Columbia Coverage 624
ke4roh writes "Space.com offers a list of questions and answers about the events and hardware surrounding Columbia's destruction Saturday. They address suspected causes, foam, tile, and some of the alternatives had NASA known the ship would not be able to re-enter the atmosphere." viewstyle writes "PC Magazine has a pack of stuff put together on the space shuttle accident, as they recognized the fact that the space program inspired a lot of tech people in general. What's pretty cool is the section written by a guy there who worked on the computer components in the shuttle." And naturally, the idea of a space elevator is back in vogue again.
30 seconds of telemetry (Score:5, Interesting)
As I understand it, the last 'good readings' were full-scale low or high on a lot of the temperature sensors, which to me would indicate sensor failure. Several of these sensors reported such values before communication was lost. This kind of makes me wonder what benefit there would be in examining whatever else came back after those failures--I can't imagine the data would be particularly accurate, though there may be some valuable information. Can anybody elaborate?
Off-scale and zero readings are still useful (Score:5, Informative)
So what the engineers will do is pull the threads. For example, it may be possible to explain all the off-scale and zero readings by assuming a particular wire bundle was cut at a certain point. This can lead them to look at the surrounding structure in more detail. They'll also look carefully at the times at which sensors went bad to determine how the structural damage evolved.
Basically the effort is to look at all possible causes of the disaster and use the telemtry to eliminate them one-by-one. Zero readings in sensors will probably be inconsistent with some possible explanations, thus eliminating them.
Re:Off-scale and zero readings are still useful (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, broken telemetry readings and strength of signal can be used to determine the attitude (read : orientation, not height) of the shuttle since transmitters are usually directional.
The attitude data of the shuttle at its final seconds would be the most useful information. For example, you can use it to determine how the shuttle begin to tumble out of standard flight reentry modes.
Re:Off-scale and zero readings are still useful (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:30 seconds of telemetry (Score:2)
-B
Re:30 seconds of telemetry (Score:3, Informative)
There is a second path where data is sent from the shuttle to low orbit satellites and then onto geosynchronous satellites and back down to earth. This data was origionally automatically discarded (i.e. not passed on to mission control) as it had more than a predetermined level of static. NASA is now looking to see if any of the data that was sent is readable to see if something of those 30 cesonds can be learned. They are hoping that 50% of the data sent during that period can be read.
[1] A familiar event in Apollo splash-downs from my youth was the period that mission control lost contact with the descending command module as the plasma generated by reentry cut off radio transmissions during the actual reentry. I remember the news announcers always talking about the ablative shielding which protected the craft from the heat of reentry and that, if it ever failed, the craft would burn up as it entered the atmosphere.
People, not tech cause problems (Score:2, Insightful)
"Technology has its limits. Information systems have their limits. Human analysis, foresight and insight have their limits."
I firmly believe that what limits us and/or holds us back is not how horribly broken is, but how we choose to abuse/use it.
Columbia likely was doomed by damage incurred during launch. However, those astronauts were likely doomed by a faulty damage analysis.
Sigh... (Score:2, Insightful)
Columbia likely was doomed by damage incurred during launch. However, those astronauts were likely doomed by a faulty damage analysis.If the "likely" cause was damage during launch, how do you propose, genius, that they could have "repaired" the "damage" in space? Faulty damage analysis indeed.
Re:Sigh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Sigh... (Score:2)
Re:Sigh... (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2001/80
Also, there are no foot/handholds anywhere on that part of the Shuttle, and Newton's laws apply up there. That's the problem they had on the first Spacewalks of the Gemini program, no one realized that without footholds or handholds, you can't even turn a screwdriver, because the screwdriver is also turning you. (No Soviet Russia jokes!)
In short, if the falling insulation is what caused Columbia to break up, they were doomed the day they launched. There wasn't nearly enough delta-V to get them into a higher orbit to rendezvous with ISS, and no way that Atlantis could be rushed in time to reach them before they ran out of Oxygen. I don't know how long the shuttle's batteries/fuel cells can keep it heated, but I'm guessing that really the only way anyone could have survived would be if they drew straws and 5 of the 7 went out the airlock. That's assuming there's enough power to keep it at least 40 degrees F in there until Atlantis could be scrambled.
Otherwise, maybe the Soyuz escape pod at ISS could be routed to them, or the Russian Progress capsule with O2 and supplies sent to ISS the next day could have been routed to them, but I highly doubt both of those were possible.
Columbia was most likely lost at launch, and there's nothing NASA could have done, even if they knew within 30 minutes that the damage would prove fatal.
Re:Sigh... (Score:2)
If you know they are doomed, don't bring them back. There's a space station up there that can hold their butts until rescue arrives.
If, due to orbital differences this isn't possible, there are still contingencies for getting the crew safely back - granted, they are alot more likely to be deadly. The shuttle does have escape mechanisms.
Finally, if the world community knew that there was a problem, I bet one or two people out there could've come up with a way to get them back safely.
Re:Sigh... (Score:2, Informative)
Columbia wasn't equipped to dock with the space station.
Re:Sigh... (Score:2)
This highlights the futility of arguing with geniuses ;-), j/k
Re:Sigh... (Score:5, Insightful)
I bet you one or two couldn't. They couldn't repair the damage. There is now escape mechanism on the shuttle from orbit. They had no suits or training for extra-vehicular activity. Their orbit made it impossible to get to the ISS and even if they did they had no way to actually DOCK with it. The only way they could have come down was using the shuttle. If there was damage to the left wing, the only way they could have prevented a burn-up is by altering their de-orbit trajectory. For example, the shuttle performs a series of rolls to turn right and left. When you turn right, the right wing has the majority of the force applied to it (and vice versa). Limiting the amount of force on the left wing may have solved the problem, but we really do not know.
All of these possiblities are under the assumption that NASA KNEW THE SHUTTLE WAS BROKEN to the extent that they'd all die. NASA did not know, otherwise they would have atleast altered the shuttles reentry trajectory (at the very least).
Short of preparation for this trajedy, there was nothing NASA could do to prevent it.
Temperature detectors... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Temperature detectors... (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the tiles becomes damaged during takeoff, but perhaps not so bad that there is any concern. The tiles are designed to take some amount of damage from space debris after all.
You begin re-entry with a damaged tile. Maybe the damage was a little more than you could have suspected, and it comes off! Now your temperature sensor is screaming and you kow you've got a real problem...
No matter what you do, no matter how careful you are, no matter how much redundancy or how large a safety factor you have, there will always be something that can go wrong in a very bad way.
All things considered, the shuttle is an extremely well built and carefully looked after machine with an exceptional safety and performance record. I don't feel anyone is at fault for what happened... it was just the luck of the draw.
=Smidge=
Re:Temperature detectors... (Score:5, Insightful)
Then we let it sit around in an environment that has all sorts of tiny little rocks and pieces of metal and neutrons and such flying around at bullet speeds for a week or two.
Then we drop it back into the atmosphere and try to land it on the earth. During this process it accelerates to speeds faster than just about any manmade object as ever moved before and heats up to thousands of degrees.
As you can imagine, there is quite a lot of danger involved here. Rather than criticizin NASA for the accident, let's recognize how amazing it is that their safety record is as good as it is, and see what we can do to learn from this catastrophe.
Re:Temperature detectors... (Score:2, Informative)
NASA believed that they had learned enough from these sensors/instruments that they were no longer needed. At some point (I'm not sure how many flights ago), NASA stopped collecting the data from them, and during Columbia's recent refit, they were removed altogether.
This was Columbia's first flight since the refit (and removal of those additional sensors), but from the briefing it seemed like even had they been aboard, they would not have been active.
Recommended reading on K5 (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Recommended reading on K5 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Recommended reading on K5 (Score:2, Insightful)
It's extraordinarily easy to bash the media. (And sometimes appropriate.)
It's not extraordinarily easy to organize the logistics of getting people and equipment to the right place and filtering the information that comes in into newsworthy and white noise.
Of course we have media overload. Supply and demand. Is your point that Americans spend too much time glued to their TV sets? If it is, I absolutely agree. But why would you pick this as an example? I don't even own a TV, but I'd have been glued to it last Saturday if I did (instead I was glued to cnn.com).
Supply and demand. Until people get off their arse and choose not to eat what the media is all too happy to spoon feed them, you can't blame the media for doing their jobs. If you don't like how a certain media outlet does their jobs, then you can pick another! Or another!
Space Elevator? (Score:5, Funny)
* (c)2003 kir
Condolances Can Be Sent Here (Score:5, Informative)
People wishing to express their sympathies can send notes to this address:
Johnson Space Center
NASA Road 1
Houston, TX, 77058
The astronauts are heroes who risk their lives to better our world. They are truly the best of the best and I think we have taken them for granted. Since Apollo, the missions they've been on haven't been attention-grabbing and shuttle launches became routine. But I think this event has awoken us to the fact that space exploration is one of the most important fields and we need to give NASA more funding. It's time to realize that space exploration is costly but to make it safe, it is even more costly. I'm also going to draft a few letters to my national representatives and let them know that NASA needs omre money. THe launch of a space shuttle is not mundane and we should still be in awe of it.
Re:Condolances Can Be Sent Here (Score:2, Insightful)
The United States of America has collected its fair share of those who have justifiable earned the title of hero, without the need to inflate the ranks with random people every time a tragedy has occurred. Think for a moment of the Marines who fought in the Pacific Theater during WWII. Those that landed on Iwo Jima and Okinawa. Most of these men did not want to be there, they knew going in that their odds stank and many got to see bodies stack up all around them yet most still charged forward to what must have seemed certain deaths. That earns you the right to be called a hero. In countless battles by many different forces, there are examples of those who have exposed themselves to heavy fire in effort to save a someone else, they have earned the rights to be called a hero.
The person who catches a bad break and has their office building fall down upon them, their car crushed by a tractor trailer, or their bus explode on them are indeed people who have faced tragedy, but that in itself does not a hero make.
Re:Condolances Can Be Sent Here (Score:3, Interesting)
(1) The crew were not heros because they were simply in a widely publicized accident, which is tragic, but not necessarily heroic.
(2) Soldiers in WWII were heros because they willingly accepted the risk of death or maiming in order to serve their country.
I agree with the premises which are, if I follow your reasoning properly,
(a) Just because you get a lot of publicity, it doesn't follow that you are a hero.
(b) Putting yourself at risk to serve your fellow man is a heroic act.
But if these are the premises, we could still consider the crew to be heros. Were they not volunteers? Did they not accept high risk? Wasn't their work/job in the service of humanity?
IMHO (YMMV), it is not inappropriate to apply the title to the crew.
What is a hero? (Score:3, Insightful)
People who knowingly risk their lives in order to either try and save the lives of others or to try and help advance humanity as a whole.
Or people who put themselves in harm's way on the spur of the moment in order to protect or rescue others.
Finally, people who dedicate themselves to helping others or performing a valuable service to society (whether or not they risk their own lives) are heroes too, I think.
So no, a person who gets hit by a bus may not necessarily be a hero, but when that person sacrifices their own safety to push other people out of the path of that bus, they could be called a hero.
And if that person who was hit by the bus had been an astronaut, then I think given the nature of what they do and the risks they take, that a hero was hit by that bus - even if dying in a bus crash isn't itself a "heroic act".
For better of for worse, society has assigned a value to the work performed in space by astronauts who were trained to go there and assume those risks. Ergo, astronauts are heroes. The bus driver may have been a decorated military veteran. Or not. It doesn't matter for these purposes. Ordinary people die doing heroic actions, and ordinary people also rise to the occasion, do something heroic, and live to tell the tale. Heroes also die peacefully in their sleep at a ripe old age - heroism and martyrdom are not automatically related.
Which is good, otherwise all our heroes would be dead ones.
(as the old quote goes, "...a statesman is a dead politician. Lord knows we need more statesmen!")
Where are all the pics? (Score:3, Interesting)
Surely there are sites out there for folks to upload pics of debris they've taken out in the field, etc? I'm tired of having these sorts of things filtered for me by mainstream news - so anyone got any URL's?
Pissed me off that I have to *subscribe* to CNN to see the amateur video that was taken in California of the breakup
space elevator physics explained (Score:5, Informative)
The structure extends from earth to a point in space beyond geostationary orbit. As the earth spins, centrifugal force keeps the structure under tension to prevent it from collapsing. To place something in orbit, you just climb the structure and let go.
Re:space elevator physics explained (Score:2, Informative)
When known in advance, propulsion on the cable is able to move it side to side somewhat or even upty-down.
This does not need to be a large amount. Most satellites are small.
It will but be a 'ripple in the force' to move it
doh (Score:5, Funny)
I'm not gonna be able to stand that much Space Elevator music!
The Software (Score:5, Informative)
There's a good story about the software team at NASA here [fastcompany.com].
From the story: "Consider these stats : the last three versions of the program -- each 420,000 lines long-had just one error each. The last 11 versions of this software had a total of 17 errors."
The next space race? (Score:2)
Rail Gun Rockets (or at least maglev) (Score:2)
Insulation Vs. The Flying Armoured Tank (Score:2)
I'm willing to call it an engineering defect before a piece of frozen isulation. Frankly, i'm surprised random chance hasn't caught up with us sooner outside the Challenger incident. I guess the best thing you can do at this point is to drop a 2lb piece of material of the same composition on a test wing an see what it does.
Interesting photos (Score:3, Insightful)
Space elevator, et al (Score:2)
Before you say, well, duh! what I mean by this is that we know what the chemical composition would be, and almost all of the problems with regard to cable damage (slow decay through ionization, meteor strike, etc) have been solved, on paper at least.
So what remains is the process by which we can manufacture large amounts of carbon nanotubes and precise configurations. This would seem to be a good research project whether it results in a space elevator or not. The spin-offs could be incredible.
On a second point, I wonder whether NASA is questioning the insulation damage hypothesis as a precursor to pointing at something they couldn't control, like a lightning strike or collision with something. Perhaps I'm too cynical, but right now NASA seems to be saying "it's not that, but we can't tell you why it's not."
Re:Space elevator, et al (Score:3, Insightful)
I dont know about you.. but I really dont want to be climbing (or anywhere near) a giant electrode.
Maeryk
Refocusing NASA (Score:5, Interesting)
I couldn't agree more, which is surprising since I usually don't agree with anything he says. But I really believe that changing NASA's focus might be the ideal solution to the public's (read: media's) boredom with our space program.
Why astronauts at all? (Score:2)
Putting people into space just doesn't seem like the best use of our resources at this point. But with more unmanned experience, manned space travel will eventually become fairly easy. Let's pace ourselves, do the easy stuff first, and not rush out there.
Yup, a new focus is definitely needed (Score:4, Interesting)
The Space Exploration Act of 2002 [spaceref.com] seemed a great first step, but received very little backing. NASA's NExT [space.com] group plans look very promising - but do they have any money, even in this year's budget? The goal should be human exploration, development, and settlement of the solar system. The National Space Society [nss.org] has a clear roadmap for space development, and a vision of people living and working in thriving communities in space - but membership there has been dropping for years. The goals actually are pretty obvious - what's needed is for the public to get behind them. Go join these organizations, write your senators and congressman! If you care about space, do something about it!
Re:Refocusing NASA (Score:3, Insightful)
The further we get from "home", the more necessary someone that can make split second judgements based on incomplete data becomes.
$15 B budget... (Score:2)
A critic already claims [time.com] the shuttle is too old and too expensive, but the management likes it that way because a cheaper shuttle means less money for the contractors.
The cause is already known (Score:5, Insightful)
Wonka (Score:2)
Journalists are idiots (Score:2)
WOOT (Score:2)
But seriously, the concept is *DAMNED* cool. Especially given its interface. Skyhooks are pretty common in scifi, and the relatively low costs could mean NASA could get its job done MUCH more effectively on its increasingly modest budget.
Imagine the cost-saving effect space vehicles that don't need huge fuel pods and boosters! You could conceivably create a low orbit space vehicle construction yard, for servicing shuttles - in space. Refueling station in space, hell, you wouldn't even have nearly as many problems with astronauts physically degrading due to the lack of gravity - with such an "elevator", cycling astronaut duty shifts could be easy to do. I mean...if we pull this off in my lifetime, it could be seen as the next "big" leap into space. You old fogies had your moon landing, we have our low-cost penetration into low orbit! Spacecraft wouldn't even need to ever come out of orbit! Whoops, there goes all the costs associated with making general purpose re-entry vehicles! At 10 billion per skyhook, Nasa could simply abandon all those failed X series vehicles, and focus on smaller, lighter, less fuel, more reliable. And just think of this - what currently keeps shuttle missions so short in time? -Human problems, fuel, oxygen, food...hey look, boom, space missions aren't "once in a blue moon" events, but *daily* occurances. Hell, the tube itself could be powered by solar collectors on from a station in low orbit...
And hell, just look at how LUCRATIVE a nanotube elevator would be. Satellite launches would no longer be an expensive, risky ordeal. Just send the sucker up the tube, have an astronaut chuck it into a slightly higher (or lower) orbit, and there ya go! Instantly, satellite TV becomes technologically cheaper. Instantly, satellite cellphones might actually become *feasible*...the possibilities are mind-boggling...not to mention tourism in space!
This is one of those times where I really look forward to the future, nanotubes have huge potential, and a space elevator might just reignite the spark of passion and interest the populace once held in the Space programme.
Red Herring? (Score:5, Insightful)
I could very well be wrong, but I would almost bet at this moment that the foam hit on launch is mostly a coincidence - or at most the beginning of a long chain of implausible events that preyed on some other, pre-existing fault. This is the case with most airplane disasters, where it's rarely one single problem but rather an entire series of highly implausible but still possible events that coincide in an extremely unlucky chain. The shuttle is not as fragile as some people are making it out to be right now; it was built to withstand the repeated abuse of the shock of liftoff and the heat of re-entry over many, many years and many, many cycles. The Columbia in particular was also just recently refurbished and had its heat shielding inspected and, where appropriate, upgraded to the latest materials available. It does not sound to me like a piece of foam hitting it at launch alone could bring it down - there has to be something more, and NASA seems to agree with their "missing link" statement.
Have you ever build model rocket sailplanes? (Score:2, Interesting)
The Angle of re-entry into the earth's atmosphere barely has any margin for error. Either your angle
is correct or you skip off the atmosphere and have to try again, or you burn up. In this case the extreme heat and turbulence broke the shuttle to pieces.
Re:Red Herring? (Score:5, Interesting)
It turns out the shuttle was on the pad during drenching rainstorms and there's (NASA) speculation that ice may've built up. Given that the piece of foam that broke off was near the strut that attaches the shuttle proper to the external fuel tank, with the strut surrounded by foam, it's possible that water could've accumulated there. Which would've frozen once the tank was filled with LOX and liquid hydrogen.
If the chunk that fell off contained a lot of ice it would've been a lot heavier than foam alone. And the engineering analysis that was done apparently only looked at the case where the foam was foam alone.
This is all in today's NYT and my local paper (which goes to bed later than our edition of the Times as I'm on the West Coast) and all comes straight from NASA.
Mothball the ISS and the Shuttle. (Score:2, Interesting)
Both of these programs are doing next to NOTHING in helping us to colonize and explore space. They are robbing billions of dollars each year in resources we could devote to developing better launch and propulsion technologies.
So why is the shuttle and the ISS still around if it is so worthless? Two reasons 1) Pork politics. NASA has cleverly made sure most of its contracts are spread out into districts controlled by powerful congressmen, and 2) nerds who know little about science but keep naively swallow the nonsense that is fed to them by NASA that the current incarnation of manned space flight is an investment in the future.
Canceling the shuttle and the ISS is not turning your back on manned space flight. Don't make more people senselessly lose their lives.
A Space Elevator? Um... (Score:2, Interesting)
Aren't we supposed to be on the next generation shuttles already? Or did Challenger set us THAT far back? Don't we have some new birds like those seen in Armageddon yet? Oh yeah, that's right. Our President cares more about dropping bombs in a sandbox than he does about Space Exploration, so NASA goes underfunded, and the War for Oil gets top billing.
Yes, we'll return to space. It took us a while after Challenger, but I don't think we'll have that much of a delay this time around. Trouble is, we're running low on Shuttles, and now that we're down by two, with the others aging, how much longer can we keep up that program? We need new shuttles, which means NASA needs more funding so it can get contracts rolling....
Nanotubes :) (Score:3, Interesting)
shuttle music (Score:2)
As a tribute to Columbia & the crew, I am dedicatingn them the Space Truckin [gillan.com] Song.
Taking pictures with satellites (Score:2, Interesting)
I found this quote from the article odd. We can take pictures of license plates from space and we can see the divits from meteors on the hubble telescope, but we couldn't look at the shuttle? As far as the 1998 reference, satellite picture technology has come quite far since then.
Management... (Score:5, Interesting)
As early as the day after Columbia was lost, we are starting to see reports of management decisions that affected safelty, design, and ignored problems what were spookily predicted when it came to the foam. Sure, lots of letters might cross managements desk in regards to shuttle problems. But it's the fucking shuttle, you check them ALL or you just don't DO the shuttle. Suddenly the pointy haired boss in Dilbert strips isn't so funny, knowing how accurate he is to real managers in the real world.
In the past four years as a computer programmer (doing other shit now, self employed, NO management to harrass or to blame) I've gotten to enjoy the view as in each and every company I worked at, managers were the cause of almost every problem that happened with the products. To all the managers reading this: goto www.dilbert.com and check to make sure you are not an idiot leading a team of people who know a lot more than you. THINK. LISTEN. THINK MORE. TRY TO DO SOME FUCKING GOOD since you do the "planing of the work" and not the actual "work". Make the best of your time in your leather chear and wall-side office, and LEAD. Watch Braveheart, get motivated!
Re:Management... (Score:5, Informative)
That's not entirely true. Sure, there was a lot of pressure, but the engineers were having a tough time convincing management that there was a problem. There had been an o-ring malfunction before (one of the two rings in a joint was burned through), but it happened in warm weather, to which NASA middle management said "see, it's not cold related," and the engineers didn't have a good response to that argument. Like it or not, you have to be able to prove your argument to win it.
There's a very good description of the problem in one of the Tufte books (a series of books on visual design and display of data, usually hawked during seminars, see http://www.edwardtufte.com). It concentrates on how not all the data was immediately available to engineers, so they made presentations (and drew conclusions) on incomplete information. Further, he argues that the data they presented was done so in a confusing, and hard to interpret, fashion. Had they had more data, they would have been able to make a much stronger case for delaying launch, but as it was, the "suits" had to go with what they knew, which was that "it seems safe enough, and nobody can convince us otherwise." (I should also mention that at least one paper takes issue with Tufte's methods and findings, but I feel that the basic truth remains -- not enough data, presented in a poor fashion, failed to convince management of the imminent risk.)
So, it wasn't so much management saying "fuck the cold," with engineers saying "they could be too cold and could leak," but instead was engineers saying "we think it could be too cold," management saying "prove it," and engineers trying to do so but not being able to present a convincing argument. Management listened, but in the end, had to go with what they knew.
Re:Management... (Score:3, Interesting)
So what? Only launch when the temperature is exactly right? But the temperature changes through the atmosphere and the booster heats up.
The managers aren't STUPID. Often they were engineers. They know the questions to ask and probably know when they're being snowballed.
It wasn't a decision with no consequences. It was a risk. If the risk wasn't shown to them, they had a DUTY to launch. They were wrong with Challenger, yes. People died, yes. But if the information wasn't available, that doesn't make it the wrong choice.
This is spaceflight, dammit. You're strapping people to a million tons of explosive and hoping that the designs are right and nothing that you haven't planned for goes wrong.
If you wait till you know it's safe, YOU'LL NEVER DO IT!
Space elevator and terrorism (Score:4, Insightful)
Look at how Al-Qaida was obsessed with the twin towers. They made an attempt in 1993 which didn't work, so they regrouped and drew up new plans. I can see terrorist organizations simply salivating at the prospect of destroying a space elevator.
If we attempt this at all, it would definitely have to be on a military base, way out in some desert in the middle of nowhere and surrounded anti-aircraft missles. Even then, that only buys us time.
It would be a difficult target... (Score:5, Insightful)
Moreover, since the base would be in the middle of the ocean, and not in a city, there would be little opposition to stationing a couple cruise missiles (for ships) and SAM sites there.
I think it's also safe to presume that all cargo and passengers would be thoroughly checked before beginning the journey to the base, to avoid any problems from that angle.
Having the base in the middle of the ocean, 3000 miles from land, and protected by the US military does more than buy us time. It's damn good insurance against the likes of Al-Qaida, who, at best, have access to Cold-War era Soviet weapons. An organization that must highjack passenger planes and fill rental trucks with explosives to carry out it's goals cannot evade or overwhelm arrays of active sonar bouys, a Los Angeles Class submarine, AWACS radar planes, SAM sites, Tomohawk cruise missiles, Commanches, JSF, or whatever else we station there if we build it.
New York City is a busy city, with 16 million people. It has it's own airport, and several other airports within an hour's flight time. It makes a great target.
A space elevator installation, in the middle of the ocean, protected by the United States DoD, would be well protected against the likes of Al-Qaida. They couldn't sneak in if they tried.
Even if they acquire surface-skimming cruise missiles, they're of little good. You can't hide from JSTARS and AWACS on the ocean, and once they get close, the phalanx guns (which we have mounted on destroyers and aircraft carriers) are quite capable of destroying a missile in flight.
I wouldn't lose any sleep over it.
Columbia Loss FAQ ... Much Better (Score:4, Informative)
FAQ Version 1.4 [io.com]
Link to low-bandwidth version to minimise slashdoting.
Intrinsically safe space vehicles (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder then, what would be needed to reverse this situation? If we knew what was required, we'd have some idea of how far away from such a future we currently are. It is after all not an impossible dream --- for example, as one part of a transport system, you could hypothesize that a seamless body built out of (say) 1000-times as strong self-sealing materials comprising millions of layers of ablative and structural thin film, with a passive self-righting shape, might not have any problem at all in dealing with reentry conditions. (This is not a proposal --- I'm just suggesting that you can always come up with a less fragile basis for a space vehicle by extrapolating current-day technological developments.)
So, given the (futuristic) possibility of eventually having vehicle technology that is inherently less fragile than the current one, what would we need to develop towards such a future? We all know that there are pretty amazing developments in materials technology heading our way already, within human timespans, but there is more to it than just materials.
For a start, is there a completely stable, self-righting shape that would be a clear candidate for a design that eliminated the risk of guidance electronics failure by not requiring any stabilizing controls once the reentry trajectory was established outside of the atmosphere?
If so, transformation from that to a gliding shape is only one of many possibilities for handling the landing, ranging from on-end-landing propulsion to catching the darn thing to good ol' parachutes and many other approaches.
Some things to remember about Columbia (Score:3, Informative)
Because Columbia was the first fully operational shuttle it is by far the heaviest shuttle with the lowest payload. For that reason it was not flown much after the later shuttles were built. IIRC Columbia could not reach the altitude of the space station with any useful payload.
Columbia was originally built with ejection seats on the flight deck that were later removed.
During the first few flights of the Columbia NASA was very worried about the tiles coming off. They had developed a thing a lot like a caulking gun that could be used by an astronaut to fill in the gaps left by a lost tile. But, IIRC it was never flown. So, this is a problem that NASA has considered, and one for which they already had a potential solution more than 20 years ago.
On a personal note, I can think of no better way to die than to do it while following a dream. And not just a personal dream, but a dream that benefits all of humanity. They are heros not because they died, but because they dared.
Stonewolf
Re:They knew (Score:2, Insightful)
Big chunks of ice fall off that big gas tank every time it goes up (it's filled with liquid hydrogen, IIRC). There was no more damage to the shuttle than occurs on any given launch.
They did inspect it, and if you were paying attention to the mission BEFORE it became a tragedy-cum-media-feeding-frenzy, you would have known that they assessed that there was no issue with safety.
Re:They knew (Score:4, Informative)
RTFA
I live in the D.C. area, know many who work for NASA, and was actully at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, MD last week doing a dog and pony show of our RMS system to their security chiefs and some of the bigwigs. I've met the people involved, higher ups and lower-downs. They dont let 7 people die to 'save face' on TV.
Re:They knew (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, that much (and more) is denied you, because you obviously know nothing about it and choose to spout off anyway. Quote from space.com article [space.com]: "Ice forms on the tank because of the super-cold liquid hydrogen and oxygen inside." --Paul Fischbeck, an engineering professor at Carnegie Mellon University who conducted the 1994 analysis.
You sound like every other conspiracy theorist* here. Short on knowledge, but long on theory.
*conspiracy theorists are often control freaks who can't stand the thought that something might happen beyond their (or someone else's) control. The idea that we're fallible, or that circumstances can be such that Bad Things happen despite all attempts to prevent them is inconceivable to them. No, there's no way a single, very lucky and very skilled nut could've killed Kennedy, it was a CONSPIRACY. Yeah, if that makes you feel better, go ahead and think it. But in reality, there are some things beyond our (or others) control...{/rant]
Re:Nostradamus knew: 1,81: (Score:2, Insightful)
No way. (Score:5, Insightful)
I firmly believe NASA knew that the insulation hitting the wing doomed the shuttle.
BOL^H^H^HI respectfully disagree...
While it may not seem much, the shuttle was travelling as awesome speed already as the insulation fell. It would have hit the wing at some shocking speed. This had sealed the fate.
Yes - the space shuttle was travelling fast. But the insulation fell OFF THE SHUTTLE. This means that the relative speed of the insulation hitting the shuttle was just the deceleration felt by the insulation in the time between coming loose and striking the front wing edge. The insulation is almost certainly inside the bow shock caused by the nose of the fuel tank itself so the insulation was probably tumbling inside the turbulent flow inside the bow shock and not exposed to the still air ahead of the shuttle.
Look - the astronauts were up there for 16 days in orbit. I don't know if there were any scheduled EVAs during that period but I suspect that the first thing any EVAs might have looked at would be a visible inspection of the wing edge.
I also firmly believe that had NASA felt that the dangers of re-entry would have a modest chance of causing a severe structural failure, they would have ditched the shuttle in orbit and looked for other ways to get the astronauts back down. There is always some sort of plan B - in this case the most obvious one is dock with the ISS and look to the other shuttles or the Russians for extraction. You don't play games with peoples lives, especially under such scrutiny and at a time when NASA funding isn't so good. When a shuttle explodes, it's inevitably a major public event.
Cheers,
Toby Haynes
Re:No way. (Score:2, Informative)
Wrong:
Insulation that fell off and hit the shuttle is from the external tanks that are jetisoned after launch. Chunks fell off while shuttle was traveling at approxiamately 2x the speed of sound.
http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/columbia_que
Re:No way. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ron Dittemore made it clear in the Saturday press conference that there is no way to do an EVA in order to inspect the wing or tiles. The EVAs that are done are done in the cargo bay area. The arm that is used to go further out wasn't aboard this flight.
Also, there is no way they could have gone to the space station. The Columbia is the heaviest of the shuttles and they used the old style heavy main tank for liftoff. They can't get to the station's orbit with that configuration.
The only hope to rescue them that I could see would be to launch another shuttle to recue them. I don't know how quickly a shuttle can be launched in an emergency, but I would guess that it wouldn't be very quick. Also I doubt that such a situation has been trained for, which would make it all the more unlikely that it would be attempted.
Assuming that they knew about the damage the best way to save the ship and crew that I know of would be to abort the launch and land in Morocco. This is a contigency plan that the crew has trained for. Of course this would require them to know about the damage when it happened and not go on to orbit.
Re:No way. (Score:4, Interesting)
Having worked on the shuttle program I can tell you that everyone involved would have done everything possible to save the crew. I agree that if they thought there was a good chance of a problem and a second launch was possible they would have gone up with a second shuttle and brought them back down.
Re:No way. (Score:4, Informative)
The main restrictions is that you have to either be teathered or in an MMU.
They did have I think 1 suit so they could go out and fix the latches on the cargobay doors if they didn't work, but that wouldn't require leaving the cargobay.
Keep in mind, that you can't climb your way across the belly of the shuttle. There isn't anything to grab on to, and you may even do more damage than the damage you are trying to repair. That is why the tile kit (which was basically a caulking gun) was abandoned.
I do wonder whether the re-use of this tank will be seen as one of the more controversial parts of this whole operation in retrospect. There were public notices that these tanks had been retired from use, with the newer design being used in preference.
The Lightweight ETs had been used for years. The Super Lightweight ETs (which are the new tanks you are refering to) are relatively new (the first flew on STS-91). The lightweight tank (the older tank that was used on Columbia) had been used for years until STS-91. They were proven hardware. The Super Lightweight ETs were designed for ISS missions. Since Columbia wasn't going to the ISS, and NASA had 3 LWETs already built, it made sense to use one on this mission.
Re:No way. (Score:2)
Actually, docking with the station was completely out of the question. Firstly, the shuttles have bugger all orbital manouevering capability; once the main engines are shut down, that's it. (They don't restart.) All you have is the OMS, which is strictly low power. Did you know that it takes the same amount of delta-vee to change your orbital plane by ninety degrees (that is, polar to equatorial or vice versa) as it does to launch in the first place? Columbia was nowhere near the station, and there was nowhere for it to go.
Secondly, SpaceLab was in the cargo hold connected to the airlock so they couldn't dock to anything anyway.
It may have been possible to launch another shuttle. The crash launch programme takes a bit over a week. Had they known for sure that there was a problem immediately after launch, this could have been done; Columbia's mission was 17 days, plenty of time.
But there wasn't really any way they could have known. Debris falls off the shuttles all the time, and it's been carefully investigated and --- up until now --- hasn't been a problem. The crew might have done a spacewalk and manually examined the bottom of the ship, but ST-107, being a SpaceLab mission, didn't carry jet packs; the bottom of the space shuttles is completely smooth. No hand holds. And I don't know if you can get off the shuttle at all when SpaceLab is installed.
No, Columbia's loss was just one of those things. You do your best, take every reasonable precaution, but sometimes... things go wrong.
Admittedly, things weren't helped by the shuttle's poor design. Wheel wells? Opening through the heat shield? Definitely an accident waiting to happen. Those tiles are a really bad idea, too. Ablative shielding is old tech and Just Works. The Russians use simple, dumb capsules and have never lost one on reentry due to heat shield failure. (They did lose a crew when a valve jammed open and the astronauts died in vacuum, but the capsule still landed perfectly.) For years their heat shields were made out of oak.
Re:No way. (Score:2)
They could not get to the ISS, they didn't have enough fuel, and if they did, they didn't take the docking module with them, so there was no way to get from the shuttle to the ISS.
All they could do was sit and wait for a rescue. I believe Discovery is set to launch the beginning of March, and could have been rushed through readiness by skipping a few safety steps. The Columbia had enough food to last till today, and could have streched that for a few days.
The downside to a rescue mission was the risk of having 14 people stranded in orbit. If they mistakenly felt there was no risk of re-entry, they they did what they felt was right.
Re:They knew (Score:2)
Re:They knew (Score:2)
That is utter bullshit and you know it.
First we have a silly thing we like to call a "space station" that yes, the shuttle was NOT equipped with the docking module but what is so fricking hard about doing a spacewalk? Hmmm, risk getting lost in orbit or guarenteeing that I'm barbecued on the way home? Gimme the fricking suit. If they knew they would have simply chucked out the lab module from the cargo bay, lightening the load and simply beat feet for the ISS.
second, we have more than one shuttle.. they can launch one in time to perform a rescue, or ask the country formerly known as russia for help.. a soyuz capsule can boost the shuttle higer/ resupply.
what you say is made up drivel from someone who really doesnt know much about the space program and the dedication that NASA has in not killing it's heros.
Re:They knew (Score:2)
That is utter bullshit and you know it.
First we have a silly thing we like to call a "space station" that yes, the shuttle was NOT equipped with the docking module but what is so fricking hard about doing a spacewalk?
I agree that it's likely utter bullshit, but Columbia was in a much lower orbit than the ISS and didn't have the fuel to reach it. So even if NASA knew there was a problem, the ISS would not have been an option.
Astronaughts? (Score:2)
I do think you vastly overestimate the competence of NASA to believe they even had the information to make this coldhearted analysis. They did analyze the problem and came to the wrong conclusion. You know, Occam's Razor beats a conspiracy theory 99 times out of 100. Personally I'd hope they botched it rather than played god.
Re:Enough already (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, it is exactly the same as the other huge time-wasters some idiot academics spent time on in the past, such as:
- That improbable heavier-than-air flying machine
- The ludricous notion that one could reach India by sailing west around the world instead of east...
- That silly experiment of using steam to turn wheels and do useful work.
- Trying to figure out the course of planets by assuming they revolve around the sun, where any fool can see that everything revolves around the earth.
Seriously, with a mentality like that we'd still be hunting wooly mammoths with sticks.
Re:Enough already (Score:2)
Space Elevator (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Enough already (Score:2)
But the space elevator will eventually be built whether you like it or not, since it is the most efficient way of getting things into space in the long run (it's the ultimate single stage to orbit vehicle since all the energy used, once the elevator is built, can be generated on the ground, not carried along.)
In addition, I find discussions on
If you don't like it, why are you here posting?
Re:Enough already (Score:3, Insightful)
It currently costs thousands of dollars to launch a pound of material into space.
Even when the technology to grow carbon nanotubes large enough to handle the immense forces involved in being used for a space elevator, the cable is still going to weigh thousands and thousands of tons.
The cable is also going to have to have a counterweight weighing at least as much as the cable itself to balance the space elevator in orbit.
Plus, there are a whole host of engineering concerns that haven't been addresed about a space elevator yet. These would have to be a dead issue, given how much of a catastrophe it would be should a space elevator ever come crashing back to earth.
So it's not really a question of if it's possible, so much as a question of safety plus who is going to foot the bill for its fabrication, launch, and assembly. Given the financial woes that have surrounded the ISS since its conception, I think the clear answer would be nobody.
And by the time we do have the prolems solved, the money to do it, and the industrial capacity to manufacture such a beast, someone will almost definitely have come up with a much better idea, anyway.
Re:Enough already (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually I thought the latest design showed that a counterweight was not required. The cable itself acts as its own counterweight.
"Plus, there are a whole host of engineering concerns that haven't been addresed about a space elevator yet. These would have to be a dead issue, given how much of a catastrophe it would be should a space elevator ever come crashing back to earth."
In short: the academics are not wasting their time studying this. There are indeed issues that we need to address before we begin building this thins, or decide not to. As for the catastrophic failure: studies show that most of the cable would burn up, with the last bit crashing to earth at a moderate speed, in a part of the ocean devoid of human settlements or even shipping lanes.
"So it's not really a question of if it's possible, so much as a question of safety plus who is going to foot the bill for its fabrication, launch, and assembly. Given the financial woes that have surrounded the ISS since its conception, I think the clear answer would be nobody."
Indeed. Part of those academics studying this thing are working on those questions: what does the elevator cost to build and operate. And unlike the ISS which was built purely for scientific reasons (and bad ones at that), the space elevator can show a decent return on investment once it is built, according to some studies.
Whether you want to believe those studies is another matter. But to abandon the space elevator as impractical is way too early.
Re:Enough already (Score:4, Insightful)
Yesterday (or the day before perhaps) someone posted a link to Feynman's Appendix on the Challenger enquiry about risks being de-emphasised if they had previously not resulted in catastrophe - and there *may* be elements of this flawed analysis involved in the Columbia breakup.
I welcome the opportunity for mainstream news stories to receive the
Dunstan
Re:Top 5 reasons to become a television news ancho (Score:3, Funny)
3 to 4 times? No, eighteen! [guerlich.com]
Re:Quatrain 1,81 (Score:2)
A valiant attempt to inject mysticism, I'll grant you, but there were only seven crew members, not nine. Bzzzt. Thanks for playing.
Re:Quatrain 1,81 (Score:2)
Re:Quatrain 1,81 (Score:2)
sorry bud, I count seven. Since I've never seen you before, I dub thee the nostradamus troll.
I honestly don't know how to feel about this whole thing. On one hand, I obviously feel bad about this because people died trying to do something good. On the other, maybe it'll light a fire under congress' ass to get some funding, or maybe a major reform on nasa.
Let's face it- in it's current state, Nasa isn't doing much- just slurping down gov't money and doing nothing groundbreaking. Part of that is from budget cuts, the rest is because it's safer to maintain the status quo.
I get the feeling that Bush might want to privatize the space industry now that he as an excuse (he likes to privatize things- that means more campaign contributions).
I'm starting to get the feeling that it might be better off that way.
As for previous comments about nasa conspiracies that they knew before the shuttle tried to land, I have to agree that it's a possibility. If you were in nasa's shoes, would you tell the world that they were deadmen? I think not. It was a lose-lose situation, and it was better off for them to play dumb.
Re:Alternative Theories (Score:2)
I agree (Score:3, Interesting)
I do NOT trust the government. ANY nation's government. I also don't trust scammers. So we are stuck on this one. The good news is he doesn't seem to have tried to immediately sell the photos, that's a good sign.
With that said, I'll wait to inspect the photo myself before commenting on it. At least it needs the highest resolution scan possible to be released on the net.
Flame me to death if you will (Score:5, Insightful)
They are not. They are just over one billionth of world population, which will all surely die. They would have died anyway, someday, probably not later than 50 years into future. So I don't care much about those seven people. And when I do, I envy them, 'cause they have been where I want to be.
I, and many of my friends, mourn for the loss of the shuttle, as in "the thing that can fly into space and carry people with it too." I would be more distressed compared to when two mars probes were lost back a few years ago had the shuttle been any other shuttle. But Columbia was what fueled my childhood imagination, it was whose first flight I watched in awe...
Whatever. It is sad.
Let me ask you another question, you probably went ape over 9/11 events. Terrorism killed ten times that amount in my country in the last decade, yet you didn't even notice. Should I tell you that you should care about 9/11 when ten times that amount had died elsewhere? Does that make any sense at all?
Re:Flame me to death if you will (Score:2)
Obviously that is "Should I tell you that you shouldn't care about 9/11 when ten times that amount had died elsewhere?"
Re:I have a question. (Score:4, Interesting)
Not to sound too crass, but it's the quality, not the quantity (up to a point) that counts here. You're right, 100 average joes/joettes die somewhere and nobody blinks an eye. Seven astronauts die and the nation is in mourning and the flags are half mast. Why, well it's because the astronauts are celebrities. Why do people make pilgrimages to view Elvis's grave, but wouldn't take to time to stop at the Vietnam war memorial? Why does an entire nation come out the mourn the death of a single "princess"? It's all about who you are. This is no different.
Re:Space elevators (Score:2)
Well, obviously, you'd pass on three-orders-of-magnitude cost savings to satisfy your emotional arguments, but I don't think many others would agree. The cost of moving stuff from the surface to LEO is a major factor in keeping space travel from becoming commonplace.
Yes, space elevators are completely new. But so were space rockets, only 50 years ago. It's nonsense to expect an elevator to replace the Shuttle within 10 years, but now's the time to start taking the idea seriously, at least.
Re:Space elevators (Score:2)
You are correct that there will be additional risk associated with a new technology. Old and refined is almost always a safer bet than new and untested.
However, your other arguments against a space elevator don't make sense.
"You'd still need to develop boosters and fuel to carry on from there."
Well, sure-- but the vast majority of the fuel in a current spacecraft is just for getting it off the earth. This is what the space elevator replaces. So you could still use current tech for maneuvering, with tiny fuel tanks compared to today's behemoths.
"It's obviously not the way to commoditize space travel"
It may be tough to build, but it's a heck of a lot better solution for commoditizing space travel than strapping yourself to billions of dollars worth of single-use hardware in a flying-brick reentry vehicle that requires months of intensive labor between flights. Chemical rockets will *never* commoditize space travel. A space elevator *might*. I would like to see it tried.
I'll ignore the emotional argument for what it is.
I fail to see how any spaceflight proponent can see the elevator as anything *but* an elegant solution. It removes the need for most of your fuel, greatly reduces your launch costs, and you get most of your launch energy back on the trip back down. If it gets space entry down to the level of general affordability, then the real exploration, and all that "flying" you're excited about can happen between the planets and stars.
Re:Space elevators (Score:2)
Sure the tech isn't ready *right now*, but has that ever been a reason not to invest in developing a new soloution to a problem?
The elevator approach would realise the shuttle-programme's original aim of making travel into orbit and back a routine and mundane matter so that we as a civilisation can get on with the important business of expanding into space. Sure it wouldn't be as exciting as the shuttle, but the possibilities it could open up would more than compensate for the loss of this vicarious thrill, and most importantly, it'd be a damned site less likely to kill the people using it.
Damn that's funny. (Score:2)
"the maneuvering jets were then fired for 2 minutes and 38 seconds, slowing the shuttle to 175 miles per hour."
Sorry, no online link.
Re:Why not try for the ISS (Score:3, Insightful)
ISS' inclination is about 51 degrees, which is pretty big (ie, it's over 45 degrees off of the equatorial line). I don't remember what Columbia was at, but that wasn't it. To get the Shuttle up to that declination from their orbit would have taken a buttload of fuel, or a lot of time, neither of which were available.
Sorry, nice thought, but not possible in this case.
Re:Why not try for the ISS (Score:3, Insightful)
Some time ago, I remember seeing/reading about these small devices called 'Rescue Balls' that the shuttles carried aboard them. They were basically just small, single-person sized foldable containers which could be sealed and pressurized with someone inside. The idea was, if a shuttle ever were stranded in orbit, there wasn't room to have spacesuits aboard for every crewmember, so most of the crew would get zipped up into these little doohickeys and the two that had suits would basically carry them over to the rescue ship.
Now, I understand there wasn't fuel enough to make it to the ISS (although I think people who think that was the only orbital option aren't thinking hard enough--I think there were more avenues that would have been explored for an orbital rescue had this been debated before rather than after the fact). But does the 'only two suits' or 'no one was trained for a spacewalk' argument really hold, or are these rescue balls still carried? Does anyone have any better information about them?