Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Space United States

Shuttle Politics 805

TheLoneCabbage writes "Texas Rep. Joe Barton has been quoted today in an AP article saying that he is in favor of grounding the remaining fleet of shuttles. 'If we have to stop manned spaceflight for five or 10 years, then so be it.' The fine gentleman from Texas displays his outstanding grasp of statistics and engineering stating that 1 failure in every 62.5 flights is NOT acceptable. According to OpenSecrets.org this may have more to do with Joe's friends than how much attention he paid to his math teachers." There's also an interesting piece on testimony given by the first Shuttle program manager.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Shuttle Politics

Comments Filter:
  • Why rush? (Score:5, Funny)

    by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:52AM (#5918194) Homepage Journal

    Why rush it? According to his math in another 187.5 flights, the shuttle fleet will be destroyed anyways.
    • Re:Why rush? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Binestar ( 28861 ) * on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:58AM (#5918235) Homepage
      Problem with his math is that he can't divide properly.

      There have been 113 total flights, The true destruction odds are: 1:56.5 not 1:62.5

      With his math we'll be safe to send up shuttles another 12 time before worrying about the odds again.
      • Re:Why rush? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by jd142 ( 129673 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:34AM (#5918544) Homepage
        Ok, so if the true destruction odds are 1:56.5, that means that over time, 1 out of every 56.5 flights the shuttle will be destroyed. That's a 1.7% chance of catastrophic failure. Because as we've seen, there are no survivors. Those actually seem a little high. What are the odds of other methods of space travel?

        Odds must be taken in context and with the benefits and outcomes weighed against each other.

        If I had a 1 in 56.5 chance of winning the lottery jackpot, I'd slap 60 bucks down with no hesitation. Small outlay of money for almost a guarantee of winning.

        If I were told that my child had a 1 in 56.5 chance of getting a fatal genetic disease, I'd certainly think twice before have a child, and I'd definitely have any possible screening tests done.

        In *your* opinion, the risk of death to people you don't know (probably) is low enough to justify letting them volunteer for a mission. Their spouses may think an almost 2% chance of death is far too high.

        Regardless of the political motivation behind it, an examination does need to be made, and the risks adequately explored.

        As a comparison approximately 129 soldiers have died in Iraq out of approximately 150,000. I had trouble getting an exact figure, but I think that's a conservative estimate of troop numbers and the 129 is an official DoD number from a couple of weeks ago. One place said there 110,000 troops around the Quwait border alone. So the chancces of getting killed in this latest ware were 1:1162. Pretty slim.

        • Re:Why rush? (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Mark Bainter ( 2222 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:54AM (#5918740)
          In *your* opinion, the risk of death to people you don't know (probably) is low enough to justify letting them volunteer for a mission. Their spouses may think an almost 2% chance of death is far too high.

          That's just it. These people volunteer. We aren't /ordering/ them to do this. They aren't conscripted. They volunteer to do it. Nobody lies to them about the risk. Hell, you /can't/ lie to them about the risk, it's all right there in our history.

          Why should we tell people they can't if they're willing to take on the risk? I would be willing to bet that this is more motivated by the cost of replacing shuttles and crew than it is the potential loss of life. Cynical yes, but sadly enough, probalby true.

          • Re:Why rush? (Score:5, Insightful)

            by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @12:01PM (#5919292)
            Why should we tell people they can't if they're willing to take on the risk?
            It's not a matter of "telling people they can't." It's a matter of NOT pouring billions into an overpriced, underproducing, dangerous program.
            I would be willing to bet that this is more motivated by the cost of replacing shuttles and crew than it is the potential loss of life. Cynical yes, but sadly enough, probalby true.
            Cynical how? According to your own argument, the loss of life is no problem, since they're volunteers anyways. But on the basis of science per dollars alone, the shuttle is a bad deal. (Factor back in the loss of life - as most of us do - and the damage to popular perception of space exploration, and it's an even worse deal).
        • Re:Why rush? (Score:3, Interesting)

          by GMFTatsujin ( 239569 )
          If I had a 1 in 56.5 chance of winning the lottery jackpot, I'd slap 60 bucks down with no hesitation. Small outlay of money for almost a guarantee of winning.

          So.. play Roulette much?

          Didn't think so. When did 1:56 become "almost a guarantee?"

          Personally, I'd feel pretty good about taking a risk -- any risk -- if I knew there was a ~2% chance of failure. Turn it around, because it also means there's a ~98% chance of success.

          *Those* are odds I can live with.

          It's a stupid argument anyway. Nobody knows the
          • Re:Why rush? (Score:4, Insightful)

            by jd142 ( 129673 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:49AM (#5919204) Homepage
            If I had a 1 in 56.5 chance of winning the lottery jackpot, I'd slap 60 bucks down with no hesitation. Small outlay of money for almost a guarantee of winning.

            So.. play Roulette much?

            Didn't think so. When did 1:56 become "almost a guarantee?"


            Well, if each selection of 6 numbers had a 1 in 56 chance of winning the jackpot and that cost me a dollar, then spending 60 bucks pretty much guarantees that I'll win the jackpot. I could still lose of course, but such a loss would be unlikely.

            I assumed people would realize that 1 ticket costs a buck.

            if I knew there was a ~2% chance of failure. Turn it around, because it also means there's a ~98% chance of success.

            So if I told you there'd be a 2% chance of death everytime you drove your car, you'd drive to work every day? Odds are you'd be dead in under a year. Better take the bus. ;)

            If there were a two percent chnce yould die from taking cough syrup, would you tough out a sore throat or take the cough syrup. A plain sore throat is a minor irritation that goes away on its own compared to a small chance of death.

            At the other end of the spectrum, if there were a 2% chance of death as a complication to a heart transplant, you'd laugh off the risk because without the heart transplant you're dead anyway.

            Odds are about more than just pure percentages. You have to weigh the costs and the benefits.

    • by xdroop ( 4039 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:23AM (#5918444) Homepage Journal
      According to his math in another 187.5 flights, the shuttle fleet will be destroyed anyways.

      Yeah, that last half flight will be a real bear.

      • failure rates (Score:4, Informative)

        by D-Fly ( 7665 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @04:28PM (#5921793) Homepage Journal
        Of course Barton is right even if his math is a little off. The shuttle is an incredibly failure prone waste of money. The Russians, despite the occasional spectacular failure, and despite their chronic funding problems, do a better job with their 40-year old Soyuz capsules [spaceandtech.com] mounted on top of what are essentially modified nuclear missiles. Simple, reliable, cheap. [spaceandtech.com] The shuttle is complicated, disaster prone and expensive. [nasa.gov]

        The numbers:
        1,600 Soyuz launches: two of which were destroyed [guardian.co.uk] in accidents.
        113 Shuttle flights, two destroyed in accidents.
  • by Lieutenant_Dan ( 583843 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:52AM (#5918197) Homepage Journal
    The odds may be against the astro/cosmonauts when they go on their missions, but how is this much different when European explorers went out onto the Atlantic? There were many lives lost as well.

    Exploration has always been a risky business. I don't believe for a second that the ladies and gentlemen who volunteer for a space mission are not aware of the risks associates with it.

    • by TheOneEyedMan ( 151703 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:56AM (#5918222)
      Sure it is risky to explore. However, the purpose of most earlier exploration was profit, which made the risks of investment easier to bear. The space shuttle doesn't do much, costs a ton, and is not very safe either.
      • by Larsing ( 645953 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:03AM (#5918279)

        ...and is not very safe either.

        Actually, broken down on passenger miles, it's the safest way to travel, on or off this planet...

        • Actually, broken down on passenger miles, it's the safest way to travel, on or off this planet...

          Only if you count the useless miles that the shuttle takes on its circuitous route. If you cancel those out, you're left with 200 miles up from the Florida launch pad, and 200 miles back down to the Florida landing strip. For this 400-mile round trip, the odds are pretty dismal, even compared to medieval seafarers.

    • by tolleyl ( 580010 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:08AM (#5918316)
      I agree that exploring is risky, and even with a failure rate on the shuttle that's almost 2%, they don't have problems finding people to fly it. I think, though, that the point of the article is that the shuttle is unneccessarily dangerous. When you compare it to the Russian Soyuz, the shuttle is several times more expensive and dangerous. NASA as a government organization is not going to come up with inexpensive designs or efficient ways of getting into space. The organization (but not individuals) is concerned about self perpetuation and not about accomplishing anything. Realize that NASA hasn't completed a new design for a manned rocket since the 1970s. They have started four or five, but never finished one of them. I don't think that dumping more money into the shuttle will fix the problems that seem to go much deeper than that.
    • Too safe a society? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Eric Ass Raymond ( 662593 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:37AM (#5918569) Journal
      I think this [bbc.co.uk] might have something to do with it. Our societies are placing so much emphasis on avoiding danger that we're actually in a completely another kind of danger: we are actually risking future scientific progress.

      "The world seems to be a dangerous place, and so the only responsible thing to do is to take care of yourself and your family, and keep your eyes open and fingers crossed.

      But could things have gone too far? Could society now have become so obsessed with avoiding danger that it is missing out on taking those risks which could actually pay off?

      A conference being held this week in London aimed at exploring that issue is facing a venerable line-up of scientific opinion which says we wouldn't be where we are today if humans had always been as cautious as they are now."

  • by Verteiron ( 224042 ) * on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:53AM (#5918202) Homepage
    Fine. Now does he have a good idea for what to do when the next dinosaur killer comes along? The longer the human race is confined to this planet, the less likely it is we're going to survive as a species.

    Of course, helping delay extinction won't put money in his pocket, so I suppose that's a lost cause...
    • by Thag ( 8436 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:02AM (#5918267) Homepage
      Or, more accurately, NASA-controlled development of manned space flight.

      Given the huge amount of private-sector activity in the suborbital market currently, and NASA's pitiful track record in developing new launch vehicles, it's not at all unlikely that simply getting NASA out of the way will yield an economically feasable set of replacement vehicles in a shorter time frame for less money.

      Jon Acheson
    • Very very few of the experiments that can be done in space need a human on site. Most of them can be done remotely, at much lower cost. Check out space station related issues of What's New [aps.org].

      For example, the famous protein crystals [aps.org] were no better than earth-grown ones, and the flu drug came from an Australian crystal, not a Space Lab 1 crystal. [aps.org]. Other than spiders in zero G, very little research has been done on the ISS (International Space Station), and none of it needed human minders.

      For exam

  • by Cyclopedian ( 163375 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:54AM (#5918209) Journal
    There are two schools of thought in Texas:

    1) Edukayshun (phonetic manglings).
    2) Mathematical Miscalculation.

    I think they are planning on adding a third one in 2004:

    3) Piracy Through Accounting

    -Cyc
  • Well.. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JeffSh ( 71237 ) <jeffslashdot@[ ]0.org ['m0m' in gap]> on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:54AM (#5918210)
    He has some good points. We do need to replace the shuttle. But, his campaign contribution lists kind of outline the whole "conflicting interests" problem that he has here.

    We already have a Senator Disney, might as well have a Senator Lockheed-Martin.

    Maybe we could start a group of citizens and buy our congressmen back?
    • Re:Well.. (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Bendebecker ( 633126 )
      Maybe we could start a group of citizens and buy our congressmen back?
      Everytime we buy a Disney product, we help Disney buy our congressman. Remeber that the next time you buy "Snow white and the seven dwarves" on DVD.
    • Re:Well.. (Score:5, Informative)

      by Eagle7 ( 111475 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:59AM (#5918784) Homepage
      might as well have a Senator Lockheed-Martin.

      Disclaimer: I work for Lockheed.

      I don't understand your point... surely Lockheed has proposals and products that compete with the shuttle, but they also have thier fingers in the shuttle as well. they handle the external tanks [lockheedmartin.com], where I work we do the data processing computers [lockheedmartin.com], they do the thermal protection [lockheedmartin.com], they support [lmco.com] shuttle missions, provide other [lmco.com] shuttle support services, and do other shuttle [lmco.com] related work.

      So yeah, they'll probably gain when NASA moves to the next-gen space exploration system. But they're by no means missing out on the shuttle action as it stands now. The thing about Lockheed is that they are very diverse... they handle IT for government sites (pentagon, bases, etc), they do package distribution for the US & UK post office, we do traditional rockets, they do air traffic control, airplanes, avionics, missiles, support services of all sorts - the list goes on an on. Go to the main Lockheed homepage and look at the list of products & capabilities. So you can't pull one proposal or project that Lockheed has, and say that they want the shuttle to die because of that.

      The politics here are a hell of a lot more complicated than $14,000 in campaign contributions. I don't understand them all, to be sure... but neither do you.
      • Re:Well.. (Score:3, Interesting)

        by nhavar ( 115351 )
        I think the real point should be that we shouldn't have questions about conflict of interest with our senators. We shouldn't be concerned with the $14,000 of "hard money" and the $X,XXX,XXX of "soft money" and the "favors" that the senator receives from a company and the "networking" that takes place.

        The reason we shouldn't be concerned about this is because it shouldn't exist. Under our constitution the People and The PRESS were the only entities afforded freedom of speech. A multinational and "diverse" c
  • by ihatewinXP ( 638000 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @09:55AM (#5918213)
    Disclaimer: I am not trolling.

    But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses? They knew what they were getting into, I assure you, just like any soldier. Thousands have given their lives for science and would gladly do so again. These scientists/adventurers/gov. employees were willing to die for the embetterment of the human race - why should cowards decide where the brave may go?

    if the problem is kids being horrified at school watching the space shuttle then put the feed on delay.
    • Looking at the ratio of workers lost to total number of workers in being an astronaut and being a US soldier, I bet that being a soldier is much safer. The US army might be safer then being a fireman.
      • Nitpicking further (Score:5, Interesting)

        by akadruid ( 606405 ) * <slashdot@NosPam.thedruid.co.uk> on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:16AM (#5918386) Homepage
        'Commercial Fishing' is actually the world's most dangerous job, closely followed by 'Timber Cutters and Loggers'.
        Being a Soldier, Fireman, or Astronaut is not even in the Top 10.
        Airline Pilots and Railroad Signal Operators are in there though.
        Astronauts have a lot more in the way of glory and probably money than fishermen too.
        You ask people who Neil Armstrong was. I bet a lot more people know that than know who Neil Kinnock was.
        source [usatoday.com]
    • by nuggz ( 69912 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:11AM (#5918330) Homepage
      Face it, the US population doesn't care about soldiers lives.

      If you die, in service, your family might get enough for a funeral.
      If you happen to be in an office building that is the target of a high profile attack (Sept 11) your family will get millions.

      It's sickening.
    • by pubjames ( 468013 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:16AM (#5918383)
      But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses?

      An excellent point. The answer is I guess, some people are more important than others. It's like when a pretty white schoolgirl gets kidnapped, it's frontpage news and the country is in shock. But if the same thing happens to a coloured guy, then nobody gives a damn. Or when you read how successful the war with Iraq was because there were only 200 fatalities, and you realise that they're just counting the Americans.

      • by Brian Stretch ( 5304 ) * on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:55AM (#5919257)
        Or when you read how successful the war with Iraq was because there were only 200 fatalities, and you realise that they're just counting the Americans.

        Or when you read how terrible the war with Iraq was because there were a few thousand Iraqi fatalities, and you realise that they're ignoring the many thousands of Iraqis per year that Saddam Hussein killed.
    • by Draxinusom ( 82930 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:23AM (#5918447)
      You're doing a risk-benefit analysis without looking at the benefit side. The risk to the astronauts would be acceptable if there were actual science being accomplished. I am not one of those profiteers who disdains "pure science," but any reasonable assessment of the shuttle program's scientific accomplishments [msn.com] has to conclude that sending old people into space and observing spiderwebs in zero gravity is not worth the tremendous cost in money and lives.

      If we did away with the shuttle program [tnr.com] (which over the years has turned into a huge pork barrel for the shuttle contractors), we could replace it with many more cheap unmanned flights plus manned flights with focused objectives. There's no reason to send an astronaut into space, at huge expense, to perform experiments that could just as easily be done on an unmanned craft. Instead, we should be sending those astronauts to Mars, which will never happen through the shuttle program.
      • Hear, hear. (Score:3, Insightful)

        by StarKruzr ( 74642 )
        I really don't understand why the /. crowd should dislike this proposal.

        If I had my 'druthers, I'd scrap the Shuttle operations budget entirely, put all of them into museums, and spend the operations budget entirely on serious R&D for purpose-built reusable spacecraft.

        We need:
        1) A reusable, unmanned heavy lifter like Venturestar (possibly with an option to load a cargo module that would essentially be a cockpit/life support system, for getting people into orbits higher than LEO).

        2) A passenger ferry
    • by King Babar ( 19862 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:45AM (#5918643) Homepage
      But how is it that we have had troops (US gov. employees) all over the world doing the most dangerous things for decades but 7 astronauts are unreasonable losses?

      First, one could question how reasonable or unreasonable the size of the US military is. (Or one should be able to; these days even a hint that we should adjust the forcepool brings with it the accusation that you are a traitor.) Second, for me it's not the loss of the astronoauts' lives per se that makes the manned space program unreasonable. As you mention, the risks are concrete, obvious, and difficult to explain away, but people volunteer. The unreasonable loss is the loss of funding and opportunity to do better science, even space science, in the US. The expenditure of cash on the problem of how to keep a manned space program going when every launch makes you cringe with its "make-work" and PR mission content is just scandalous. People who think that *this* kind of thing will help us fight off near-earth asteroids or bring us closer to lunar colonization are really and truly just not thinking very critically. I would go so far as to argue that the people who are most interested in the eventual manned exploration of space should be the people who should be *least* interested in supporting the status quo.

  • by I'm a racist. ( 631537 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:00AM (#5918250) Homepage Journal
    Just wondering, what do people here feel is an acceptable risk?

    I would easily say that 1/62.5 is acceptable. In fact, I'm quite impressed that it's not 1/2. It's a really amazing accomplishment to do it at all. Back in the early days (even well into the Apollo program) it was pretty much given that this is a major risk to the lives of the astronauts.

    Could it possibly be that we've just gotten soft, and started to take space flight for granted (which would be good in it's own way)? Is it just that the fucking baby-boomers have no spine? If so, will this only get worse in time? For example, I just heard on Howard Stern this morning that the average person doesn't really consider someone an adult until around 26 years old. Are we just becoming less and less responsible and, consequently, less willing to accept the consequences of our actions (including death)?

    Or, as stated in the /. writeup, is this just another DC windbag looking to make some cash for his cronies?

    In any case, 2 crashes in 20 years is a very very good record. You'd be hard pressed to make the airline industry perform so well. Sure, the people on board the shuttle are worth more than those aboard commercial flights and the shuttle is worth more than a plane... still, it's quite impressive.
    • Let's put this in perspective. If one out of 62.5 airplanes crashed, that would be, what, about two plane crashes per major airport per day?

      Yes, this is a real problem.

      Jon Acheson
    • Could it possibly be that we've just gotten soft, and started to take space flight for granted (which would be good in it's own way)? Is it just that the fucking baby-boomers have no spine?

      Dude, are you saying people should risk their lives to do stupid little experiments with ant farms and shit? Come on.

      There's nothing wrong with taking a breather and trying to minimize risk. It's obvious these shuttle people are totally incompetent.
    • Just wondering, what do people here feel is an acceptable risk?

      You can't weigh risk without looking at the benefits. And the lack of benefits is the biggest problem the Shuttle and ISS programs have.

      The Shuttle is not cost-effective for commercial space applications. The science conducted on the Shuttle and ISS is a joke.

      As an American tax payer, I'm outraged that billions of my tax dollars are being spent on a pork-barrel jobs program for aging engineers at NASA and bloated defense/space contr
    • by donscarletti ( 569232 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:44AM (#5918634)
      Just wondering, what do people here feel is an acceptable risk?

      Shooting up a crew of seven to do what an unmanned lifting rocket could do for a 20th the price, or simply to dick around on a space station for a few months is simply a stupid risk to make. Yuri Gargarrin proved that humans could exist in space, that was we need to know until we think of something worthwhile to actually do up there. Perhaps the Russians found the first worthwhile thing to do with people up in that stupid domain of nothingness: provide entertainment for tourists for money. But now, because of the shuttles being suspended, the Russians need to use their soyutzs to ferry people to and fro from that stupid floating junkpile we call the ISS and they don't have any in reserve to do usefull things like make money.

      You'd be hard pressed to make the airline industry perform so well

      ROTFLMAO! That's why pilots and flight attendants have a 30 - 80 day (depending on the length of flight) average lifespan? And don't give me no crap about how the space shuttle flys further in a trip, because all that goes wrong happens on takeoff (Chalanger) and landing (Columbia), just like a plane.

      Don't get me wrong, I am all for scientific discovery, but everything useful that can by done with humans in space was done in the sixties, now space "research" seems to be just a way to subsidise wothless contractors and risk people's lives, not that there arn't things worth dying for, it's just drumming in the point repeatadly that humans can live in space is hardly one of them. Maybe the money spent on maintaining those "reusable" monstrocities that cost more to maintain than any disposable rockets in existance (except maybe saturn V) could be spent in theoretical, non-dangerous, non-wasteful research by our friendly accedemics to find out how humans in space might actually benifit us as a race

    • by Anonymous Canard ( 594978 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:44AM (#5918637)
      I would easily say that 1/62.5 is acceptable. In fact, I'm quite impressed that it's not 1/2. It's a really amazing accomplishment to do it at all. Back in the early days (even well into the Apollo program) it was pretty much given that this is a major risk to the lives of the astronauts.

      Strangely enough, I had never considered combining the first and second failed shuttle missions into a single statistic. The space shuttle program is a system, with a failure rate that varies over time, not a single 20 year long experiment. I would rather say that the failure rate at the time of 51L was a little under 10%, and that the system now has a failure rate of a little over 1%, although good statistics don't really apply to such small sample sizes. Still I would hestitate a long time before replacing the known failure rate of a 20 year old system, with a new and unproven system which still has all of its bugs intact. Nor is NASA interested, if I guess rightly.

      In part I think that this is what annoys Joe Barton among others. It isn't that NASA is too risky, but too conservative. There are no new systems coming on line, and the old system isn't sexy any more. In its current state the STS is incredibly manpower intensive, and a lot of the reliability of the system depends on the training and full staffing of the shuttle program. If NASA were less risk adverse, they might be able to reset and design a new system, which over twenty years could approach the reliability of STS, but at a fraction of the cost in time and manpower.

      But thinking that way will make the system less reliable, not more; at least until the bugs have been worked out.

  • by AbdullahHaydar ( 147260 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:00AM (#5918258) Homepage
    From this link [menschmedia.com]:

    "Barton's moment in the sun, up until late last year, was his advocacy of the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC)."

    So, apparently, this guy's not all bad...(although, apparently, that was politically motivated as well...)
  • Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by larko ( 665714 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:01AM (#5918262) Homepage
    "The fine gentleman from Texas displays his outstanding grasp of statistics and engineering stating that 1 failure in ever 62.5 flights is NOT acceptable." I don't think there's any need to call him stupid just because you disagree with him. That is, the fact that he thinks 1 / 62.5 is too big does NOT mean he thinks that it's not small.. it just means he either places less value on space exploration or more value on human safety than you do. 1 death per 62.5 roller coaster riders is much too high... I'm not sure where I stand on space exploration right now myself - I think it's very interesting, and there is certainly the possibility of it being essential to our survival as a race - but the fact is that people are dying and whenever that happens we have to consider our priorities in terms that cannot, perhaps, be described with things you learn in high school math.
  • agreed... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by joebeone ( 620917 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:02AM (#5918274) Homepage
    I know this might be hard for the Slashdot crowd but the Rep. is right.

    Columbia and Challenger were not destroyed because of an O-ring or a piece of foam... they were destroyed because NASA as an organization failed [astron.berkeley.edu] [shorl.com]. We need to fix NASA before we continue to launch shuttles... which have become glorified construction and grocery delivery vehicles as opposed to exploratory or R&D craft.

  • Honesty at NASA (Score:5, Informative)

    by ChuckDivine ( 221595 ) * <charles.j.divine@gmail.com> on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:03AM (#5918276) Homepage

    Based upon my experience at Goddard, I will say that most of the people at NASA are honest, upstanding individuals intent on doing the best job they can.

    Unfortunately, I don't think the management culture they inhabit works the same way. Yes, there are honest people in management. Too often, though, they must fight against pressures forcing dishonesty and abuse.

    Some people are quitting the field because of dishonesty and abuse. Donna Shirley, the woman who led the team that designed and built the successful Mars rover of 1997, has quit, citing the "lack of honesty and openness" in the field.

    When I was at Goddard, some high level managers in my company were caught defrauding the government out of millions of dollars. As a part of being allowed to continue doing business with the government, the company signed an agreement that forced all employees to receive annual "ethics" training. The training was a joke, emphasizing things like not using government e-mail for personal use. Teaching employees how to recognize major corruption on the part of mid and high level executives? Why, we "worker bees" need not worry our pretty little heads about that sort of thing...

    Personally, I think the kind of dishonesty reported in these articles will persist until NASA embraces honesty, openness and democracy in its culture.

  • by steelerguy ( 172075 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:04AM (#5918283) Homepage
    There is obviously not a shortage of astronaughts wanting to go up in the space shuttle. It is not like we are strapping space monkies into the shuttle and sending them up against their will. These are smart educated people, who train hard to be astronaughts and are willing to give their lives to go into space and be pioneers. If they choose this risky business then so be it, I applaud them.

    I'm not saying there is no room for improvement in the shuttle program, but some bozo politician from Texas should keep his word hole shut, when it comes to issues like this. When people are probing the frontiers some are bound to die. He should look at the history of the state he represents, it was not a bunch of sissy frontiersmen who wanted to stable the exploration and charting of Texas.
  • by yoz ( 3735 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:07AM (#5918306) Homepage
    The Russian Soyuz spacecraft has made 1500 successful launches in a life of over 30 years. Several hundred of those have been manned, with only one catastrophe.

    Unlike the Shuttle, the Soyuz is not a reusable craft. The Shuttle was designed to be reusable to cut down on the cost of manned spaceflight - the irony being that the cost of the two lost Shuttles is greater than all the money spent on Soyuz craft so far.

    More information here [nasa.gov].
    • Several hundred of those have been manned, with only one catastrophe. Two catastrophes involving loss of astronaut life (one dead on Soyuz 1, burned up on reentry, and three on Soyuz 11, depressurised in the upper atmosphere). One catastrophe involving loss of ground crew on an appalling scale (Nedelin). And one spectacular cock-up involving a supply ship and a space station, which thankfully was survived by all concerned, including the station. Oh, and they buggered up their last landing on return from S
      • Soyuz 1, burned up on reentry
        Nitpick: Crashed due to parachute failure, but didn't burn up. (Still not great for the occupant).

        One catastrophe involving loss of ground crew on an appalling scale (Nedelin)
        This accident predates the Soyuz program by several years.
    • I agree with the soyuz solution. There is nothing a shuttle can do that soyuz + iss can't, and then some. THe fact that it landed 300 miles (the number I heard) off target and the crew survived means it is robust. If the shuttle had 'landed' that far off course it would have killed everyone inside. We could have several ready to go in case of an emergency on the iss.

      The shuttle was driven by pork barrel politics, where the largest number of contractors got a piece of the pie. As such it is a gold plated tu
    • Unfortunately, the soyuz, at a 7.5 ton payload capacity, has only a fraction of the shuttle's 25 ton capacity.

      The current state of affairs is that only the shuttle fleet can get so much material into space in one shot. Russia had a few heavy launch projects in the works, but i think they've all been canned due to the dismal financial state over there.
    • Soyuz not that good (Score:3, Informative)

      by ToSeek ( 529348 )
      The Russian Soyuz spacecraft has made 1500 successful launches in a life of over 30 years. Several hundred of those have been manned, with only one catastrophe. This is inaccurate in several respects. The Soyuz/R7 launch vehicle has a 97.5% success rate (1 failure per 40 missions). 106 of those launches have been manned with 2 fatal failures (Soyuz 1, Soyuz 11) and several aborted missions, including the Soyuz T-10A, where the launch vehicle exploded and only the recovery system saved the cosmonauts.
  • by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:08AM (#5918317)
    If we can get it so that the shuttles are built, launched, and landed in West Virginia, and renamed as well (i.e, "Senator's Bird"), we can get the program more than adequately funded as a pork program by Senator Robert Byrd.
  • by WIAKywbfatw ( 307557 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:10AM (#5918325) Journal
    Given that Joe Barton represents the state of Texas, home of NASA, this is a major surprise.

    Most Texans (and especially Houstonians) take extreme pride in the space programme. You only have to look at the name of Houston's NBA and MLB franchises - the Rockets and the Astros - to see how synonymous the words "Houston" and "space" have become. ("Houston" was even the first word spoken on the moon.)

    But lets look at the rationale behind this "frank" admission.

    The longer the shuttle fleet is grounded, the more likely it is that the fleet will be put through a series of expensive upgrades and overhauls. Furthermore, the more likely it is that serious amounts of money will be spent on looking at the next generation of NASA manned orbiters. (There's no way that George W. Bush, the former Governor of Texas, will want to go down in history as the President that mothballed NASA and destroyed a national symbol of pride - that's not the way he wants to be remembered.)

    And just who'll benefit from all that extra money pouring into space research? Why, astronautical and aeronautical engineering companies, oil, power and chemical firms, big and small, especially those that are based in (yes, you guessed it) Texas.

    Is grounding the shuttle fleet for the next ten years a good idea? Well, I don't have all the facts but the failure rate does suggest that the programme does need to be more closely examined.

    Is a new orbiter the best way forward? Again, I'm not on the NASA payroll so I'm not the most informed individual but I'd argue that we need a reusable platform for getting to and from the International Space Station now, and a more modern, flexible and efficient replacement ASAP.
  • Tokamak Parallels (Score:4, Informative)

    by Baldrson ( 78598 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:13AM (#5918354) Homepage Journal
    From the Space Daily article:
    So that's where those very low cost-per-flight numbers came from. They were never real.

    From Robert W. Bussard's letter to Congress regarding the Tokamak fusion program [geocities.com]:

    Each of us left soon thereafter, and the second generation management thought the big program was real; it was not.
  • Every one of those astronauts that died understood the risks. They understood the engineering behind the shuttle, and knew full well that they could pay for the experience or chance of being in space with their lives. Last time I checked, NASA was an all-volunteer organization where people fought like hell to get accepted into the astronaut ranks. Those 14 people volunteered, and not a one of them would want his or her memory reflected by the cancellation of something they spent their entire lives to achieve. (with the exception of McAuliffe, but I don't think she'd want it cancelled either)

    We shouldn't remember them as some goddamn statistical casualties, we should remember them as people so dedicated to the cause of human space exploration that they willingly laid down their lives for the furtherance of human knowledge. This guy's statements bring those 14 brave people down to the level of a goddamn statistic, and I hope

    Keep the shuttles flying as long as there are volunteers to crew them, and make every effort to bring them home. We have the technology now, we had it in the 1970's, all we need is the national will to do it right.
    • by vondo ( 303621 ) * on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:07AM (#5918857)
      Those 14 people volunteered, and not a one of them would want his or her memory reflected by the cancellation of something they spent their entire lives to achieve.

      So for that reason we should continue to spend billions of dollars and risk more lives?

      Keep the shuttles flying as long as there are volunteers to crew them, and make every effort to bring them home.

      As opposed to look at whether what we are doing up there makes sense in the first place?

      Ok, these people are heros, brave, and all that. Yes we should remember them as such and not as statistics. But to say that because these people are brave and willing to take the risks, we as a society have no responsibility to look at and change the situation is ludicrous.

      I think its been pretty well established that the science done by the manned space program and on the ISS is not worth anywhere near what we spend on it. So we have to ask ourselves what the prestige of the manned space program is worth, both in dollars and in human lives. Is satisfying our yearning for the last frontier worth the cost we are paying? Should we do it now, or develop a cheaper, safer way to do it 15 years from now? Maybe the answer is that it is worth it and we shouldn't wait. But let's at least be honest about the questions we have to ask and ask them rather than forging ahead blindly because it's the only thing we know how to do.

  • No problem (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Salsaman ( 141471 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:17AM (#5918399) Homepage
    I am sure the Russians, Chinese, and the EU will step in to fill the gap if the US gives up on manned spaceflight.

    Plus there will probably be a few private companies doing the same thing over the next decade or two.

  • by sammyo ( 166904 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:19AM (#5918412) Journal
    Auto and plane stats are given as deaths per N miles. Now that would be an interesting and possibly more valid statistic. Shuttle deaths or even Space program deaths *per mile*!
  • by Spencerian ( 465343 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:24AM (#5918450) Homepage Journal
    Let's look at basic facts of manned American flights to date.

    Project Mercury: 6 flights, no deaths.
    Project Gemini: 12 flights, no deaths, 1 abort.
    Project Apollo: 18 flights (including Apollo-Soyuz). 3 fatalities (non-launch-related), 1 abort (in-flight, no injuries)
    Project Skylab: 3 flights, no aborts.

    So, by the end of 1975, Americans have flown into space only 39 times. Thirty-nine. Barely enough to tempt fate, it seems.

    Space Transportation System: 113 missions, 14 fatalities (in-flight).

    Everyone knows that spaceflight is still very dangerous. In the case of a Shuttle, the odds just caught up. That's not a failure.

    In the Challenger disaster, NASA and its contractors failed, as they did with Apollo 1, to use their imagination properly to see the real numbers as real chances for catastrophe.

    In the Columbia accident, NASA didn't go the extra mile in determining damage on the orbiter, but all other decision making appeared on-target, IMHO. Not that there were many options that they could have presented to the astronauts to save orbiter and crew.

    The main problem with the Shuttle right now is to protect the critical tiles. Ice will always form on the orbiter's ET and all flights have returned with some ding damage from ice. Foam falling from the ET was obviously too much damage for Columbia to withstand.

    I propose an aeroshell that fits under the orbiter body where it mounts to the ET. It would be integral to the ET, and cover the RCC and underbody of the orbiter, including part of the nose. The only change in flight that would be required is for the orbiter or the ET to be given thrusters that push the ET forward (or orbiter to aft) to clear the aeroshell that covers the leading edges and nose.

    That, and perhaps we can rig a harness where we can place inept Congressmen under the STS exhaust to show them how things really work.
  • by RhettLivingston ( 544140 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:24AM (#5918453) Journal
    you'd still have no troubles finding astronauts to fly them, though you might want to make sure they are more important than those we've taken lately. We seem to have totally lost our sense of the value of exploration as well as our sense of freedom.

    Those that go up aren't doing so blindly. They've made their choice as to the relative value of their lives to themselves without going versus the value to themselves of going. We should honor that choice by being proud of them for being braver than most, not by denying the choice to others.

    If someone were to come up with a plan for a one way trip to Mars that offered even a glimmer of hope for surviving, you'd have no trouble finding people who would rather live a few months on Mars than the rest of their lives on Earth. Time by itself isn't a reason to live.

  • Exploration (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lxy ( 80823 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:26AM (#5918464) Journal
    Space exploration is why we send 7 people up there on a regular basis. We don't understand what's up there, we want to find out.

    Unfortunately, one of the things we don't have a handle on is how to do it safely. That's part of the exploration process. We obviously have a system that works, as we've returned many safely back to earth. In the case of Columbia, an unknown variable was introduced. We've never known what happens if a tile is struck with an object on liftoff. It's never happened before, and we had to react with information we knew to figure out if it was a problem. Sometimes the only way to learn is to find out.

    As for the 7 astronauts, this mission was hailed as one of the most successful in space history. The amount of research that was performed and the data was collected surpassed any previous missions. The astronauts love their work, so much in fact that they're willing to risk everything for it. For 7 people to sacrifice themselves for their research is truly an honor, and the world should see these 7 people as heros, not casualties.
    • Space exploration is why we send 7 people up there on a regular basis. We don't understand what's up there, we want to find out.

      Well, that's fine and dandy, but since the shuttle never makes it above LEO (low earth orbit), there's not that much there to see that hasn't been seen before...

      So if you insist on sending people to LEO just because you can, why not do it safely and cheaply in a non reusable orbiter, carried on top of a old fashioned rocket.

      As others have mentioned the Soyuz has a remarkable

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:28AM (#5918482)
    If loss of life really we're the reason, the following things would also be outlawed / shut-down:

    Driving
    Helicopters
    Airlines
    Military
    Sex for those over 40
    Smoking
    Drinking
    High School (Columbine)

    What a crock. This whole thing is politically motivated.

    So what, we had an accident and lost an expensive vehicle and some highly trained personnel. I don't want to sound harsh, but we lose highly trained military personnel in helicopter accidents monthly (and usually more than 7 personnel), why not shut down all of that model of chopper?

    Just stop fighting already and build a space elevator.

    BA
  • Funny (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jayhawk88 ( 160512 ) <jayhawk88@gmail.com> on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:30AM (#5918507)
    I love these people who go around with "we have to ground shuttle flights to protect the lives of astronauts" or "the shuttles must be perfect so nothing ever goes wrong". These same people who are so worried about the safety of a handful of test pilots while they are working to ensure the survival of our species, don't blink an eye sending thousands of soldiers halfway around the world to help ensure low gas prices...errr, liberate a country, on vehicles and with equipment typically built by the lowest bidder.

    The sad thing is, it sells. What is it about space travel that scares the hell out of people so much?
  • by trybywrench ( 584843 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:31AM (#5918519)
    ... I am ashamed this guy is from Texas.
    Do I get to appear naked on the cover of Entertainment Magazine now or what?
  • only half agree (Score:5, Interesting)

    by zogger ( 617870 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:34AM (#5918536) Homepage Journal
    --I don't want them grounded, but I would like to see them all used for one more trip up, then left up there. Turn them into the first step of having a shuttle fleet between LOE and the moon and mars. It's the take off and landing to earth that beats on them bad, but they are fine once in orbit. They could be additions to the space stations, perhaps the cargo bays retrofitted before last launch to additional fuel tanks and better crew cabin areas, purposes like that. No need to waste them, just use them more efficiently. On the ground they would just be stupid tourist traps, up in space, still dang useful. I see little reason a shuttle couldn't have smaller boosters installed and a larger fuel tank filled once in orbit, then used for manned missions to mars and whatnot. It's that HUGE fuel cost to escape earth and reach orbit that is expensive and dangerous, so WHY keep doing that over and over and over again? A fraction of that fuel used once leaving from orbit would take you to mars. Launch them up there ONCE, then it's UP there and we got us "space rockets" then. We're reinventing the wheel every time we launch and re land one. OK idea when first proposed, now time to move on. I see it just exactly like they have done with B-52's, they have thought of so many uses for them that go beyond their original missions and specs. Let's just do some more creative modding with what we got and paid for already instead of throwing them away or continual beating on them.

    I've thought this for more than a decade now, seems a duh to me.

    Dumb rockets can carry cargo and occasional passengers up better, and we can land passengers better too, our old "splashdown" into the water worked quite well..
  • Statistics (Score:3, Insightful)

    by tmark ( 230091 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:50AM (#5918698)
    The fine gentleman from Texas displays his outstanding grasp of statistics and engineering stating that 1 failure in ever 62.5 flights is NOT acceptable.
    You demonstrate your own ignorance of the issue by interpreting his comment as a statistical statement. It is not (unless your issue is the 1 in 62.5 statistic). Because the value of a human life and the value of the shuttle's missions are not unanimously quantifiable, his is a judgement, outside the realm of statistics. He is saying that he doesn't think a catastrophic failure 1.6% of the time is acceptable. You're ridiculing him by implying such a rate of catastrophic failure IS acceptable. Given the loss of life, I'd say YOU'RE the one with the <sarcasm>outstanding grasp</sarcasm> of things here.
  • by jazuki ( 70860 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:51AM (#5918710) Homepage
    While one can quibble with the arithmatic, I don't think there's any getting away from the fact that 1 in 56.5 is a horrendous statistic for failure, particularly for a program with a mission cost of $640 million in current dollars.

    The story was, with all this expense (though NASA has been lying about the program expense from the very beginning, claiming it would be less expensive per mission than single-use rockets), you would be able to increase reliability and safety.

    It hasn't turned out that way. The Russian Soyuz single-use rocket, for example, has a far higher safety rating (no accidents on manned flights since 1971), and costs about 30 TIMES LESS per flight.

    There's something obviously wrong here, and you don't have to be an opponent of the space program to see it.

    And I'm very much a proponent of the space program as a whole, and want to see a concerted effort towards a mission to Mars. But I don't see how the Shuttle program gets us there. It's a boondoggle only justifiable with really really bad math (read NASA math).

    Thus, the biggest reason to be opposed to the Shuttle program: It's astronomic expense crowds out money for any meaningful space exploration.

    Even if it means a five to ten years hiatus in the manned space program (though Russian launch vehicles could still be used), I'm all for using the money to build a manned space program that actually makes sense.
  • by Arsewiper ( 535175 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @10:54AM (#5918736)
    More people die from the mistakes of politicians in one year than NASA could kill in the next 30 years of space exploration.
  • Barton's right. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by An. (Coward) ( 258552 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:04AM (#5918829)

    Hate to say it, but I have to agree with Rep. Barton. Manned space flight, as it is currently practiced, is a joke, and has been since the seventies. The Space Age has apparently come and gone....there are children today whose parents were not even alive at the time of the last moon landing. Having once stepped on another world, we now seem to be content to simply play in our cosmic back yard.

    All our manned space activity has been devoted to a bloated hulking monstrosity of a vehicle that can manage far fewer missions at far higher cost than originally intended; for twenty years, until the ISS was finally built, it failed to serve the function it was designed for--ferrying equipment, construction materials, etc. into space. (And the value of the ISS is as dubious sa that of the shuttle itself.) We send it up two hundred miles, it circles around the earth a few dozen times, and it comes back down. If it doesn't blow up on the way up or burn up on reentry. The shuttle program has obstructed cheaper, more efficient, and more powerful ways of getting people into space. It has so hindered us that it would take us another ten years to rebuild the infrastructure needed to send us back to the moon.

    And for what? For PR? So schoolkids could have a real live astronaut growing their bean sprouts for them? So John Glenn could have one last moment of glory? The only worthwhile missions in my opinion have been those to service the Hubble telescope. Consider the adverse impact it has had on other, more valuable, unmanned programs, either because of the shuttle's drain on NASA's budget, or its inability to function due to delays and disasters--the delay of the Cassini program, the bare-bones funding available for Mars missions, the shame of being the only spacefaring nation unable to send a probe to Halley's Comet on its last visit, the failure to send a probe to Pluto when it would be most scientifically useful...

    The shuttle program is a parasite on the nation's science program, and it is a killer. Don't look at it as a 2% failure rate--two disasters out of 107 flights. It's a 40% failure rate: two of five vehicles catastrophically exploding, well within the limits of their expected usable life.

    I am by no means saying that we should end the space program. The Voyager program, the Hubble and Chandra telescopes, and other unmanned scientific missions have provided us with vast knowledge about the universe around us. The commercial space program has enriched our lives here on earth, through global communications networks, better weather forecasting, etc. But compared to these, our manned space program is lagging far behind. We can send people no farther than low earth orbit, and we have no worthwhile vision for what they should do once they get there.
  • Why the sarcasm? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by daves ( 23318 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:04AM (#5918831) Journal
    The Challenger exploded on STS-51L. The subsequent investigation predicted catastrophic failure, on average, every 58 flights (IIRC). Current stats show about the same rate.

    It sounds to me like Rep. Barton is on the money concerning shuttle reliability.
  • by Phoenix ( 2762 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:06AM (#5918849)
    Frankly I agree with him on one point. The STS program needs to be replaced. The Shuttle is an aging piece of antiquated hardware that is probally getting to the end of it's lifespan.

    However

    I do not believe that we have to send the rest of the Shuttles to the Graveyard just yet.

    The two shuttles lost are so far, the first that actually made it into space (Enterprise being little more than a test platform) and the Challenger which (if memory serves and if I'm wrong I do apologize) is the second oldest orbiter.

    Secondly, It's Space we're dealing with. It's an unknown and we're trying to learn how to get into space without killing ourselves. If you think about all the manned spaceflights that we have done as the world as a whole, mankind has a pretty damn good track record.

    I agree that the Shuttle needs to go, but with a little care, it CAN still serve it's purpose until the replacement is designed, tested and ready. Give the remaining Shuttles a once over, fix the problem and get them back up.

    Phoenix
  • by Elvisisdead ( 450946 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:09AM (#5918883) Homepage Journal
    Let me say, as someone who actually attended the Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee hearing, that this cynical Barton- and government- bashing is ridiculous. What the Yahoo article failed to point out was that Barton unequivocally affirmed his support for manned space flight and ambitious space exploration, and has in fact supported every NASA budget request (read: every ill-designed, failed NASA initiative) over the last ten years.

    His remarks were made thoughtfully and deliberately, not banging a shoe on the table. And as to remarks by MagusAptus that "Just goes to show that we elect the brightest and the best to congress. It would just seem reasonable that if we had to have these committees on everything, then the members of those committees should have at least *some* knowledge or background in the area," Congessman Barton has actually been on the S&A Subcommittee since the early '80s; he served when the Challenger crashed. And he also earned a B.A. in Industrial Engineering from Texas A&M.
  • by sacrilicious ( 316896 ) <qbgfynfu.opt@recursor.net> on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:11AM (#5918899) Homepage
    From The Simpsons:

    Tom: It's a lovely day for a launch, here, live at Cape Canaveral, at
    the lower end of the Florida Peninsula, and the purpose of
    today's mission is truly, really electrifying.
    Man 2: That's correct, Tom. The lion's share of this flight will be
    devoted to the study of the effects of weightlessness on tiny
    screws.
    Tom: Unbelievable, and just imagine the logistics of weightlessness.
    And of course, this could have literally millions of applications
    here on Earth -- everything from watchmaking to watch repair.
    Homer: Boring.
    [tries to switch channels, but the batteries fall from the
    remote control]
    No! The batteries!
    Tom: Now let's look at the crew a little.
    Man 2: They're a colorful bunch. They've been dubbed "the Three
    Musketeers". Heh heh heh --
    Tom: And we laugh legitimately. There's a mathematician, a different
    _kind_ of mathematician, and a statistician.
    Homer: Make it stop! [panics]
  • National Pride??? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by rm3friskerFTN ( 34339 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:31AM (#5919059) Journal
    "... imagine this scenario: It's 2029, and a lunar mission lands at Tranquillity Base. A crew of heroic young Indians - or Chinese - quietly folds and puts away America's 60-year-old flag. If the world saw that on television, wouldn't the gesture be worth tens of billions of rupees or yuan? Of course it would." The New Cold War [wired.com]

    BTW, I think NASA/society sets the bar too-high for astronauts ... a crew of high school kids with an old-fart chaperone (someone who is 28-years old) would do a far better job than the over-qualified astronauts ... real-life example is the reactor control room of a US Navy submarine.

  • by ianscot ( 591483 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:31AM (#5919064)
    That last bit of testimony from Robert F. Thompson included some stuff about Nixon -- can you believe it? -- collaborating in misleading congress. In this case, it was about how often the shuttle could be launched, the resulting cost per pound of cargo, and the overall cost estimate for the program. The leading congressional opponent, seen then as a "luddite" (Washington Post) who'd gut NASA if he could: Senator Walter Mondale of Minnesota.

    Today's neoconservatives often disparage the shuttle as high-tech socialism, and I've talked to more than a few different people who regard the whole program as a tax-and-spend legacy of an earlier governmental style. (Low-cost probes like Pathfinder and so on are their usual ideal.) Just goes to show you, the world's not black and white.

    Mondale would be practically a liberal dinosaur by today's standards, and generally speaking he was arguing for funding social programs above NASA -- but his objections to cost estimates for this program seem to have been basically right, don't they? You have to respect that. Nixon's got a conservative's rep, but he was a Keynesian in economic terms and he definitely committed to a massive spending program here based on bogus estimates. With his eyes wide open about it, too.

  • by lawpoop ( 604919 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @11:43AM (#5919155) Homepage Journal
    No deaths in a Soyuz capsule in 20 years. I don't blame the senator for saying our death/accident rate is too high.

    Can't we at least do better than the Russians?

  • Statistics (Score:5, Interesting)

    by visionsofmcskill ( 556169 ) <vision AT getmp DOT com> on Friday May 09, 2003 @12:15PM (#5919389) Homepage Journal
    1 in 56.5 is far more than acceptable given the field of work.

    when you consider these VOLUNTEERS enter the most dangerous and inhospitable of environments known to man (a vacum), and return safely in nearly 99% of missions, then the risk becomes more acceptable.

    To ground the program due to what seems to me an exceptional track record given the extreme nature of their work is beyond senseless, a disaster occured in which information can be garnered to prevent such catastrophies from occuring again. Because a ship was lost does not justify reasoning that the entire organization is flawed. This is high risk work people, and generaly high risk work runs into intermittent tragedies that illuminate problems to be prevented int the future.

    Now at this point im sure plenty of people will chime in, that what if these tragedies can be averted by further research and development... etc.... This logic however falls short because we cant prepare for every possible imaginable disaster, we cant protect ourselves from millions of potential disasters that are beyond boundless in scope and possibilities. An ill timed solar flare on a certain region of the sun could wreck ireprable damage on all the electrical systems on earth, so should we just not go into space at all considering that may happen (and trust me, we dont have the tech to protect ourselves from a strong enough flare)

    so then the real question becomes acceptable risk. is a 1-2% failure rate acceptable? I would have to say yes, and most risk-analysers would agree.

    the second question is risk vs profit. this is far more tricky, as many have mentioned what THEY believe to be pointless or fruitless expiraments done in space, which provide little benfit given the risk and cost of the endeavor. In my honest opinion almost any reasonable research in space is at this point priceless, even manned research is of an in-estimable value to mankind. The results may not lend any imediatly profitable outcomes to buisness ventures, but on the whole the entire endeavor does many things, it first of all provides a wealth of knowledge otherwise completly unattainable on earth to the scientific knowledge of all humanity. We are talking about research that is impossible to obtain otherwise. Second of all it gives us, humans, a goal beyond this planet, a sense of a greater direction, a destiny of sorts that we can all build towards. I know that sounds grandiose and over the top, but look at our cultures far back into time, breaking boundries and pushing limits to find new things has been the legacy of humans since we could write on walls. And lets face it folks, as far as earth goes we're begging to reach the boundries here-in.... the space program has been giving us a new frontier that is important for the well-fare of the human psyche and our global culture. Thirdly the program creates jobs on more levels than NASA, there are contractors, and the companies that support the contractors, most people in the end are somehow connected to NASA through the MANY companies that support, supply, or buy from her.

    while no-one has seriously proposed to stop NASA, grounding her is a similar action in that it would kill a great amount of drive behind her development. And in my opinion NASA's development is one of THE MOST IMPORTANT things earth should be doing right now.

    i agree that reviewing the processes behind how NASA operates should happen frequently, but hampering her as well is worse than foolish, it is counter-productive, and potentialy catostrophic in it's own right. If anything we should be pumping more money into appropriate portions of NASA and concentrating on creating and achieving even grander goals in shorter spans of time.

    a manned mission to mars should have been accomplished years ago.... there should have been a manned (or at least unmanned) station ON the moon decades ago, there should have been hundreds more probes sent through our measly solar system, and many more things.

    the space race has died, and needs to be revived for the greater good of all.

    If commercial space ventures can get a jump-start soon (as they seem nearly there), then we may find ourselves finaly advancing at an acceptable rate.

  • Project Apollo (Score:4, Insightful)

    by earthforce_1 ( 454968 ) <earthforce_1 AT yahoo DOT com> on Friday May 09, 2003 @01:53PM (#5920250) Journal

    I believe the apollo astronauts knew that there was a significant risk of catastrophic failure. I am sure everybody around them knew of these risks as well. I remember a TV interview of one manager who was in mission control at the time of the first landing, talking about the master computer overload alarms that kept popping up as they were landing. He said he had estimated beforehand that it was 50-50 as to whether or not they would acutally be able to complete the mission. Apollo 13 came hairline close to catastrophic failure.

    I remember seeing a film clip of a man testing a prototype parachute off the eiffel tower in 1900. His prototype chute didn't open, and the unfortunate man met his end at the base of the tower. Fortunately, this didn't dissuade others from repeating his tragic experiment.

    We all have to go sometime, might as well make it for a meaningful cause.

  • Unmanned Shuttle (Score:4, Insightful)

    by MichaelPenne ( 605299 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @03:03PM (#5921018) Homepage
    Instead of fixing the shuttle, Barton said it should be grounded or converted to a craft that flies unmanned.
    This seems more logical: the thing flies itself anyway.

    Rip out all the life support systems and it will make a great space truck, then build a ligher, safer, more modern space plane to get the people there and back in one piece.

  • NASA spaceflight. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Mordant ( 138460 ) on Friday May 09, 2003 @03:33PM (#5921312)
    NASA is a jobs program for bureaucrats, and a goldmine for companies like . . . Lockheed-Martin.

    Lockheed-Martin has no interest in seeing NASA shut down the shuttle - quite the opposite. Government contracting in general and NASA in particular are great cash-cows for LMC and for all the companies on the list you've cited.

    Aging, sclerotic bureaucracies flying obsolete, overly-complex 'spacecraft' don't explore new frontiers.

    The future of spaceflight doesn't lie with NASA - it lies with private ventures like Xcor. Taking the manned mission away from NASA and pushing them the hell out of the current command-and-control, false economy of the Shuttle-distorted launch market is the best thing that could happen to the cause of manned spaceflight.

And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones

Working...