NASA Panel Says ISS Cuts Hurt Science 289
medcalf writes: "The AP reports that the International Space Station, as proposed, is incapable of doing much meaningful scientific research, and that NASA should thus stop characterizing the program as 'science-driven.' Factors listed in support of the recommendation are insufficient crew, lack of certain vital equipment and insufficient resupply missions. Makes me proud of spending $30 billion in tax money -- hey, isn't that about enough for a manned Mars mission? Perhaps a reevaluation of our goals in space, and what we are prepared to risk for the money, would be in order?" The AP article is summarizing the conclusions of a 23-member panel, which finds the current aim of a "core-complete" station too slender a justification of the past and current expenditures in the name of science.
Damn (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Damn (Score:2, Funny)
This will be a huge setback to such diverse fields as watch making, and watch repair.
Add another zero to get to mars (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Add another zero to get to mars (Score:2)
The public (Score:3, Interesting)
The public? (Score:4, Informative)
Every time you vote for the people who represent you in Washington.
If it is as important as you think- get the word out, get others to rally around your platform and elect someone who will get the job done.
If you don't think people will do that now- what makes you think they would be more active if they were voting for how money is budgeted directly?
If the American populace determined the budget it would be a complete mess. And if you think a majority of your fellow citizens are in favor of huge expenditures for space exploration - you are mistaken
.
Re:The public? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The public (Score:3, Informative)
We do. Every two years in November. It's called "voting for the guys who dole out the budget."
Re:The public (Score:2, Insightful)
Unfortunately, there are only two choices on the ballot, and they are "cut NASA's funding" and "cut NASA's funding". If you think American elections actually give Americans much of a say in things, then I highly recommend this book [fixingelections.com]. Modern America is a democracy in name only.
Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
Its our damn tax money that pays for this stuff, I say we should be able to vote on what NASA should focus on next.
Why should NASA be different than any other government agency? There was no election held to decide whether we should bomb the bejeepers out of Afghanistan. I never got a chance to vote on the S&L bailout in the 80s. The religious people don't get a chance to veto public money being used to support artists that create blasphmous works like the "Piss Christ" and the "Dung Virgin Mary". The public never gets a chance to vote how their money is spent.
Besides, if the public had their way, they'd probably vote for NASA to blow it's budget sending N'Sync of J Lo into space. Remember how the media wouldn't shut the hell up about John Glenn's return to space a few years ago?
GMD
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
In fact, fire congress and just have direct democracy right now.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
I agree totally, we should be able to vote on the details of all that other stuff as well.
Well, I wasn't actually advocating that kind of system where the public votes on everything. It sounds interesting but I fear that a system like that would end up being mob rule. As I mentioned before, the religious right would certainly organize a campaign to have NEA funds witheld from any artist that they didn't like. I'm sure they would successfuly be able to convince Joe Average, who knows nothing about the value of controversial art, to vote in support of their measure. Science funding would most likely take a big hit as well. Actually a lot of the stuff slashdotters hold near and dear would probably find themselves voted out. We're not exactly mainstream people here.
All I was saying in my original post is that allowing the public to vote on how their money is spent in such a micro-fashion just doesn't fit in our current system.
GMD
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
So you want the public to vote on the sort of issues you deam them capable of! You hypocrite. This country should be ruled by the people if that means they make decisions you don't like then tough.
You cannot stop people voting merely because they vote differently to how you want. This is the current system and it stinks.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
the majority of people do not vote. That says nothing for the status quo and everything about the state of politics and goverment.
The US is currently mirroring the last days of Rome how long before baby bush gets out the fiddle?
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2, Insightful)
The politics and govt. are the way they are because the people don't care.
That is the status quo.
You seem to feel that the govt. made the people this way but it is quite the other way around. You forget- ultimately the govt. is the people. This is a fact that is undeniable. If every citizen of the U.S. woke up tomorrow and decided to change things- they would change. Who would stop it?
.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
people do not care because their opinions are not listened to by goverment. Why vote when the candidate who won the popular vote does not get the job? What part of the last presidential election did you miss?
The goverment is not the people, it never has been. You think that congreesmen/senators are just regular people doing a job? It's a ruling class, look at how many career politicans and sons of politicans are on the hill?
Nearly every citizen does want change! Speak to your colleagues/friends very few of them are happy with the current system. The question is how do you change, you vote! Ahh back to square one were the current system does not listen to the vote of the public.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:5, Insightful)
And this is a bad thing? I've said it before and I'll say it again: "Democracy" is just a pretty name for mob rule.
"We have to put up with this Electoral College nonsense."
The only nonsense there is the fact that most of those electors aren't allowed to exercise free will. We've gone from a system where electors could have some sort of personal interaction with presidential candidates, the ability to ask and answer they're own questions instead of the ones the press deems important, to one where the guy who looks best on TV gets elected. Again, this is a good thing?
"I think we should be choosing Supreme Court justices"
No! No! A thousand times NO!!! The justices of the Supreme Court of the United States should be accountable to the federal constitution and the federal constitution only! "Will the voters like this?" is a question that should never go through a judge's mind. The "justice" doled out by the court of public opinion isn't justice at all. We've already fouled up the system that decides state-level judges (where candidates tout not how fair they are but how many convicts they've locked up for long prison terms), why on earth would you want to screw up the SCUS as well? If anything, that would be a way of guaranteeing the establishment of the "autocratic theocracy" you claim you fear. "Vote for me! I locked up thousands of undesirables my last term!"
"and cabinet members"
Yeah, instead of letting the president pick people he knows he can work with, let's let the faceless millions that don't know anything that isn't on TV decide for him. Great idea!
"Senate seats and Presidential houses are reserved for the quite rich"
Because the folks like you screaming for more "democracy" put them there! By demanding the "right" to vote directly for these people you guaranteed that only those people who could afford TV time are put there. And you want to spread this heinous system to even more corners of the federal government?
I already ranted about a lot of this in a past journal entry [slashdot.org] of mine. Of course, if you would rather remodel the US government into one that can change on a [bbc.co.uk] weekly [bbc.co.uk] basis [bbc.co.uk], you're probably far too gone to see the light of reason. And we'll end up with elected officials that bend over backwards to please the voters in the same way the chief executives of Enron and WorldCom tried to please theirs. After all, if all that matters is what the voters say, why bother with the law?
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
wow, they sure got you brain washed.
Do you really think that enough people is all that is needed to unseat the money and power that the government has established? It takes a lot more than just enough people. I am sure there are more than enough people that would like to get the government to stop fraud waist and abuse. I doubt you would find anybody not in the government that didn't want this stoped. has it changed?.....No.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
I don't think so. Maybe you should think about your wording. large groups of people that want something Really bad are going to have a lot of power. This is where special intrest groups come in.
This is also a really bad thing. It was the special intrest groups that wouldn't let the forest service manage the forests in Showlow, AZ. and it burned 450k acres of land. You cant clean out them dead and dry trees a spoted owl might live in it...Yea, where the fuck is the spotted owl going to live now? Where are the 400 families that lost there homes going to live now? What about the Deer and Elk that inhabit that area?
Yea, lets let nature clean itself out. meanwhile we can all parish in the name of morality. Is there really anything wrong with people doing, in a clean fashoned way, what nature would do in a masive and distructive way?
Ok that was a tangent. Sorry I have family in that area.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
You're right. But if we're going to call that a "wrong" that needs to be "righted", Mr. Gore (2000) will have to get in line behind Samuel Tilden (1876) and Grover Cleveland (1888), who also lost the electoral college despite having narrow wins in the popular vote count.
Until someone passes a Constitutional Amendment that does away with the Electoral College and elects the President by popular vote, the popular vote don't mean squat. Don't like it? Call your Congresscritter and tell 'em you want the Constitution changed.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
Actually, it is a disputed fact. Quite a few absentee votes were not even looked at in the state of California. Why? Because electoral votes are delegated on the state level, and there weren't enough to affect the outcome, since the Democrats had already won by well over a million votes in that state. This happened in several other states as well. We don't know the exact outcome of the popular vote, and never will. However, this is an OK thing, since we don't elect based upon the popular vote anyway, but rather use it to assign seats in the Electoral College. Whether or not the Electoral College is a good thing, however, is an whole different matter.
Re:Public never gets to choose anything (Score:2)
Define free? How much does geoverment cost.
What peacful action can the people take that will make a difference?
FUD is exactly how the goverment works. Why do you think Bush has such a high approval rating. The people have no voice.
Remove the electoral college, it was put there because the founders did not trust the tyranny of the majority! Think about that.
Marched on Washington, you mean a revolution or a peaceful protest?
Public apathy is the only peacful protest left!
Re:The public (Score:2, Interesting)
Well, they kind of have, you just haven't noticed it directly. Consider that the way America wages war (coined "Hyperwar") involves sending overwhelming waves of missiles and striking targets with a ferocity that nobody can effectively react to. This form of warfare is becoming increasingly reliant on satellites for communications.
In other words, your largely unopposed war in Afghanistan is testament to what NASA has done lately.
Re:The public (Score:2, Informative)
But seriously, the US was all set to go to Mars, but in the heady days of the early 70s, the Nixon administration had other plans. After all, remember that Apollo was really just a political carrot held before us by the Kennedy administration. Once we got to the moon, the collective sigh was sent up: "Been there, done that". By the time of Apollo 13, people took rocket science for granted, and were caught off guard by the Apollo 13 debacle, which, in my opinion, was a textbook example of Nasa at both it's worst and at its best.
In theory, the shuttle program could have been a more practical stepping-stone, but various budget-cutting measures and a highly-diminished drive to go to space handicapped it before it ever flew. So, you get what you pay for. Signs of this are extant in the solid rocket boosters, which are a cheap (and dangerous) alternative to a throttleable booster system. Whole unmanned systems were developed on paper as shuttle derivatives, but never flew off the drawing board due to intransagent budget hawks
Challenger showed the pennywise-poundfoolishness of the various cost-saving measures. Hopefully the people will see the real threat emerging from China now - they want to go to the moon themselves - and vote in pro-space legislators. Slip on over to space.com or spaceflightnow.com to bone up n your space geek knowledge. Your brain will goo "Mmmmmm!"
Re:The public (Score:2)
NASA could stage a poll to solicit opinions on worthwhile goals, and use the results to attempt to lobby Congress for more funding, but in the end the pork-barrel projects like ISS would win out. I find it quite remarkable that so much good science (the Mars program, Cassini, Galileo, CONTOUR, the Solar observatories, Hubble upgrades, Stardust, and so on and on) gets done in this environment.
except the extreme (Score:2)
Re:The public (Score:2)
Re:The public (Score:2)
Yeah, but very few programmers actually type it that way in my observation.
That reminds me of the rumor that the Mariner One space probe (or was it Mariner 3?) crashed into the ocean because somebody had FORTRAN code something like:
For I = 1.5
Instead of
For I = 1,5
(Psuedo-code example, not real FORTRAN)
Somehow, spaces made one look like the other.
Where? (Score:2, Interesting)
Gotta love the American System...
Probably not... (Score:4, Insightful)
Makes me proud of spending $30 billion in tax money -- hey, isn't that about enough for a manned Mars mission?
Well, given the inability of multiple independent national and international space agencies (the US and Russia in particular), to bring in a much simpler, safer, and less technically challenging mission (namely ISS) on time and on budget, I find it highly doubtful that a $30 Billion dollar projected budget for a manned mission is even within an order of magnitude of what the actual cost will be....
How To Save Mars Mission Money (Score:4, Funny)
I got an idea to save money. Have a Mars Survivor TV show. All the participants sign away any death compensation rights.
That way we don't have to spend lots to make the ship extra safe, and the TV ad revenue for the show helps pay for it.
Plus, it will make great drama.
"Dammit! I'm leaving this tin can! I can't stand you four. You selfish b8stards only want....."
"Wait!!!, don't open that air lock without a......"
(Swoooooooooooosh)
"Nevermind"
-T-
politics, not technology (Score:2)
This is why I suspect that truely commercial/private ventures will be the ones that give us a significant presence in space. Such organization don't have to worry about outside politics for funding, and their internal politics reward taking a risk and achieving something.
I still have my hopes up for www.armadilloaerospace.com It is still relatively primative, but progressing despite the budget being relatively tiny and with a small staff. I am hoping that, at the very least they will demonstrate that it is reasonably possible for private/commercial entities to go to space without the aid of NASA.
Hrmph (Score:2, Insightful)
What good is feeding the starving, curing cancer or AIDS, and fighting the latest war when it all comes down to the fact that for the foreseeable future we, in fact, have no real "future" beyond what is here in front of us.
The reson is that none of that is going to happen (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with the future of space exploration is that there's no evidence that there's any useful return on that investment in the short term. As we can tell from the social security debates, that's what makes or breaks any political decision.
As for your view that we shouldn't care about AIDS, etc, because it doesn't matter in the long run if a big asteroid wipes us out. Using that logic, then to hell with space exploration, lets get to work on reversing entropy. Because regardless of anything we do, if entropy continues on its merry way, we're screwed. Check out Asimov's short story, I believe it's called "the question" or something like that.
Personally I think space exploration is vital to our survival, but in a way that isn't immediately obvious. It's not about avoiding the next plague, rather it is about creating hope and something to strive for. Right now, there are few frontiers left to explore on this planet. We have this growing sense of stangation of culture, etc. BUT, if we were pushing into space, then suddenly we've got new things to strive for.
I suspect though that, as with all of past exploration, money will have to be the driving factor. Corporations need to be convinced that there's money to be made by investing in space exploration. Renaissance exploration was all about trying to find resources, and wealth. If the WWF's report on the fate of the world is any indiciation, there will be plenty of motivation to do this in the near future.
Meteors & humanity. (Score:2)
With regard to our "short-sightedness" regarding space in general & meteor strikes in specific:
Suppose we were to find out & verify, ala Armageddon, that meteor X, about the diameter of Texas, composed of a mixture of metal ore, rock, and ice as most meteors are, is hurtling toward us to destroy earth & humanity. What those politicians you refer to as short-sighted realize that you may not is that there's not a damn thing we can do about it. There is no ICBM collection, no space shuttle that can do jack shit for us no matter what story Jerry Bruckheimer likes to tell. There's also no form of technology we even have an inkling of that can deflect a meteor large enough to do serious damage to our planet. You can do the calculations yourself, but there aren't enough nuclear weapons on the planet to put a dent in a rock that big. We'd all have to face the fact that we're fucked and everything wasn't meant to last.
For fuck's sake, if there's any situation it's not the US government's job to handle, that's it. It's bend-over-&-kiss-your-ass-goodbye time, because almost all of us would die and the state of the US budget would instantly cease to be a concern for any survivors.
Re:Meteors & humanity. (Score:2)
Answer #1: That's why they weren't advocating building a meteor defense shield around Earth, but rather establishing colonies on at least a couple of nearby rocks, so that the entire human race wouldn't be all in one place and vulnerable to being wiped out by a single catastrophic event.
Answer #2: It all depends on how far out we catch it. If it was far enough, we might only need to deflect its course by a few milliradians to put it on an orbit that would miss us. F=MA. If the mass, distance, velocity, time, etc., worked out right, we just might be able to give it enough of a nudge to do the trick.
Though I agree, of course, about the silliness of the movies, where you see the producers' eight-year-old-level understanding of physics (i.e., the cute notion that when you "blow up" something, its mass just "disappears"), plus the fact that, I guess, "nudging" it somehow doesn't seem as cool.
Re:Hrmph (Score:2)
And forget about colonizing the planets as an escape plan. It's orders of magnitude cheaper to build underground shelters with a few years of supplies to outlast the nuclear winter. As long as they don't take a direct hit, the shelters would survive.
Ask yourself why. (Score:3)
Re:Ask yourself why. (Score:2)
Think again. NASA doesn't effectively utilize the funds it gets right now; why do you think throwing more money at it would help? A government bureaucracy sometimes just isn't the most effectrive way of doing things. Instead, private enterprises should be encouraged to engage in space exploration, e.g. through tax incentives.
(I agree with you on the war on drugs though - it's just stupid.)
Re:Ask yourself why. (Score:2)
imo that cannot be fixed, and thus the best way to solve NASA is to toss more money, especially given the at least triple digit times more cash that's spent on bombing people.
I do agree on privatization as the "best" way to do things in space, though I am as wary, if not more wary, of corperations as I am the US government.
Re:Ask yourself why. (Score:3, Interesting)
This sounds an awful bit like something influenced alot by NASA in order to get a bigger budget.
Well, in a word, no. This is the same conclusion drawn years ago by (literally, not figuratively) hundreds of other independent scientific organizations, including the NAS, AAAS, APS, AIP, and MRS: there is almost no science that the ISS can do that can't be done better, cheaper, faster, and safer either on the ground or on an unmanned orbiting platform, or during short duration flights. There is certainly no other scientific program funded by the US (and other nations) government that would be able to get away with such a fantastically miniscule ROI. The space station never has been, and never will be, primarily a scientific research platform. This is not to say that the he ISS is an unjustified expenditure, but its scientific program is not the justification.
Re:Ask yourself why. (Score:2)
Re:Ask yourself why. (Score:2)
This is sincere curiosity: What in your opinion is the justification for the ISS then?
My personal opinion is that the ISS is a completely unjustified waste of money, with no redeeming scientific or engineering value that could justify its construction costs. But I haven't necessarily thought through all of the arguments others put forward in favor of the ISS to the level that I feel justified in concluding that there is NO justification; I just haven't seen an argument that comes even remotely close to swaying my opinion.
My primary objection is that the ISS seems to be a construction project in search of a purpose, instead of a major piece of a well thought out long term space exploration program with goals and milestones. The Shuttle program suffer(s)(ed) from a similar problem: in the 70s, NASA got to build either a space station or a reusable truck to get to a space station, but not both. They went with Shuttle, and so for the last thirty odd years, the US space program has had a horribly overpriced, partially reusable means to get into orbit, but nothing truly valuable to do with it. The ISS is going to be the same thing: it costs too much for the very very little that it does, and it does not have a well defined part to play in a well designed long term space exploration strategy. There are many better things to do with that money, in my opinion: unmanned interplanetary probes, astronomy and astrophysics, long duration unmanned orbitting research platforms, an orbitting "gas station" for manned lunar and Mars missions (which the ISS can never be, due to its current orbit), etc. With a well defined purpose and goal, ISS would not have spun out of control in trying to become all things to all people, and failing miserably at all of them.
Re:Ask yourself why. (Score:2)
But couldn't this just as easily be the result of budgetary concerns? If people knew the ISS would be well funded for several years we would be more likely to see a greater interest in research projects.
This isn't, in my opinion, the problem here; this isn't a chicken and egg problem. That is, you typically don't spend the time and money to build a multibillion dollar scientific facility unless you already have an interested user community lined up as far as the eye can see. Even within NASA this is generally the case: the Hubble is, and has been since inception, completely oversubscribed, and the demands on JPL to design and build deep space probes vastly exceed the supply of resources. The same with most particle accelerator facilities worldwide. And I could go on in many other fields.
ISS is a different beast, however. There IS no user community for ISS resources (slight over exageration ... there is a very small community of interested users); there is no huge waiting list for ISS scientific use. And it has nothing to do with concern over the ISS construction budget/schedule. It has everything to do with a lack of need for the facility; the benefits to most real world research of microgravity are greatly overstated, and the drawbacks are usually vastly underplayed (a big one that is never mentioned: the actual experiment is done by someone else not intimately associated with the experiment; astronauts aren't dummies, but most frontier experiments are tough enough to get right when the experimenter is there running the show themself!). You can do most of the types of experiments envisioned for the ISS just as well on the ground with tougher quality control, at a greatly lower cost and vastly lower risk to both experiment and experimenter.
If the US government guaranteed tomorrow that the thing would be fully funded (as NASA defines it), you almost certainly wouldn't see the demand on the facility jump; that just isn't the way that it works in frontier science.
Re:Ask yourself why. (Score:2)
There is not a lot of leads right now, that I know of. NASA even studied some anti-gravity research, and got blasted for selecting high-stakes research like that.
Nuclear power seems to be the best bet so far, and you know the political risk that goes along with anything nuclear.
Giant cylindarical fire crackers seem to be the easiest way so far: almost identical technology cenceptually to what the Chinese rockets used thousands of years ago.
Research by for-profit companies did not produce anything revolutionary after some hearty tries either.
Sigh. (Score:3, Interesting)
Typical.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, lets do something about the space shuttle for god's sake! What total piece of shit. How sad is it that we are flying something designed 25+ years ago that has the computing power of an P90 into space in the 21st Century.
Re:Typical.... (Score:5, Interesting)
No shit.
I did a double-take when I saw the title of this article -- ISS Cuts are hurting science? It's the goddamn ISS/Shuttle sinkhole that's making it impossible to do science in the first place. Perfectly good probe in orbit around Jupiter is gonna fly by Amalthea and miss out on a chance to get spectra of Ionian dust that's accumulated on it. Why? Because we can't afford $100K (or $1M to do it by "established procedures") to turn the damn camera on -- because ISS has eaten the budget again.
Science is suffering because we're spending billions on the goddamn ISS, which exists solely to provide an excuse to give the friggin shuttle fleet something to do.
<RANT>
The best thing NASA could do for science would be to launch one more shuttle, duct-tape it to the ISS, and fire the engines to deorbit it -- with the point of impact being the rest of the rest of the Shuttle fleet!
</RANT>
The resulting $30-40B in cost savings could be used to develop a heavy-lift capability (read: buy Proton and Energia from the Russkies), and start launching probes capable of doing real science. Hell, if you get the heavy-lift capability right, you could have enough cost savings to choose between building a replacement space station or saying to hell with low earth orbit for now, and doing a Mars Direct approach.
The only use I can see the ISS having is as a meeting/construction/refueling point for fuel tanks and other probes. If they'd just admit it and use it for that, it could have been a lot cheaper and more functional to boot.
Thank you! (Score:2, Insightful)
1) Give the manned program a rest until we have heavy lift capability or reusable vehicles with maintenance schedules similar to those of military aircraft.
2) Build more Galileo-class probes. The faster-better-cheaper nonsense has been exposed for what it is. Doing anything right is neither fast, nor cheap. Focus on the "better" part and save money in the long term.
3) Don't succumb to the urge to "build pyramids." Apollo, was a classic example of what we DON'T want to see happen: an awesome technical achievement left to decay when priorities shifted. When we go to Mars, I hope we'll have a CONCRETE exploration / colonization plan that extends DECADES into the future, not just a series of flag-plantings.
Amen. (Score:2)
Probes are the key to studying space. Are there people on Chandra? On Hubble? People only go to them to make repairs and upgrades. I use these two observatories as an example because they have been of great benefit to science and should be exemplary (with the exception of the Hubble lens snafu) of the rest of our efforts in space. Manned presence in space is only necessary for maintenance, repairs, and upgrades.
By the way, do you ever read Robert Park's weekly "What's New?". If you don't, I think you would really enjoy it (go to aps.org). He frequently comments on NASA.
The Space Shuttle (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, lets do something about the space shuttle for god's sake! What total piece of shit. How sad is it that we are flying something designed 25+ years ago that has the computing power of an P90 into space in the 21st Century.
What exactly don't you like about the shuttle? Why is it a piece of shit? Is there something wrong with it? Is it not meeting our needs? I can't tell if you have a legitimate beef with it or just don't like it because it's old. Except for the tragic Challenger accident, the shuttle seems to have done a pretty good job of wethering the years. I think it's impressive that something built 25+ years ago is still in service. Like the U2, it's a testiment to the quality of the original design. And what makes you think the shuttle has the computing power of a P90? I find it hard to believe that NASA hasn't upgraded the computer system in the shuttle. And if they haven't, it's probably because they haven't needed to.
GMD
it is too expensive (Score:2)
it is still in service but it gets practicaly rebuilt after every flight.
Re:The Space Shuttle (Score:2)
It seems to me that the major problem with the shuttle is that it's a white elephant. It's horribly inefficient at doing various jobs like launching satellites. It costs half-a-billion dollars to get it off the ground. It's much cheaper to do things with unmanned disposable rockets.
Re:The Space Shuttle (Score:2)
There are plenty of good things about the shuttle program, but the bad thing about the shuttle program is that everything else that NASA does revolves around it. The HST was put into low orbit so the shuttle could deploy and service it, which limits it's usefullness. The Chandra x-ray telescope had to be designed to fit in a shuttle cargo bay and be launched from the shuttle's top altitude, which isn't very high. You can launch a satellite with a rocket for cheaper than you can launch it with the shuttle. We spend and have spent a lot of money on this tool (the shuttles) and so we are locked into useing them even if they are not the best thing for the job.
I'm not offering an opinion on what we should be doing, just my understanding of the facts.
Re:The Space Shuttle (Score:3, Interesting)
It's a good way to get astronauts into LEO and back.
The only reason astronauts need to get into LEO and back is to build the ISS.
It's shitty because it's an expensive way to get things into orbit. Because astronauts are fragile things, needing air, water, and life support systems, if you wanna launch something with the shuttle, you're gonna pay tens of thousands of dollars per pound to lift 1500 pounds of human meat, thousands of pounds of life support systems to keep the meat alive, and a big honkin' pair of wings to let the meat come back. Comm satellites, space telescopes, and interplanetary probes don't run on meat. They don't need wings or life support. As far as the science missions are concerned, most of the Shuttle is dead weight.
It's also a shitty way to get heavy things (Hubble, ISS components, fuel tanks for space probes) into orbit, even if cost is no object -- because of the mass penalty for life support systems, it's got a small cargo bay. That's a horrible design constraint on unmanned satellite and manned ISS module alike.
And because of both of these factors, it's an even more shitty way to get anything (light or heavy) beyond earth orbit. "Lousy cargo capacity" plus "huge mass penalty" equals "no fucking way you can launch something with enough fuel on it to get to the outer planets, or even Mars, in a reasonable timeframe"
It's a "space truck", and was designed as such -- and for that purpose, it's adequate.
Unfortunately, "doing science" typically requires lifting heavy things (like space telescopes) in orbit. Or accelerating lighter things (like space probes) to well beyond escape velocity. For these tasks, the Shuttle is the wrong tool for the job.
Re:The Space Shuttle (Score:2)
The shuttle is not just expensive for launching stuff in low earth orbit (LEO). It is not just very expensive. It is not just extraordinarily expensive.
The shuttle is obscenely expensive to operate.
Way back when the shuttle was supposed to lower launch costs. But now it is the most expensive means to launch anything, by a large, large margin. It requires a tremendous amount of effort to refurbish between flights.
All this is because they had many conflicting goals when it started out. The STS is the most complex launch system ever designed, and it shows.
Re:The Space Shuttle (Score:3, Informative)
Let's see _you_ go through the atmosphere at Mach 20+ and hang on to all your parts. And even then the heat dissipation systems on the space shuttle are still the best thing being used out there.
"I'd say that the *design* is 25+ years old but the actual shuttle is at best a few years"
If that were true then Columbia would be able to make ISS flights. Tiles are replaced as needed, SSMEs are replaced as a part of scheduled maintenance, other incidentals like tires... Other than that, beyond the new glass cockpits and the Canadarms what you see is what's always been there.
Re:The Space Shuttle (Score:2)
No wonder Superman won't go to bed with Louis Lane. He re-entered Earth too fast once and lost something.
Episode #752
Re:The Space Shuttle (Score:2)
Let's see _you_ go through the atmosphere at Mach 20+ and hang on to all your parts.
Let's see _you_ manually replace all 30k tiles, or hire someone and guarantee them a profit to do so. Never send a man to do a machine's job, unless you're not worried about stuff like cost-efficiency. Which they aren't - else they wouldn't have this little rule in (almost) all of their contracts saying, "We'll pay whatever it costs, plus a guaranteed percent profit".
It's not just the shuttle, it's the whole attitude towards cost controls (and thus, automation for any reason other than safety) being worthless.
Re:Typical.... (Score:2)
Galileo - USA & Europe Jupiter Orbiter/Atmospheric Probe - 2,222 kg - (October 18, 1989)
Hubble Space Telescope - USA & Europe Telescope - (April 25, 1990)
Ulysses - USA & Europe Solar Flyby - 370 kg - (October 6, 1990)
Mars Observer - USA Mars Orbiter - (September 25, 1992)
Clementine - USA Lunar Orbiter - (January 25, 1994)
SOHO - Europe/USA Solar Probe - (December 12, 1995)
NEAR - USA Asteroid Orbiter - 805 Kg - (February 17, 1996)
Mars Global Surveyor - USA Mars Orbiter - (November 7, 1996)
Mars Pathfinder - USA Lander & Surface Rover - 264 kg (lander), 10.5 kg (rover) - (December 4, 1996 - September 27, 1997)
Cassini/Huygens - USA & Europe Saturn Orbiter/Titan Probe - (1997)
Lunar Prospector - 295 kg - USA Lunar Orbiter - (January 6, 1998)
Deep Space 1 (DS1) - USA Asteroid and Comet Flyby - (24 October 1998)
Mars Climate Orbiter - USA Mars Orbiter - (11 December 1998)
Mars Polar Lander - USA Mars Lander - (3 January 1999)
Deep Space 2 (DS2) - USA Mars Penetrators - (3 January 1999)
Stardust - USA Comet Sample Return - (7 February 1999)
IMAGE - USA Space Weather Satellite - (25 March 2000)
2001 Mars Odyssey - USA Mars Orbiter - (7 April 2001)
Genesis - USA Solar Wind Sample Return - 30 July 2001
CONTOUR - USA Fly-by of three Comet Nuclei - 4 July 2002
I'd like us to do even more, but I'd hardly characterize the above as "crap".
Re:Typical.... (Score:2)
>
>I'd like us to do even more, but I'd hardly characterize the above as "crap".
Magellan - shuttle - 1994
Galileo - shuttle - 1989
HST - shuttle - 1990
Ulysses - shuttle - 1990
Everyting from 1992 through 2002 inclusive:
NEAR - Delta 7925
Mars Observer - Titan 34D
Mars Pathfinder - three Delta 7925 launches
Clementine - Titan 2
SOHO - Atlas IIAS
Cassini/Huygens - Titan 4B
DS1 - Delta 7925
Mars Climate Orbiter - Delta 7925
Mars Polar Lander - Delta 7925
Stardust - Delta 7925
IMAGE - Delta 7925
2001 Mars Odyssey - Delta 7925
Genesis - Another Delta
CONTOUR - Another Delta
OK, so we've done some cool shit since the '80s. But I think I'm noticing a trend here in terms of whether we need the Shuttle to do it.
(Source for all launch vehicle data: Astronautix.com index of spacecraft [astronautix.com].)
Re:Typical.... (Score:2)
As for why our space program is so limp now; we have no competition.
NASA wasn't born with scientific research in mind. (Score:4, Informative)
From http://history.nasa.gov/brief.html
"... Formed as a result of the Sputnik crisis of confidence, NASA inherited the earlier National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), and other government organizations, and almost immediately began working on options for human space flight.
Re:NASA wasn't born with scientific research in mi (Score:2)
This is actually a good thing, perhaps.
It has been suggested that battling it out with space accomplishments reduced the chances of physical conflict on the ground by focusing aggression and ego toward the space-race instead.
Rename Discovery as SponsorShip (Score:4, Funny)
Mars (Score:3, Interesting)
The Russians are going to try to do it for 20B [bbc.co.uk]
Re:Mars (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Mars (Score:2)
Seriously, if the US would just get over this whole death thing it would be so much better.
It's not suprising the russians killed cosmanauts it's suprising they killed so few. America has also killed it's astronuaghts. This is OK with me. nobody is forced to strap themselves into a self propelled bomb.
Shit 30 billion? (Score:4, Funny)
Overhead ? (Score:3, Interesting)
It'd be interesting for organizations such as NASA and other government bodies to actually be accountable to 3rd party auditing firms for their spending. I mean, could you imagine how much was spent on engineers who get paid over $145,000 a year just to design a better O-Ring for the base of the toilet ?!??
I think when an issue like this comes up, NASA should not only plead for more money and complain that they are not getting the funding they need, but also VALIDATE these reasons with actual COST and EXPENSES they incur and actually how much more money they'll need with validation for that as well.
It just frustrates me how government agencies will complain that an amount of money like 30 BILLION dollars isn't enough to fund a project, but refuse to be accountable to anyone other than themselves for their spending habits and business practices!
Re:Overhead ? (Score:2)
i think corporations that overbill the govt are more of a problem.
Re:Overhead ? (Score:2)
Hey, if *that* O-ring fails, imagine the cost of cleaning fecal matter out of thousands of contaminated parts.
Your budget proposol is risking a lot of shit, literally.
Re:Overhead ? (Score:2)
When someone is actually doing something liek O ring development that is atleast going into the research and development. Its the people that are only there because they want their input into the program and they have the money/power to do it.
There really does need to be a unity of command on some of these projects. Panels are only usefull as advisors there still needs to be one person that dictates how it all gets done in the end. Panels start to push and pull political games until the entire thing flops.
Re:Overhead ? (Score:2, Informative)
You make it sound like there is absoulutely no accountability, this couldn't be further from the truth. Financials are due every month and quartlery major programs have full reviews. Things are expensive because they are manufactured in extremely low volumn. Go ahead and look at what these systems are designed to do and how reliable they need to be, then take into the account that you are only producing maybe 3 or 4 of them.
Mass production is what makes things cheap. Virtually all of the work for these things, from tooling to wire harnesses to assembly, are done by hand.
Re:Overhead ? (Score:2)
Someone mentioned 'O-Ring' and 'Toilet' in the same sentence - and did it without a goatse.cx link?
Such restraint! I'm impressed!
Remember the super-conducting super-collider? (Score:3, Insightful)
The super-conducting super-collider was purposed several years ago. This was going to be the largest particle accelerator ever built. The benefit to science would have been enormous. However, the project was dropped because it was too expensive. Now the International Space Station is costing the United States a lot more money, and the benefit to science is questionable. Kind of makes you mad at the government for masquerading the International Space Station as science.
Science Officer? (Score:4, Funny)
Yes, preferably one with large breasts.
misleading heading (Score:2)
Also the heading suggests that the space station is failing as a tool of science and that is just not true - it is completely capable of being a tool of science with increased funding. And that increased funding seems to be much less than the initial 30 b cost.
As far as mission to mars is concerned, considering NAsa's track record of cost overruns, a manned mission to mars will cost much more than 30 B.
Unknown Cost (Score:2)
wealth (Score:2, Funny)
Bill Gates is actually Rich Enough to build and travel to his own Moon Base.
The interesting thing about people that get that rich is: they don't want to go to the moon or mars. Afraid of attracting the attention of Bond, James Bond, perhaps?
Re:wealth (Score:4, Insightful)
I've thought a lot about that question ("Why doesn't Bill Gates do something really cool for humanity, like fund a private Mars program? Man, if I were Bill, I'd be spending my summers on Olympus Mons already.")
At this point, I think I understand the answer. Bill never wanted to build a moonbase or go to Mars, any more than he wanted to become the President of the United States or a Bond-esque archvillain. He wanted to become the richest dude on Earth by running the world's biggest software company. That's it. That's all he ever wanted, and he obviously wanted it more than anything else, because that's what he got.
Paradoxically, if Gates had ambitions in other directions such as funding a private space program, he'd likely never have achieved a position in life that would allow him to do those sorts of things. He'd have retired to go play with rockets after making his first few hundred million, a la John Carmack. This is why the only people who could take space exploration private won't.
Which sucks, but I'm pretty sure that's the way it is.
Re:wealth (Score:2)
Re:wealth (Score:2)
Tsk tsk...Somebody hasn't been watching CNN lately....
Re:wealth (Score:2)
Because instead of doing something cool, he's people who don't even know what Mars is [gatesfoundation.org] because all they think about is their starvation and the deadly diseases that plague them.
He wanted to become the richest dude on Earth by running the world's biggest software company. That's it.
We all have our own interests, as well as opinions on what's valuable for humanity. How dare you judge someone just because they don't share the same values that you do.
It's not always doom and gloom (Score:2)
Re:It's not always doom and gloom (Score:2)
Is that any less than the spin a commercial company would put on something similar?
I personally think that in the not-so-distant future, small-time terrorists will be able to destroy entire nations in one blow.
There is sort of a Moore's Law of Terrorism that says that the number of people a given (fixed sized) terrorist group can kill doubles every X years. (Estimates for X range from say 10 years to 100.)
If this trend is accurate, then we better start putting eggs in other baskets, because this one will get nuked or poisoned on a large scale.
If the only thing.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Bob Park has been saying this forever. (Score:3, Interesting)
American Physics Society head Robert Park has been saying that there's no research of any consequence going on in the ISS since its inception. Most science was cut out of the budget because of all the cost over-runs, Russia & US inability to synchronize production timelines, & other ISS bullshit. The Mars Pathfinder mission alone provided more new information about space & Mars than the ISS at a fraction of the cost.
Practically, being on the ISS is hell. You've got to wear ear protection because the noise of the machinery is like sitting front-row at a Metallica concert. It's smaller than you think due to missing modules that haven't been put in place yet, and you spend so much time putting it together and keeping it a safe, clean place to live there's no time to do anything else. It's like a tiny house that's so poorly designed all you can do is clean & fix it all day. Basically, without pouring tons MORE cash into this yawning vacuum of funding, it's a dead horse. Unless someone steps up to the plate with money, probably the US, this thing'll be abandoned within the decade. Good riddance. Fund more satellites & probes like Pathfinder.
Fat budget-heavy projects featuring humans simply aren't feasible without the confluence of factors seen in the 60's. With all the smart engineers in NASA it's troubling that they're still so driven by publicity & flash at the expense of real science.
Insight from Popular Mechanics (Score:2)
NASA's spending billions of dollars just to maintain the ISS because it can't afford to do anything else with it.
sigh (Score:2)
What makes you think $30B is a reliable figure? (Score:2)
Why not give it to the russians? (Score:3, Interesting)
I think we ought to give the ISS to the russians, and scrap the shuttle. Let's give 40% of NASA's budget to the russian space program, 10% to fund a civilian auditing organization (to stop the fleecing), and 50% to US contractors to build a cheap, reusable launch vehicle. Let's leave the heavy lift vehicles to the russians.
The russian space program, though beaten down by their new economy, is much more efficient, dollars to rubles, than NASA will ever be. They're unencumbered by the massive buracracy, have far fewer regulations, will sell space flights for money (the horror!). Basicially they can do for 1 Million what the US can only dream of for 50 million. Our money is better spent on their program. Hell, they could even launch harmless nuclear payloads without worrying about braindead idiots in the US protesting the poisoning of outer space.
Once the new vehicles are tested and in place, we can think about using ISS as a gateway to MARS! That would be truly cool, and well worth taxpayer's money. We'll just never get there under NASA's current (very heavy) thumb.
Re:Mars Mission (Score:2)
Also, the orbit isn't really that efficient for transfering out of because of the inclination, so you have two costs, the launch from ground cost and the fuel cost for boosting out of orbit.
Re:Mars Mission (Score:2)
Re:Mars Mission (Score:2)
Re:Mars Mission (Score:2)
Cuba was an ally of the USSR, but never part of it. Kids these days...(Not that I was alive last time Russia tried putting Missles in cuba...) I imagine there are at least a couple slashdotters that were though.
Re:NASA has always worked like this.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Um... dude... Some guy just went around the world non-stop in a hot-air balloon he was greeted with a collective yawn. The public doesn't care about that stuff, they'd rather watch the latest Britney Spears video.
Re:i am keeping my fingers crossed for china (Score:2)
Can I quote you after some mental zealot sets off a "dirty nuke" in downtown Chicago?
Re:i am keeping my fingers crossed for china (Score:2)
(* WWII time frame, in U of Chicago basement there was an experimental reactor operating with minimal safety.... *)
That is an orthogonal issue.
(* lastly, i would wager to say that the nuclear waste sitting in all of the plants today pose a much more serious threat than a lone terrorist with a dirty bomb. *)
So far more people have died of terrorist than from bad nuclear plants.
Besides, coal and gas plants kill people via lung desease, etc. Energy has risks associated with it. Either we live in the dark, or we accept energy generation risk.
(* i don't see 40 billion dollar initiatives on requiring breathalyzers on cars *)
Well I bet such an initiative would cost a lot more than 40 billion, plus be an inconvience for every driver. (Underground work-arounds would likely pop-up, and require a huge enforcement effort.)