Shuttle May Fly Again In '04 186
giantsfan89 writes "A report from CNN says that a shuttle (possibly Atlantis) could fly again next fall. "The latest launch window is September 12 to October 10, NASA said Friday." A conference call referenced in the NY Times (free reg or via Google News) says it'll be an uphill battle (obviously) but that 'I'll also guarantee you that we're getting an awful lot smarter about this and we're going to come back stronger and safer as a result.'"
Come back smarter? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd be much happier to hear that we could expect spaceflight based on rocket technology in 2004. Whatever happened to that article?
Re:Come back smarter? -- Disgusting (Score:2, Insightful)
what is truly disgusting though is the fact that this article, as well as almost all others written about the subject drive readers to the conclusion that the shuttle needs t
Re:Come back smarter? -- Disgusting (Score:2)
'Deficient' is an excellent word to describe the shuttle.
But, you are right, the shuttle does not need to be fixed. It needs to be abandoned.
Re:Come back smarter? -- Disgusting (Score:2)
Re:Come back smarter? -- Disgusting (Score:2)
This may force individuals to confront the sad reality that the visions of manned exploration of the solar system in their lifetimes were just bad science fiction. Too bad for them. Next time, don't be conned so easily.
Re:Come back smarter? -- Disgusting (Score:2)
As to your point about costs of NASA developing any replacement - I quite agree - NASA spent a million dollars developing a pen that works in zero/micro gravity. The Russians just used a pencil......
Stop Repeating this Urban Myth! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Come back smarter? -- Disgusting (Score:2)
Space Shuttle (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Space Shuttle (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Space Shuttle (Score:2)
This is needed on every flight to the ISS, since the station wants lots of big thingies all the time (until it is built; then it will require lots of food and water instead.)
or when they somehow need the land-like-an-aeroplane ability.
I doubt this was ever needed. You want to land, and that's pretty much all. Only the most sensitive experiments could benefit from softer landing; I don't know if that was ever the case; and relatively hard capsul
Re:Space Shuttle (Score:2, Insightful)
One word: Progress
How do you think ISS survived without a problem half a year without a shuttle and will survive at least year to come? (and could survive...whole its life, just like Mir)
Of course you can say "but I meant assembly also". Well, there's nothing stopping us from using cargo rockets.
Re:Space Shuttle (Score:4, Interesting)
It would require redesign of a lot of systems. Soyuz, for example, is powered by kerosene + liquid oxygen, but Proton (designed by a different team) runs on dimethylhydrazine. The former is harmless; the latter is deadly. Guess which one would you choose for a manned flight? Then we would go into redundant, voting systems, crew ejection tower, and many other things that do not even exist on cargo rockets.
Some people would even say that you need to design the whole rocket from scratch. Imagine, for example, that you need to upgrade your Ford Taurus to win Indy or F-1 race. Where would you start? And consider that failure of any single part can doom the mission; so you need to go through *all* parts and improve them or make sure the failure will be contained.
It's not like NASA haven't done it before. The trick is that the old rocket scientists of Von Braun vintage all retired long ago, some are dead already. Nobody at NASA (or at Boeing, etc.) has a clue about where to begin. Design from scratch, and then testing, and then inevitable failures will take many years (say ten) to reach good reliability numbers.
If you compare this situation to Chinese, Russian and European efforts - which are up to date, and quite finely debugged by now, and for which trained technicians and engineers exist, then you will see that NASA painted itself into a corner. It has only Shuttle, and nothing but Shuttle. Today it can't operate anything else, and it can't develop anything else either (proof of that is in many canceled X-projects which were meant as a replacement or a companion for the Shuttle.)
The Ariane 5, for example, was initially developed with the french shuttle Hermes in mind.
Show me this Hermes thing in orbit, and then I will take it seriously :-)
Re:Space Shuttle (Score:2)
Don't forget that the old NASA went from no manned spaceflight whatsoever to building Saturn V's and putting people on the moon in just slightly more than eight years. And these were with people who not only had no prior experience with manned spaceflight, but people who couldn't even read about it because nobody had ever done it before.
I am fully confident that a competent organization could duplicate
Re:Space Shuttle (Score:2)
Sure, there are problems with the way NASA is run, particularly managers who micro-manage. For example, I had to make a 15 minute p
Flawed logic? (Score:2)
Sorry, when something as old and dangerous as the space shuttle stands in the way of change, and change for the better, then there's something seriously wrong. Especially so when you're cheering such a luddite view.
Do we need to be making real strides into space? Yes. Is the best way of doing that by clinging onto old technology th
I'm all for exploration too, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
Granted, we're only going to hear about stuff like this after something happens...
However, I'm really wondering why we still spend a crapload of money more or less flying around in circles above the Earth.
How much more can we really learn from the shuttle? Put the money in some other form of space research...
Re:I'm all for exploration too, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
I think that NASA should have probably made sure to be better prepared for repairs to be conducted on the space shuttle. On the other hand, sometimes it takes a catastrophe like this to bring it to the attention of the rest of the
Re:I'm all for exploration too, but... (Score:2)
I work on computers all around the world. But I dont FLY there.
Re:I'm all for exploration too, but... (Score:2)
HST's successor, the JWST, is being launched into an orbit where it cannot be serviced.
Article Text (Score:2, Informative)
The space agency decided in recent weeks that it needed more time to develop systems for detecting and repairing damage to shuttles in orbit, forcing the agency to retreat from plans to launch in March or April.
The space shuttle fleet has been grounded since the Columbia disaster in February in which all seven crew members died. Insulation debris from the external fuel tank has bee
Keeping things in perspective... (Score:4, Insightful)
Go Space Program! (Score:4, Interesting)
Let's see if we can dump some of that massive defense budget and sink that cash into a more active space program. Let's see if we can get to the moon. We already know we can blow up the world pretty good. We don't need to prove that we can, and if the situation actually arose where we needed to unleash our arsenal, then the world would be screwed anyways.
I bet I sound like a naive, idealistic fool...sue me.
Re:Go Space Program! (Score:2)
Re:Go Space Program! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Go Space Program! (Score:5, Interesting)
There's 2 factors that come into play, economics, and political will. Political will is generated by 'the masses', and the economics are generated by political will. The 60's were a wonderful time to grow up as a young boy interested in science and exploration. As a pre-teen i watched the first landing on the moon live, on a black and white tv. Even then, I knew, I was watching one of those historical moments that happens but once in a century.
The environment of the space race in the 60's was brought on by a political will to make it happen. The entire country was focussed on the space program as a point of national pride. It wasn't there to be efficient, it wasn't there to be 'cost justified', it was there so folks could watch with pride, wave the flag, and say 'we are the best'. It worked, and worked well, the focus of the entire country was on research, development, and 'do the impossible'. Nasa was the fledgling young organization tasked with 'do the impossible', and they did it with tremendous pride.
The political will does not exist today. The politics of today are focussed on military expenditures, and doing whatever it takes to contue justifying the existence of the military industrial complex. During the cold war, this wasn't to difficult, the percieved threat was real enough that everybody 'bought in', and life went on happily. Nasa got shovelled aside to play with shuttles, while the real expenditures went into the military.
Today, the achievements of Nasa are viewed by most as 'just a money pit' for tax dollars. National pride is focussed on the military invasions overseas. It will take time, but that tide will shift once again. Folks are already tired of hearing about body counts, and little things like 'we need another 87 billion dollars to keep this up'. it would have been easy to keep the momentum in this area, but, the politicians are finding, they have been called up on statements, and, cant back them with enough facts to convince folks anymore. The population is rapidly losing the political will to continue feeding the military industrial complex now that the price is measured in bodies as well as dollars.
Achievements in space have always been a big point of national pride in the USA, but it's something that is kind of taken for granted today, most americans believe that the USA is still the leader in space development and exploration, and this is something that goes without question, is taken for granted. But, one has to look at a few facts, to check this out carefully, the assumption is no longer valid.
As it sits today, the american space program consists of sending american astronauts to an international space station, riding up and down on soviet hardware. That's not much of a 'leadership' role. Now, look around, the Europeans are flight testing the next generation in space propulsion that is required to do longer range missions. The Chinese are launching rockets on a regular basis, and will have a manned mission in orbit before the year is out. They have a stated goal to reach the moon with a manned mission, while the european flight test hardware is already on it's way to the moon, to validate the new concepts in propulsion.
The ducks are starting to line up for a major shift in the cards of political will. Joe average on the street doesn't even realize that the Chinese are going to be launching people into space imminently. When it happens, it's going to be a wake up call to todays generation, similar to what sputnik was to mine. I dont believe Joe Average is willing to conceed the leadership as a space exploration nation, it's far to big a point of national pride.
It isn't going to happen for 2004, but, the ducks are lining up to create a groundswell of support for a 2008 campaign, one that is prepared to de-emphasize military conquest, and re-emphasize scientific achievement.
Then again, I could
Re:Go Space Program! (Score:3, Interesting)
You are forgetting where all the dollars spent on the space race actually went: into the so-called "military industrial complex". Saying that politics today is all about that is missing the point; the politics of the 1960s were all about that too!
The finish line is a permanent installation on the moon, and a year or two from now, we'll find out if
Re:Go Space Program! (Score:2)
Don't forget that universal healthcare might be on the horizon. I can't wait to wait for three hours to get a check-up by a civil servant with guaranteed job security and a pension who says I don't qualify for treatment XYZ because I don't fit the racial or economic profile alloted by Congress.
Wheeeeeee...thud.
Re:Go Space Program! (Score:2)
Social security is a much larger slice of the pie that could be better spent on technology development. Regardless, it is getting to the time where the private sector can take over. I think Rutan's X-Prize entry is an example of how entrepeneurs can take us forward.
Free Link (Score:2, Informative)
NYT Reg free link (Score:2)
Columbia Accident Investigation Board Report (Score:3, Interesting)
However, I think the CAIB Report [streamos.com] released in August raises some very interesting points that need to be addressed (if they haven't already been). It mostly discusses long-term issues that will only be solved over the long term.
The last thing NASA wants to do is jump into anything to quickly. Let's face it: one more accident resulting in injury/death will destroy NASA's reputions for many, many years to come. Maybe they should elect to take some years off now, watching out for their own future? Let's just hope they've got 100 people thinking about this...and everyone else actually listening to them this time...
Re:Columbia Accident Investigation Board Report (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Columbia Accident Investigation Board Report (Score:2)
extremely limited launch windows (Score:4, Insightful)
Now I certainly want the thing to be as safe as possible, but is anyone else think that the level of acceptable risk has gotten too small? We should make the shuttle as safe as possible, but we shouldn't do this by compromising the shuttle's ability to fulfill its mission. Remember, we now have a space station up there that is going to need lots of maintenance, supplies, and fresh crews if it is going to be able to carry out any of the science work that are ostensibly the reason for its existence. Albatross or windfall, we put the thing up there, now we have to take care of it -- otherwise we've wasted a lot of money and political capital.
Re:extremely limited launch windows (Score:2)
I thought we had non-visible-light cameras by now...perhaps even hundred-dollar camcorders have it already...but what do I know--I don't work for NASA.
I wish I could believe it that easily (Score:5, Insightful)
The same kind of stuff was said after Challenger. Then over the years everyone got complacent again and reverted to the old attitude. Maybe they've learned that lesson now and won't make the same mistake three times. It remains to be seen though.
Re:I wish I could believe it that easily (Score:3, Interesting)
If they make the mistake two more times, then there won't be *any* more problem to worry about.
Re:I wish I could believe it that easily (Score:2)
Re:I wish I could believe it that easily (Score:2)
safer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:safer? (Score:2)
Err...I think they're hiring writers from The Simpsons to work out the new security procedures, so I wouldn't rule out any spontaneous unjustified-yet-massive explosions.
Re:safer? (Score:2)
Well, if the Constitution blew up, would the irony of that situation suprise anyone, given recent Democratic and Republican rule?
Other Changes Needed (Score:3, Insightful)
My best friend's father is actually an engineer at NASA and I would sometimes talk with him about some of the problems there. He said NASA has become too bureaucratic and that the management barely communicates with the engineers or with other managers. He also said that NASA was lacking an atmosphere where innovation would be welcomed and that there was no big goals for them to strive for.
I personally think that NASA either needs to completely recreate itself or it should be replaced with a new organization altogether.
Re:Other Changes Needed (Score:2)
He said NASA has become too bureaucratic and that the management barely communicates with the engineers or with other managers.
Well, there's a shock. Imagine that, a government buracracy, with management problems. Say it isn't so, Pa.
Would we be happy with government made shoes? How about if the government went and made cars. Would you want to ride in D.C. engineering? Why is it that most rational beings agree that when you want a good product,
Re:Other Changes Needed (Score:5, Insightful)
First of all, private industry has been building the space program hardware all along. And they profit from it. Their customer is NASA.
Developing man-rated space hardware is hideously expensive, which is why governments foot the bill. Just like governments foot the bill for building bridges and roads and such. A space program is not like making cars or some other consumer item. It's more like public works.
Space travel is difficult, and the profit from going there is hard to see. If there is any, it will be long-term and after a huge investment. That's why you don't see private corporations avidly going after space programs on their own. As far as I know, nothing is stopping them, other than the fact that there's no good business reason to go there.
Other than commercial satellite launches, wherein private corporation make profits from employing technology derived from years of research and development funded largely by public money.
The idea that all we need to do is "get some profit motive in there" sort of ignores the fact that there is no profit to put there! At least not the kind of profit that shows up within the planning horizons of most any corporation on Earth. How do you propose to get some profit motive in there?
I'm not defending NASA - there are real flaws in the culture there. But invoking the idea that "private enterprise" as some sort of magic incantation that is going to solve every problem is a bit over the top.
That should be *somewhat* stronger and safer (Score:4, Informative)
When the shuttle launches again, the current problems will still remain:
- There is still no viable crew escape system. During launch you theoretically have a chance to abort as long as the emergency doesn't involve the SRBs. In reality though, there is not much you can do. A mid-launch abort is more of a fantasy concocted to make astronauts and the public feel better. Once you're in space, hope that you can either get to the ISS (assuming all your navigational and propulsion systems are working properly), or that there is another shuttle almost ready to go...and you manage to survive the shuttle-to-shuttle transfer.
- Repairing the shuttle is still pretty iffy. NASA developed a substance that can be injected into small breaches in many parts of the shuttle to ensure the craft survives re-entry. Note I said *some* parts. The repair does not work on leading edge of the wing and you couldn't really hope to fix it in orbit even if you happened to have just the right spare part with you. (which is unlikely in of itself)
Repairing the shuttle can actually inflict more harm on the craft. There is a good chance anyone going over the side to look at the heat tiles will actually damage more in the course of the repair.
- The launch systems....mainly the SRBs are still horribly broken technologies that are absolutely not fault-tolerant whatsoever. Hundreds of things usually go wrong with the shuttle during the course of a mission. Little things here and there. If something goes wrong with the SRBs, you will probably die.
Re:That should be *somewhat* stronger and safer (Score:3, Informative)
That would be the case if an untrained spaceperson does that (like those on Columbia). However it is trivial now to establish means for safe inspection, and all astronauts can be trained to use them.
I don't work for NASA, but even I can think of soft rubber shoes and gloves that would allow you to touch the surface w/o damaging it. The spaceman would be weightless, so no stat
Re:That should be *somewhat* stronger and safer (Score:3, Insightful)
I know this is
Re:That should be *somewhat* stronger and safer (Score:2)
Come on, abductions are not politically correct any more; don't give the Venus government the chance to blame Earth again :-)
Anyways, it is most definitely understood that anything involving space is a little bit more difficult than eating a pretzel. In this context (which is presumed to be blatantly obvious to /. readers) it _is_ trivial to equip an astronaut with soft gloves, compared to the much less trivial matter o
Re:That should be *somewhat* stronger and safer (Score:2, Informative)
Spaceflight now (http://www.spaceflightnow.com/shuttle/sts114/031 0 03target/) indicates that there are multiple technical goals for the first return to flight mission: "Mission STS-114, currently assigned to the shuttle Atlantis, will include a robot arm extension and sensors to look for damage to
"trivial" is not in our vocabulary (Score:3, Interesting)
Several points here. First, soft gloves aren't sufficient for handling tiles in bulky spacesuits, these things are too delicate for that. Ie, astronauts shouldn't be
Ok, it shouldn't be a huge deal. (Score:3, Insightful)
...Yeah... (Score:3)
[Looks at a model of the space shuttle, thinks of what animal the shuttle most closely resembles.]
Um... never mind.
Ryan Fenton
Good ol' Nasa (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Good ol' Nasa (Score:3, Insightful)
As matter of fact, China already announced its intentions - to fly to the Moon and beyond. What transpired at NASA? You guessed it. Nothing. As if China does not exist.
On the other hand, NASA does not have resources to do anything even if the challenge is valid and immediate. Imagi
Well, it's one thing to "announce intentions" (Score:2)
Right now they only have "intentions" and NASA is absolutely correct in not reacting to them. NASA has proven time after time they can fly whatever wherever given the right financial resources and prioritization of goals. Will they prove this again?
Re:Good ol' Nasa (Score:2)
I for one welcome the prospect of going to sleep by the light of a Communist moon. :)
Seriously, though - it's the only way we'd ever get people interested enough to do more than keep NASA barely on life support.
Re:Good ol' Nasa (Score:2)
What if China announces the moon sovereign territory? Or has an international treaty already covered this?
Shuttles are unnecessarily complex (Score:4, Insightful)
USSR had a superior shuttle program, "Buran" which got cancelled because of three simple reasons:
1. It was way more expensive than rocket-based space launches (which kinda defeated the purpose of having a reusable spacecraft).
2. It was less reliable than rocket-based stuff.
3. Russians had proven they can build a better shuttle than Americans (Russian shuttle flew its first flight unmanned and landed all by itself) which back then was a big thing.
Here's more info on Buran: http://www.buran.ru/htm/molniya5.htm
Re:Shuttles are unnecessarily complex (Score:4, Interesting)
Energia was the most expensive booster ever built (Score:3, Informative)
At one launch per year (which was a tentative plan) it did not make financial sense to k
Re:Energia was the most expensive booster ever bui (Score:2)
Re:Energia was the most expensive booster ever bui (Score:2)
American space (and military) programs have historically been orders of magnitude more expensive than Russian ones. If we're talking equal prices, for Russians this meant exorbitant costs sucking in the entire space budget.
The high cost of Energia wasnt caused as much by technologies used (
Re:Energia was the most expensive booster ever bui (Score:2)
In the mid eighties Russia was making something like 10 times as many launches as the US (see the graph here [fas.org]), and had accumulated 3 times as much manned time in space. NASA's budget in 1985 was about USD 7B. There is no way Russia was making 10 times the launches on a tenth of NASA's bu
Re:Shuttles are unnecessarily complex (Score:2)
>> got to see the US' attempt with the Space Shuttle
>> before they designed their own.
FYI, that's also why MiG and SU fighters are superior to their american counterparts. They started out as carbon copies but were then improved a lot, because American stuff in its original form didn't cut the mustard.
The newer MiGs and SUs are another story. I've seen an American military pilot's jaw drop when I showed him a video of SU-30 doin
Re:Shuttles are unnecessarily complex (Score:2, Informative)
Stanislaw Lem said... (Score:3, Insightful)
KISS, the more complex it is, the more it will cost. Reentry and horizontal landing cost fortune in development cost, fuel, payload capacity and quite a few other domains. Carrying all the life support space and devices on flights that could be perfectly performed by unmanned devices is plain stupid.
Re:Stanislaw Lem said... (Score:2)
Reminds me of the improbability drive (in HHGG); with an improbability drive, even the most improbable things are very likely to happen as soon you turn it on. (or something to that effect).
Shuttle has no future (Score:5, Interesting)
The Shuttle is only about 99% reliable. In other words, if you fly it 100 times it is pretty much certain to have a fatal failure. We have two Shuttle orbiters left; that's about 200 flights we have left. Maybe less.
My suggestions:
Make sure anyone who flies on the Shuttle is a volunteer. You will get volunteers who want to be in space so badly they are willing to risk a 1% chance of death, so that's okay.
Immediately start finding ways to ship people and supplies to the Space Station without using the Shuttle. Never again use the Shuttle for any mission that could be done by, say, a Russian rocket.
Immediately offer a large, tax-free, cash prize for the first company to put 1000 kilograms in the same orbit as the Space Station, and then do it again within three weeks. Offer another, almost as large prize for the second company to do this. Also offer contracts for delivery of supplies and people to the Space Station.
Something everyone needs to realize: there is no amount of money that anyone could spend that will buy another Shuttle orbiter. They are done. There are two left in the world, and that's all. When those two explode or whatever, there will be none left.
Something else everyone needs to realize: NASA is incapable, as an organization, of building any reasonable system for going to space. If we let NASA build a "Shuttle II", they will first spend billions of dollars, hire many people, and conduct many studies and write many documents. Perhaps even, someday, some hardware might fly. That hardware will be a haywire monstrosity almost as bad as the current Shuttle. Conclusion: don't give any additional money to NASA, and don't ask NASA to design any new spacecraft.
steveha
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2)
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2)
steveha
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2, Interesting)
You know, the original plan for the ISS was to assemble the whole thing on Earth in a collapsible form, strap it to the back of a shuttle booster in place of the shuttle itself and launch the whole thing in one go, unmanned. NASA's engineers thought this was a good idea, Lockheed-Martin's engineers thought this w
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2)
I liked reading your posting, but I'm pretty glad you were not the one teaching me statistics.
This is almost like saying that you are pretty much certain to get a six by throwing the dice six times.
--
Gaute
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2)
If I were teaching statistics I should be very careful how I phrase things -- more careful than in a Slashdot discussion about t
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2)
Actually, the losses were caused by interaction of bad design with programmatic imperatives. The shuttle is too expensive to really justify its operation, so NASA is pushed into operating it in a way that inhibits addressing the safety issues.
This implies another accident of the same general kind is inevitable.
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2)
Since when has NASA been that honest? In the book What Do You Care What Other People Think?, Richard Feynman wrote about his role in the Challenger investigation. I recall his saying that the official NASA estimate was five-nines reliability (99.999% chance of survival) and that to get that number, various sub-systems had estimated reliabilities of seven or eight nines; it appeared to him that they had "co
Re:Shuttle has no future (Score:2)
The important part of the idea is money for results, and no money for no results. With NASA the money is for studies and red tape, more than results. (And I mean modern NASA. NASA in the late 60's was by all accounts a very can-do sort of operation.)
steveha
Good to see (Score:2)
I look forward to seeing what they come up with for a replacement. The suttle design has worked out fairly well as a low earth orbit vehicle. If they can work out the catastrophic bugs, the next generation should be impressive.
I think we need to get back to the moon and create vehicles that are appropriate for moon travel. The where further inovation will gestate.
Re:Good to see (Score:2)
That's the easy part: fire those inept managers that refuse the photo opportunity (Lynda Ham (sp?) in particular seems to be the culprit here, according to the CAIB report)
I hope this is US grammar ... (Score:4, Funny)
"Fall" is a comment on the reliability of the shuttle program, or the US for Autumn?
Re:I hope this is US grammar ... (Score:2)
Shouldn't that be "I hope this is from the US lexicon?" or something along those lines?
But, yes, pairing "next fall" with "shuttle launch" would seem to be... well, wrong.
A sick joke... (Score:4, Insightful)
"We can go there after all the things wrong on Earth are fixed," said Betty Collatrella, a retiree from Caldwell, New Jersey. "I'm totally against any of it. It's a total waste of money we need for our kids, for illnesses, could put somebody's kids through college, could cure so many diseases."
And why don't we cure injustice and human suffering first as well? Bleh. We have heard those arguments for decades, but they scare the ever living hell out of me... What's the good of sending kids to college if we stagnate here doing nothing? What good is one more .com founding MBA if the taxes they pay aren't going towards something other than money for more kids to go to college and start more .coms?
Enthusiasm for the program of space exploration was greater among younger adults, those with more education and those with higher incomes. Whites were more likely than blacks and men were more likely than women to think the shuttle should continue to fly.
Let's all just stay home and knit sweaters. Liberal women and their damn social welfare concerns.
More than half, 56 percent, said they believe civilians should be allowed to participate in shuttle missions, while 38 percent said they should not.
This makes no sense to me... Should we send soldiers off into space against their will, or should we ask for volunteers? I think astronauts understand the risks involved pretty well. This article concerns me because the polls show ignorance and lack of ambition. There are also priceless lines like this:
"I think it's all bogus," said Claudette Davidson of Jonesboro, Georgia, who does accounting work for physicians. "I just do not believe they've gone to the moon. I saw Capricorn One," she said, referring to a 1978 movie that featured O.J. Simpson and included a faked trip to Mars. "That did it for me."
My head was about to explode after reading that.
Well, Claudette, do you believe in alien abductions? Maybe the extensive education necessary to perform your job doing 'accounting work for physicians' gives you a unique insight into the veracity of the government's claims regarding the space program. I've got to say, though, that I've seen Catch Me if You Can, and I feel fairly certain that your employer is not only a con artist, but that he is in fact Leonardo DiCaprio.
It's too bad that people like Claudette get to vote.
So the government isn't going to get us to Mars as long as people like Claudette and Betty have any choice in the matter. What we need is a private venture to take us there(see the X Prize) or a good scare provided by the Chinese (see the 100 Day Countdown until China puts a man in space, which may or may not be on hold or on target, I haven't checked) to jumpstart the government program. China is already talking of a moon base. Would that be enough to wake the government up?
Probably not. Claudette wouldn't believe that they had actually gotten there.
Re:A sick joke... (Score:2)
Yea, right - find a person who has no clue about anything, and ask her "a question of cosmic proportions", to cite Prof. Preobrazhensky [lib.ru]... I bet she also has a fully formed opinion about usefulness of synchrotrons, and is ready to advise humanity on how useless tensors [wolfram.com] are (since she can't buy them at Wal-Mart.)
These people are flatlanders - always were, and always will be. People
But in reality the reitrees are right (Score:2)
Nanotech. Quantum computing. Genomics. Protein research. All of which stand to pay out much higher dividends for humanity and frankly have nothing to do with space research. All manned spaceflight has really taught us is that space is inherently t
Re:But in reality the reitrees are right (Score:2)
For example, microgravity is useful in growing crystals for computing (allows extremely large samples of perfectly aligned atoms), and protein research (allows for protein folding that can't be done on earth because of gravity))
Research before you post !
Re:A sick joke... (Score:3, Interesting)
Betty hasn't heard about our sun [cornell.edu]. And yes, that means I believe we'll never solve every problem everybody has on Earth to the satisfaction of everybody. Until that condition is fulfilled, Betty's argument stands.
I think J. Michael Straczynski said it best:
Meanwhile, Concorde goes out of service (Score:4, Interesting)
Just as with the Shuttle, a fatal (and much more lethal -113 people were killed) crash occurred as the result of a known weakness - easy projectile rupturing of fuel tanks.
Despite attempts to bring it back, the thing is finally going out of service. It's old technology, and it is always expensive to maintain small volume old technologies. Of course, there is no replacement supersonic passenger air travel. But it hardly matters. Long haul flight is now cheaper and more fuel efficient than ever before for "normal" passengers, and the thing that did not exist when Concorde was first built - efficient video conferencing and around the world networking - is now commonplace for urgent communications.
I think the analogy is worth pushing. Why is the Shuttle needed? The Russians have shown that bread and butter manned flight can be done relatively cheaply and more reliably with non-reusable rockets. The things that didn't exist when the Shuttle was first launched - really sophisticated, small robotics systems - are now commonplace.Eyes, ears and other sensors can be put on other solar system bodies using increasingly sophisticated remote robots. The development of miniaturised electronics and ion drives gives the enabling technologies for really interesting long range missions that would not be possible in manned versions for many years to come. So why keep the Shuttle flying at vast expense rather than do something new? Inertia?
putting people in space (Score:2)
Re:putting people in space (Score:2)
Re:Meanwhile, Concorde goes out of service (Score:2)
More cheaply, yes, kinda. For your lowered price you also get vastly lowered capacity. (You are comparing the cost of 747 to a Piper Cub, but ignoring the difference in capability and flexibility.)
More reliably? If anything, the Soyuz is *less* reliable than the Shuttle. The Shuttle has two LOCV (loss of crew and vehicle) incidents and one partial mission loss in 113
yep (Score:2)
Amusingly, all soyuz capsules come with sawed off shotguns. Why? The russians had problems with them going off course and landing in the woods and one crew found itself staring down hungry wolves while they waited for a rescue team.
Re:Meanwhile, Concorde goes out of service (Score:2)
Handwaving away a major systems failure 'because the backup worked'[1] is what killed Challenger. Handwaving away a major systems failure 'because the damage wasn't too bad'[2] is what killed Columbia.
[1]The primary O-ring nearly failed and the ba
spam in a can (Score:2)
NASA escapes full-fledged revamping (again) (Score:2)
NASA will go back to building the ISS - aside from Star Wars in the 80s, the largest transfer of public money to a military contractor in history. Who knows, maybe missile defense will end up being a bigger boondoggle, but right now ISS is the white elephant to beat. Just what is NASA doing up there? The crew has only one job really - janitor/su
Will we ever hear Birdsong in sp (Score:2)
[Birdsong = Fuglesang = family name of Scandinavian astronaut whose space trip has been postponed three times for various reasons]
Not particularly surprising... (Score:2)
That would take years... and they certainly don't want to rely on Russia (or anyone) for that long.
Soyuz safes money and lifes! (Score:2)
Re:Soyuz safes money and lifes! (Score:2)
And why exactly it's too bad? IMHO it's good for russians to specialize on a technology, where they have all benefits of the strongest aero-space engineering education all over the world (many people even in North America would be agree with me) while still pretty low prices for labour ($300/month - where else for the same quality?). As for a launchpad? It doesn't
Re:perseverence (Score:2, Insightful)
The shuttles use 486DX66 processors in their flight control systems. Actually, they use 4 processors which each perform the same calculations and then submit the results to a fifth processor. This processor then takes the (hopefully identical) results and control the shuttle in whatever it is doing. The reason for this is that any potential damage