Entire NASA Safety Board Resigns 39
identity0 writes "All nine members and two consultants of NASA's Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel have resigned today, reports CNN. The Panel was responsible for advising NASA on the safety of its spacecraft and facilities, and was set up in 1967 following the Apollo 1 fire. Recently, it had been criticized by the Congressional investigation into the Columbia accident. Here is the NASA press release, and the official home page of the ASAP."
Hmmm (Score:3, Interesting)
well, kinda hard with the shuttle and all, but you get my drift...
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm (Score:1)
Which can lead to situation where the not-so-good guys stay, while the good guys quit...
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
Then (presuming good faith) they would have resigned at the time their advice was rejected - i.e. long before the accident.
If NASA was not allowing them to do their job well, and they kept doing the job, they must have been content to do the job badly.
This reminds me of a couple of years ago when the whole EU commission resigned after the publication of a report on corruption. It is a beurocrat's response to incoming shrapnel from an investigation.
Re:Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not sure it was clear to the safety personnel that they were doing a bad job. Rather it seems from the description as though the whole in
Re:Hmmm (Score:2)
If they recomend X and X neither happens nor is rejected for considered and sane reasons, or if they ask for access to information source Y and are denied for political or beurocratic reasons, or if they are snowed under with paperwork and nonsense, then it must be very clear to them that they are not being allowed to do the job.
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Informative)
Their resigning makes the statement that "we failed in our mission. we take responsibility. we're now going to step aside so that you can implement new policies with a new safety board."
reorganization? (Score:3, Insightful)
NASA: "Need Another Seven Astronauts" (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately, as news reports come in about disregard for safety for Shuttle Columbia, it appears that such "joke" has a major element of truth. NASA bureaucrats (and probably politicians up to and including at the White House, as well) disregarded Morton Thiokol engineers in 1986, and we're now hearing that engineers warned NASA officials and the President prior to Columbia's launch that the Shuttle system itself was prone to such a disaster as witnessed yesterday. We know that Columbia was hit with "something" ("foam" or more likely, ice) during its launch on January 16th, and apparently, officials didn't take it seriously enough (Cain slew Abel; did Leroy Cain slay Columbia?). The excuse that "Columbia's crew was doomed from the start because they couldn't make repairs" is both silly and illustrates the current "can't do" attitude of today's NASA, which is far different than the NASA which both put humans on the Moon AND safely returned a crew to Earth after Apollo 13 had a "major malfunction" way up there.
For NASA's bureaucrats (and some politicians), it appears that risking astronauts' lives, NOT for the "unknown variables," but for glamour, expediency, and selfishness, is "acceptable." Perhaps this is to be expected in today's America where "style" and "appearance" are far more valued than substance and tangibility.
The "joke" way back in 1986, "N.A.S.A. = Need Another Seven Astronauts," has tragically turned out to be 2003's reality.
challenger statistics (Score:5, Insightful)
The link I gave is just a summary & leaves out some parts - the original graph was organized by serial number, not launch temperature, and is filled with cutesy pictures of rockets (chartjunk in Tufte terminology). The new graph shows temperature vs. problems-found-on-recovered-orings. The Challengetr's launch temperature, 40 degrees F, is highlighted at the left of the graph, showing how different this one was versus all others.
The book has a much better presentation, and it's an excellent excellent book. This example is something that I think back to when I make any presentation
Re:challenger statistics (Score:1)
Re:challenger statistics (Score:1)
Re:challenger statistics (Score:1)
Here's why: That pretty curve-fit line in Tufte's graph is crap. It is based on an incredibly small number of samples, especially at lower temperatures. The curve fit is completely useless unless it is presented with error bars. Furthermore, the curve fit is misleading since attracts the eye and leads attention away from the fact
Re:NASA: "Need Another Seven Astronauts" (Score:2, Informative)
Apollo 13 lost one of the spacecraft, but they were fortunate to still have the one with the heat shielding to use for reentry. The "can do" attitude would not have saved
Re:NASA: "Need Another Seven Astronauts" (Score:1, Informative)
The excuse that "Columbia's crew was doomed from the start because they couldn't make repairs" is both silly and illustrates the current "can't do" attitude of today's NASA, which is far different than the NASA which both put humans on the Moon AND safely returned a crew to Earth after Apollo 13 had a "major malfunction" way up there.
[/quote]
*ahem* Bull Shit.
Colombia only had a few opportunities to avoid destruction, and they were all during lift-off. If NASA took the impact seriously, the orbiter c
Re:NASA: "Need Another Seven Astronauts" (Score:4, Informative)
Second, Columbia had two EVA suits onboard as all shuttles do. The suits are a moot point unless you can get another shuttle up there in time.
As pointed out in the CAIB report, if NASA had concluded early in the mission that Columbia was mortally damaged, there was a possibility that Atlantis (which had already been mated to its ET/SRB stack in anticipation of an upcoming mission) could be launched before consumables aboard Columbia ran out. Once in proximity, the Columbia crew, using the two EVA suits and others brought by Atlantis, could have been transferred to Atlantis. Columbia would have (presumably) been de-orbited ito the ocean or brought down on autopilot (unlikely).
Also as CAIB noted, there was PLENTY that could have been done, aside from as one engineer said, "crossing our fingers and hoping for the best." None of it was ever done, however, becuase NASA managers failed to appreciate the possibility of damage to the thermal protection system. Even if it was detected and Atlantis couldn't be launched in time, there were ideas to stuff all sorts of junk (like water-filled bags which would freeze prior to reentry) into the breach in an attempt to fortify the structure just enough to allow for re-entry and bailout (the shuttle needs to be subsonic and in level flight for bailout), even if a landing would be impossible.
As it is, the wing held together (rather impressively) through most of re-entry and the computers worked like mad to compensate for the asymmetrical drag. Eventually, however, the wing's deformity induced yaw forces that the control surfaces and steering rockets could not compensate for - when Columbia lost this tug of war, the left wing dropped, the nose swung hard to the left (relative to the path of travel) in a "skid" -all adding up to a very bad day at hypersonic speeds.
To say that there was "nothing" NASA could have done (had they appreciated the extent of the damage) is just not true.
Looks Like NASA Admin. O'Keefe Engineered This (Score:3, Interesting)
This from the guy who, barely hours after the accident, with astronauts' bodies still smoldering in half a dozen states, announced that he was forming an "independent" review board, under his terms, subject to his time frame, and under his budget control.
When Congress talks about the "NASA Culture", the finger is clearly pointing in his direction. O'Keefe should have resigned ages ago.
Re:Looks Like NASA Admin. O'Keefe Engineered This (Score:5, Insightful)
Can you 'knee-jerk'?
Will it do any good ? (Score:5, Interesting)
The report on the shuttle disaster cited cultural problems at NASA. I don't see how changing 9 faces at the top will change the culture. What NASA could probably use isn't just a few sacrificial lambs at the top but someone to go through the agency and decimate its ranks. This is a life and death matter for the people that ride pillars of fire into the sky, it should be for those on the ground as well.
Re:Will it do any good ? (Score:1)
Re:Will it do any good ? (Score:1)
Re:Will it do any good ? (Score:1)
Beyond things like that, they would never issue a "No go" edict (particulaly with the Administrator and the ISS Schedule hovering over them) and risk their careers.
This Board should be dissolved, and rep
It seems to me... (Score:1, Redundant)
NASA = Need Another Nine Advisors? (Score:2)
NASA = Need Another Nine Advisors?
Q.
FFS... (Score:2)
Do you see the word "paraphrase"? Do you understand the old joke I am referring too? Do not assume others are as stupid as yourself...
For people who get my comedic reference (including the intentional mis-spelling) - I hope they are mildly amused.
You I couldn't care less about, 'tard. Oh and only nine were permanents, the other two were consultants - "Do you see the mis-match here?"
Q. the TrollDoll
Pass the parcel (Score:2, Interesting)
Ex-Panel Members Blast Congress, NASA (Score:1)
Particularly scathing is the following: "'Rather than committing to an adequate budget for the space shuttle, NASA and its congressional allies found it easier to get rid of those raising the alarm,' the former panel members said i