the spec in the purchase order prior to the invoice being paid.
This applies equally to spacecraft as it does to computers or flashlights or anything else.
I imagine if the news media got hold of a story about NASA receiving a new PC from Gateway that had a bad stick of RAM installed, we would have a similar bunch of posts about NASA screwing up.
Besides, space flight is not easy, nor risk free. Just like any other technologically intensive activity, things go wrong. Unfortunately, unlike the everyday foul-ups and equipment failures that happen everywhere, NASA's are shown live on TV.
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:2, Funny)
No, no, no... This is the US government here. Hammers generally run about $50,000 each, a couch runs several hundred thousand dollars, etc. You have to convert to government dollars. Last I checked, the going conversion rate is something like ((N/I) * Pi^8) where N is the normal price, and I is the importance of the item (scale of 1 to 10, duct tape being a 1, nuclear weapon being a 10).
Therefore, that $1.50 per roll duct tape would actually cost about $14,175 US government dollars.
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:1)
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:2)
Where do you put the cost of black projetcs into the equation?
Re:Cost of Repairs vs. Relaunch vs. Reentry (Score:1)
The real reason... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The real reason... (Score:1)
Re:The real reason... (Score:1)
In actual fact, similar things have been going on this side of the pond with market traders going all the way to the European court to claim the right to sell produce in pounds and ounces rather than kilogrammes and grammes.
I have yet to see one person who can sensibly claim Imperial measurements ('English' measurments to our US bretherin) are useful for technical specs and calculations.
Re:The real reason... (Score:1)
Your spelling would have it pronounced Lee-tree.
Besides, it's not the first time a spelling morphed when a word was adapted from another country, I don't see why anyone would lose sleep over it.
Re:The real reason... (Score:1)
The same way 'centre' is pronounced 'cen-tree'? Of course this is just the way that the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, France, etc. spell it and since the USA spells it wrong, they must be right :) -- Note this is not an anti-US flame, just that English is a little bit decoupled in the spelling vs. pronounciation dept.
Re:The real reason... (Score:2)
I have yet to see one person who can sensibly claim Imperial measurements ('English' measurments to our US bretherin) are useful for technical specs and calculations.
That's just it, most industries do use the metric system. The thing is that in people's day-to-day lives, the customary system is easier. (No, I don't know why base-10 is so hard for measurements) Personally, I find it easier to say I'm 6'1" rather than 185cm. I'm sure it's mostly an issue of culture, but 185cm seems cumbersome to me. As to miles vs. kilometers, well, there is just a lot of inertia here. For some reason though, liters are better accepted, as long as you don't sell it to me in gas.
I think that the metric system will take over in the US, just slowly. It'll have to start with things like they did in some county in Kentucky. All the signs there said "Foosville 100km(60mi)." I don't remember which county it was in, but I thought it was a great idea. My cousin told me that they just stopped with that small area unfortunatly. I think Loudoun county, Va was supposed to have switched over the the metric system in like 1996, but they didn't. Aperently, it's not the first missed deadline on it either.
And anyways, how else was I supposed to bother my physics teacher? Giving velocity in furlongs per fortnight is fun!
Metric Pints? (Score:2)
Well, my buddy Gerry and I sat down and each ordered a pint of cider. There was something funny about those pints. The waitress confirmed that the "pints" were actually only 500 millilitres. We got a kick out of ordering another round of "metric pints".
Re:The real reason... (Score:2)
Also remember that the American "English" scales of measurement are not the same as Imperial measures. Especially when it comes to volumes, such as "pints", "gallons", etc.
As for technical measures in the 1940's both the Imperial and the English inch were redefined to be exactly 25.4 mm. Because the differences were causing problems in the manufacture of precision parts for weapons systems.
Re:The real reason... (Score:1)
Re:The real reason... (Score:2)
When are the rest of you going to realise that metric is just anouther arbitary measurement system. the only advantage of metric is it is used by most of the world (which is a LARGE advantage, don't get me wrong).
Metric is not perfect. 1/3rd for instance doesn't work out easially in metric. Nor does 1/4th. In some areas both are commonly needed.
In the end though all the really matters is that whatever arbitary measurements you use, everyone ends up with something that fits.
Most amercians can work with metric. I do it when I need to, but quite honestly I see no reason to switch. I'm comfortable working in both systems. Even if we did switch overnight, I have a lot of old equipment that I like to keep running (old iron is a hobby, of mine), so I will still be using the old system, and I would hope others do.
Thus, I would argue that americans have an advantage because we are used to more systems, and can use whichever one is best.
Score -1 Nitpicking.. Re:The real reason... (Score:1)
Give it a break! (Score:2)
What do you expect? Everyone has to take a leak a sometime...
Older rescue (Score:3, Informative)
The TDRS satellite [hughespace.com] has a similar mass to the Intelsat [nasa.gov]
Re:Older rescue (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Older rescue (Score:1)
The landing is a "soft" glide down to earth.
I think it IS safe to assume that the satellite could fit in the cargo area...assuming they can retract any commucation antena they had to extend.
Re:Older rescue (Score:2)
Yes. In case of a failed launch (like engine failure) the shuttle has the option to return to earth for a landing. Either at the launch site or in Spain or some other location. AFAIK ejecting the payload is not a part of that procedure.
Re:Older rescue (Score:2)
My point is that they have launched seven TDRS satellites in the past, and so for safety's sake each of those launches, must have had various mission abort strategies that entail a landing with a TDRS on board. Emergency landings at KSC, at Easter Island, Edwards, White Sands, etc. And I bet there are abort to orbit scenarios in which they still can't ditch their payload and so have to land with it eventually.
So yeah, I am betting that if they can launch with one then they can configure a mission in which they can land with one. Land that is, assuming there are no dangerous fuel leaks.
Re:Older rescue (Score:1)
I'm not so sure about that. This TDRS is a newer models, not like the ones launched by the shuttle.
It also is probably pointless to do a rescue mission. IIRC, NASA contracted to take delivery on orbit, so if the mission fails, it doesn't cost taxpayers anything. Why risk a rescue mission when they can just wait for a new satellite to be built?
Re:Older rescue (Score:2)
True, but it might be cheaper for Boeing to get it rescued. Assuming Nasa is already sending up a shuttle (which they do from time to time), that will come back with an empty payload bay (which happens often). Then the extra cost to retrieve a satalite is essentially nil above the costs nasa already has to spend. So Nasa could contract out retrivial of this satalite for some amount of dollars, which is mostly profit.
Obvously, sending up a shuttle to only get the satalite is not worth the cost. however that is not the case.
So the real question is: Can Boeing make a new satalite for less than what nasa wants charge to retrive it. When calculating this out, don't forget any possibal engineering value in studing the retrived statlite to see why it failed. (and thus do a redesign so the next one won't fail that way)
Re:Older rescue (Score:1)
It can't be easy to catch a satellite that is rotating in a low-G environment - even 1/2 a rotation/second is pretty freaking fast.
Wording (Score:1)
to an orbit that keeps it in the same position above the Earth's equator.
It's called geostationary orbit... duh.
The term has been around for more than 40 years, along with actual satellites in that kind of orbit.
I wonder how stupid the target audience for bbc news is. I mean, in a couple of years they'll call the traffic lights "color encoded traffic regulator at street crossings"?
leaky fuel tank (Score:1)
Who is going to build.... (Score:1, Interesting)
I guess engery is the only limiting factor...
Re:Who is going to build.... (Score:1)
If energy is a problem, and time is not, could this robot use a light sail? How far are we from that? What prevents using these robot tugs to take satellites out to geo-synchronous orbit in the first place?
Another article in this thread said that NASA wasn't allowed, to carry any liquid fuel rocket in the shuttles, after the Challenger disaster. (Wrong solution to the wrong problem maybe?) So what powers the maneuvering jets of current birds? I read something in another thread recently about "cold-gas jets".
Re:Who is going to build.... (Score:1)
Re:Who is going to build.... (Score:2)
So we now need the Earth orbiting equivalent of a garbage truck as well as a tow truck.
liquid fuel? (Score:3, Interesting)
Leaking fuel? As in liquid fuel? Since when can the shuttle carry up payloads with liquid fuel?
Following the Challenger explosion, one of the safety regs imposed was that no payload could have liquid fuel. This required the Galileo team to adjust the launch trajectory for the spacecraft to include 2 slingshots around the inner solar system.
Re:liquid fuel? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:liquid fuel? (Score:2, Informative)
Slingshot link (Score:2)
Re:liquid fuel? (Score:2)
Actually, only the slashdot summary mentions a fuel leak. The article only says that there was a fuel tank malfunction - which could just as easily be a screwed up valve or clogged pipe.
Re:liquid fuel? (Score:2)
Re:liquid fuel? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:liquid fuel? (Score:1)
Yeah, the Ariane is really great, but make sure you've got the right firmware [umn.edu] on it.
As old as the Shuttle is, the fact remains that it is without peer because nothing else can service an already orbiting sattelite.
I don't mean to be U.S. centric about this, but until you've played golf on the Moon, you just aren't in the club. Sorry.
when you hear the phrase (Score:1)
I must be tired (Score:1)
Re:OT: Your Website (Score:1)
In other news... (Score:1)
Re:In other news... (Score:2, Insightful)
Pioneer 10 cost $75 million to build which translates into approx. $350 million current day prices. The TRDS project has $825 allotted for 3 sattelites that are far, far more capable than Pioneer 10, and have to fulfill a far, far more complicated role.
Pioneer 10 might have been good, but it was also expensive, and took over three years to build. Good, fast, cheap. Pick two.
Shuttle rescue unlikely (Score:3, Informative)
I draw slashdot's attention to the fact that the story was originally broken by Keith Cowing's excellent NASA Watch [nasawatch.com] web page. I expect that they will get the bird to GEO, although Space Command doesn't seem to have issued any new orbital data for it in several days.
Re:Shuttle rescue unlikely (Score:3, Interesting)
I think the modifications have since been removed. We now have no shuttle capable of launching a Centaur upper stage -- the other was destroyed. I have often wondered if this really is all that dangerous, considering the fact that the hydrazine maneuvering fuel used on many satellites the Shuttle launches is hypergolic, meaning it will ignite on contact with its oxidizer, no spark needed. Hydrogen and oxygen, on the other hand, require an ignition system.
Re:Shuttle rescue unlikely (Score:2)
The shuttle has both kinds of fuel on board anyway. The OMS and RCS are hypergolic fuel and the main power system uses hydrogen and oxygen fuel cells (providing drinking water as a byproduct). Quite possibly there is more hydrogen and oxygen onboard the shuttle than there was on board the Apollo service module.
Use it as a test (Score:2)
I didn't think it was funny either.
Space Tows (Score:2)
Anyone know if this has ever been NASA's intention?
Cassini, NASA & plutonium (Score:2)
NASA at the time said that there were safety features that made an accident virtually impossible.
I wonder now, considering the fuckups w/the various Mars missions and this $825m satellite, whether they should be allowed to continue using plutonium fuel...
Thoughts? Are these protesters paranoid or do they have a valid point?
W
Re:Cassini, NASA & plutonium (Score:2)
If Cassini had reentered the odds say that it would have hit the ocean. Plus the plutonium is in ceramic form that likely would make it to the sea floor more or less intact.
Plus you make the fault in assuming that all NASA missions (and all aspects of those missions) are treated the same as regards to safeguards against failure. I'm sure NASA looks at "what's the worst that could happen if this fails" for all the scenarios. Therefore the launch of a relatively small sub-$1bln part of a series mostly-nontoxic satellite didn't receive as much redundency than a multibillion long-term one-of-a-kind toxic subcomponent probe.
Re:Cassini, NASA & plutonium (Score:2)
An RTG is not a fission reactor. The chemical properties of the fuel and it's daughter istopes are well known, so it can be encapsulated in a way which is very safe.
If they want to make a fuss about danger from shuttle launches they'd be better off complaining about the SRBs which produce all manner of nasty chemical byproducts.
Re:Cassini, NASA & plutonium (Score:2)
They took a rocket, put a container in the nose of the rocket, and then launched it into a wall. (Not a normal wall,obviously.) The cantainer was unscathed.
The prtester have a valid concern, but they shouldn't close there eyes to the saftey precautions and say "its bad, just bad". I would have a lot more respect if they actually evaluated there concerns, instead of a knee jerk, radiaion! it must be stopped.
Of course it was these people that tried to tell me Nuclear Power planets are bad because it sends radiation over the wires.
As someone... (Score:2)
There would be errors with satellites and maybe even the ISS, but shouldn't there be other craft with available resources?
Colonize space, don't just send up a few metal boxes.
Yoyo ? (Score:1)
Waitaminit
You mean like a "yoyo" ?
What's wrong with YOU man? (Score:1)
MOO, Whats wrong with this picture? http://www.revoh.org:1234/whatswrong
Dude, that picture thing in your sig is FUCKED UP! That's just wrong man. Scared the shit outta me... I think it's funny now, but Jeezus!
I don't get it. (Score:2)
Re:OT: Your Website (Score:1)