Discovery Set to Launch July 13 161
An anonymous reader writes "The US space shuttle is set to launch July 13 for the first time in nearly two and a half years, after being grounded following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA said today. NASA experts held a final 'flight readiness review' meeting on Wednesday and Thursday to make a final decision."
whaa? (Score:4, Interesting)
I mean granted, I'm sure they know what they are doing but what happens if we lose Discovery too? We haven't launched in over two years due to Columbia blowing up and I can't even imagine what would happen to the space program if we lost Discovery. Even more so if it is because of one of the failed safety checks.
From my link:
The panel said that NASA had failed to satisfactorily eliminate losses of foam and ice from the shuttle's external fuel tank. Additionally, the agency could not adequately strengthen areas of the spacecraft that are at risk of being damaged by the impact of stray debris. The astronauts who are a part of the return to flight mission did not have reliable repair kits, the panel pointed out.
Re:whaa? (Score:5, Insightful)
The space business is a dangerous game and everyone used to accepted that. This was when astronauts were larger than life Supermen rather than scientists. I just want to know when the threat of death became an unacceptable risk for exploration.
Re:whaa? (Score:4, Insightful)
One aspect of the recent tragedy was that those astronauts died on nothing more than a glorified taxi run. Their mission contributed nothing to science, it had no scientific reason to take place
The sooner we re-focus on real exploration in space the better, and we can do it without the shuttle or the money pit that is the ISS.
NASA needs to stop wasting money and get on with unmanned exploration of Mars, Europa and elsewhere, replace Hubble, and launch the terrestrial planet finder. All these projects are being pushed back to make way for this current fad of unscientific garbage that explores NOTHING.
Re:whaa? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:whaa? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:whaa? (Score:1)
Face it, most of life is boringly routine, including spaceflight. Not everything has to be about doing bold exploration in to the unknown.
Re:whaa? (Score:1)
If somebody's going to perform a useless boring routine, I'd prefer that the government not waste half a billion dollars of the taxpayers' money subsidizing it.
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
But going with your half billion, well, the rather mundane intersection between a 4 lane street and a I-880 by me is costing 96 million, so for your half billion you can have a space shuttle that does some interesting stuff, or about 5 intersection that are very boring, used by lots of people doing pointless tri
Re:whaa? (Score:1)
That compares favorably on a value-per-dollar basis to a two-week ant farming expedition for 7 overachieving geeks.
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
NASA and Star Trek have badly mislead generations into believing that unless it isn't Boldly Going - it isn't exploration.
How can you say it is safer Safer? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:How can you say it is safer Safer? (Score:1)
Re:How can you say it is safer Safer? (Score:2, Insightful)
More people have died, but the shuttle program has lasted much, much longer than any of the previous programs and has flown many more times than all the other manned missions combined.
So (# deaths)/(length of program) is lower, and (# deaths)/(# flights) is lower, thus making it safer on average than any of the previous projects.
Re:whaa? (Score:1)
Ask the NHSTA what the automobile death rate is.
The astronauts still realize the risk. I believe it is an off-shoot of our 'everyone-has-to-blame-everyone' society.
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
Unfortunatly the rest would be unkown. Some say that the stress on the airframe would break it up, some say that you might get away with it.
If they do, they then have three options. Limp into space and return on a planned re-entry, do a total abort (i.e also jettson the main external tank), and try land, or do a total abo
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
When your launch costs $200 million in hardware costs alone, nevermind another $300+ million in refurbishment costs, you don't deliberately "test" abort methods...
But I can only imagine why booster separation would be a bad thing, and that's that the boosters would scream right by the orbiter, baki
Re:whaa? (Score:2, Insightful)
The chance of dying on the space shuttle is basically 2 out of 113 based on past history. The percentage of US troops in Iraq that have died is around 1% (1700 out of 170,000 or something like that).
Of course no one has ever died on any of the unmanned interplanetary missions. Maybe the lesson is that we should be doing more of those. What Iraq and the Shuttle have in common is they are BOTH horribly expensive, deadly, wastes of money. At lea
Re:whaa? (Score:2)
The Democrats made noise about a draft to hurt the Republicans.
NO ONE WANTS A DRAFT, EXCEPT THOSE WHO ARE DAFT.
Also is the 170,000 the number of troops currently there or who had ever served in Iraq. You should use the second, higher number to calculate the risk.
I'd feel safer in Iraq myself. Heck, Baghdad is safer than many parts of some U.S. cities.
Re:whaa? (Score:1)
Re: whaa? (Score:3, Insightful)
> I mean granted, I'm sure they know what they are doing but what happens if we lose Discovery too?
It would surely mean the end of our manned space program.
It might well mean the end of our entire space program, since it looks like the unfunded Mars mission serves no purpose other than to kill our unmanned space program.
Don't want any risk? (Score:1)
Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:2)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:2)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:2)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:2)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:2)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:2)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:4, Interesting)
In orbit, this attaches to the end of the Canadarm and is able to inspect the entire surface.
They have a rather cool animated walkthrough and some images here [mdrobotics.ca].
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:1)
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:1)
Haha. I almost thought you were serious for a moment.
Oh wait...
The second round into the same hole... (Score:2)
Re:The second round into the same hole... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The second round into the same hole... (Score:1)
When did the
Re:The second round into the same hole... (Score:2)
To say that the only useful thing we learned from Challenger is that everything should be inspected more thoroughly on the ground before launch is missing the point. Perhaps the most illuminating writing on that particular incident came from Richard Feynman in his appendix to the Rogers Commission report [nasa.gov], where he noted that NASA already knew about the problem of ring erosion from inspections perform
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:3, Informative)
It appears that they have a new model AERcam [nasa.gov] in development for use on ISS and shuttle inspections though.
Re:Please tell me they at least have the ability (Score:2)
Re:$800!?!??! (Score:2)
2. The thrusters can do this job relatively well, IF you have a high enough resolution camera so that when it's far enough away you can still get a good enough digital picture back to get the whole bottom of the orbiter.
3. Camera and optics is the cheap part- an 8 megap
Re:$800!?!??! (Score:2)
oh no! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:oh no! (Score:2)
Re:oh no! (Score:1)
It's a darn good thing that this shuttle flight is STS-114, and not STS-113,. .
Re:oh no! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:oh no! (Score:2)
Either that, or the guys and girls at NASA just don't believe in all that superstitious stuff.
Being full of astronomers and mathematicians instead of astrologists and numerologists, I would guess that the latter is the case.
My memories (Score:5, Insightful)
My dad is gone now, and I'm not sure what he would think about things now. I think he would be sad. We have angered countries, lost landmarks and shuttles have fallen. I would not want him to know these things, and I bear them now in his memory, but maybe, just maybe, we can regain our standing as a nation and in space....
Re:My memories (Score:1, Flamebait)
A. It launches
B. it land safely
and stop the week by week coverage of the pathetic bureaucracy that is today's Shuttle program.
If you want to salvage your faith in American ingenuity and space farering try to catch the Discovery documentary Black Sky: The Race for Space [discovery.com] and its sequel,
Re:My memories (Score:1)
Compare that to a continual human presence in space for almost 5 years.
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Scaled Composites = 3 if I remember correctly
NASA = 0 of this I am sure
Record for fatal accidents in the last 3 years:
Scaled composites = 0
NASA = 1
How much did NASA spend on manned space flight over this period? Not sure anyone knows but its probably like $10-20 billion, Scaled composites spent like $20-30 million.
Who broke the 40 year old altitude record for a
Re:My memories (Score:1)
Yes, we lost seven dear friends.
Comparing scaled $ to NASA $ is like comparing tonka trucks to semis.
Yes, 40 years after the X-15, burt and crew are catching up.
I'm sure scaled has lots of things "on the drawing board" -- and guess what -- they are now begging for NASA funds....
Yes, the Russians are part of the ISS, but if you think they are solely responsible for the last 5 years, you haven't a clue. The Russians would still be flying in i
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Such arrogance, you must work for NASA? Those are my god damn tax dollars your wasting buddy, feeding your ego and not doing much else worthwhile with 'em.
"they are now begging for NASA funds...."
Really how so Thats OK with me though, NASA sure can't do anything useful with my tax dollars I would rather they gave it to Burt than waste it on their welfare program in Florida and Texas.
I know Scaled was going to bid CEV with T/Space b
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Burt Rutan is cool and all, but as far as inexpensive commercial orbital spaceflight goes, I suspect Elon Musk's SpaceX [spacex.com] is going to be first. They've already announced their intent to compete for America's Space Prize.
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Re:My memories (Score:2)
You have to be careful there. A big part of the reason Burt Rutan did so well with so little is because he was operating in a competitive atmosphere with a funding source that he was directly accountable to. If you just give him billion dollar cost-plus gover
Re:My memories (Score:2)
"I guarantee that in a matter of years his organization will be just as inefficient and bloated as that of the traditional aerospace companies."
I doubt it, its contrary to his nature to go down that path. He likes building air and space craft for the sheer love of it and not because its a welfare check. He hates bureaucracy to the root of his bei
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Bullshit. Zarya and Zvezda are the core of the station. The ISS was habitable when they were there along with Unity. America's module Destiny is a lab module, I dont think it is self sufficient.
The key point is the station was operational when Zarya and Zvezda were there and could be again. I don't remember how essential Unity is though I'm sure its handy. Its a simple docking module its not a major achievement.
"If you undocked all the US par
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Nice
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Oops, forgot this one, NASA's manned space program has been "down" since the early 70's, if we have to wait until the are "up" to kick them then by definiton we will never be able to kick them.
Please note I am carefuly applying all this venom only to NASA's MANNED SPACE PROGRAM. Other parts of the agency do some great work, especially JPL, the great observatory teams, earth monitoring, aeronautics sometimes, etc.
Its just the manned space prog
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Rule No. 3
The number of people having any connection with the project must be restricted in an almost vicious manner. Use a small number of good people (10 percent to 25 percent compared to the so-called normal systems).
Adding an army of mediocre warm bodies leads to spiraling costs, and makes schedule slips happen instead of
Re:My memories (Score:2)
We have angered countries
Hang on just one minute... why is that wrong? Perhaps its those very countries that are the problem and not America. If you do the right thing and make people angry, is that wrong?
Re:My memories (Score:2)
I was born in 1979. I don't have any memories of the space program being a big grandiose symbol of just how great the United States is.
My first reasonably clear memory of the space program is the day Challenger exploded.
I think that the only memorable (to non-sciency-types) thing NASA's manned spaceflight program has accomplished in the last 20 years is the loss of two shuttle crews probably says something.
Re:My memories (Score:2)
I'm no biologist, but believe that this is frequently the case.
An admirably holistic approach to life... if enough things impressed you enough to become everything to you, pretty soon *everything* will be everything for you. I recommend reading something about Buddhism [wikipedia.org]. Seriously.
Re:My memories (Score:1, Offtopic)
Being right and popular rarely go together.
The invasion has eliminated a tyrant and there is no occupation...
Terrorists are confined and treated better than they deserve...
How do you put a price on freedom and our children's security...
Our country still has the power to explore the heavens with what once was a mortal enemy...
If you can't
Re:My memories (Score:2)
Freedom is slavery.
We have always been at war with Iraq.
There is no occupation.
13th (Score:2)
Wednesday the 13th (Score:5, Funny)
So they decided to go surfing for a week before, to beat the crowds.
Re:13th (Score:1)
Re:13th (Score:2, Funny)
Thank goodness for that. Everyone knows it's bad luck to be superstitious!
Famous Last Words (Score:2)
"We honestly believe this is the cleanest flight we have ever done. The only other flight that will be cleaner is the next flight," he added.
SWEET (Score:1)
Re:SWEET (Score:1)
When is it set to "land" ? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Meanwhile... (Score:4, Interesting)
...more immediately and IMO more interestingly, Deep Impact [wikipedia.org] is going to do its stuff in about 4 days.
Quite odd (Score:2, Insightful)
Yet less than a week later, the same news networks were saying that a major commission had concluded that NASA infact hadn't met their targets, lumped with a whole lot of criticism of the space agency as a whole, too.
But as this topic confirms the launch will go ahead apparantly regardless of what this commission found?
Re:Quite odd (Score:2, Informative)
No Guts, No Glory? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No Guts, No Glory? (Score:2)
It's one thing entirely to know that something unknown might go wrong and you may die. It's quite another to know that what went wrong last time wasn't fixed.
I count the former to be an acceptable risk, given the care NASA usually takes and their track record. The latter, I really must concede. They should fix the problems better.
Re:No Guts, No Glory? (Score:1)
Unless we have some futuristic sheilding technology, things hitting the shuttle hard and damaging it are going to happen. By your logic, because we don't have the sheilding technology (or the capability to repair the shuttle in space) then we should just wait around until someone invents these things before returning to space.
Re:No Guts, No Glory? (Score:1)
Not Friday The 13th... (Score:2)
Possible Problem (Score:1)
Re:Possible Problem (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Possible Problem (Score:2, Funny)
That gives me an idea for a sure-fire space program that will enjoy the full support of the American public:
Create two teams each comprised of a combination of rocket scientists and washed-up hollywood celebrities. Pit them against each other in a battle to create the next manned space launch system. Each team is given a workshop, a silo full of
Reality TV In Outer Space (Score:2)
Create two teams each comprised of a combination of rocket scientists and washed-up hollywood celebrities. Pit them against each other in a battle to create the next manned space launch system. . .
Not quite what I was expecting, which is: "Who will be voted out the airlock THIS week?!?!?!"
Greeeeaaaat (Score:3, Interesting)
A hundred probes a year? A thousand, if we mass produced them?
I hate NASA and the culture of "we must put people in space no matter how wasteful and useless it is."
Re:Greeeeaaaat (Score:3, Informative)
What features that are currently technically feasable (at any cost) would you put
Re:Greeeeaaaat (Score:2)
Only one feature is needed: Modularity.
You design a general probe with all the things that wouldn't generally change (e.g., communication, power, etc), and you make the sensors "modules" that can be plugged into it.
Where would you send them?
If you can't think of anything to see, get out of the way of people who can. There are ENDLESS experiments
Re:Greeeeaaaat (Score:2)
You've forgotten the law of government spending. If you don't spend the big bucks on what the public or congressmen wants to see (even if it's wasteful and has low benefit), you lose all funding for all projects.
If you don't spend X Million with contractor Y for project Z, you also don't spend X thousand on project A
Re:Greeeeaaaat (Score:2)
Taking Bets (Score:2)
Schedule of the heavens: July (Score:2)
July 15: Temple 1 hits shuttle
Yea! My Birthday! (Score:2)
1-800-KSC-INFO (Score:4, Informative)
If you call you'll hear in the first 10 seconds of the recorded message that the launch is currently targeted for July 13th. The message said the same as last time I checked a week or two ago.
Definately a handy number to have
1-800-KSC-INFO for anyone that didn't see the subject.
NASA and Commercial Space Transportation (Score:3, Interesting)
At a recent talk, Michael Griffin outlined NASA's plans [space.com] for helping to generate a robust and competitive commercial market in orbital spaceflight. The speech [spaceref.com] and Q&A [spaceref.com] transcripts from the talk are available. In a move reminiscent of the US government kickstarting the early airline industry by purchasing airmail services, NASA plans on purchasing cargo delivery services to the International Space Station from commercial providers, followed by crew transportation after the systems have proven themselves. Unlike traditional government contracts, sellers wouldn't see a profit before the services are delivered and the emphasis will be on actual performance instead of process and specifications. Non-traditional space companies such as SpaceX and t/Space have found Griffin's remarks encouraging, and Aviation Week has some commentary [ecnext.com].
Re:The shuttle (Score:1)
Raise the deflector shields, or cover the shuttle with inanimate carbon rods?
Re:Apollo 13 wasn't so bad (Score:3, Informative)
Re:100% (Score:2)
Bad luck for you, I guess. I would think the "I would go no matter what the risks are" lunatics are among the first to be kicked out during recruitment tests :-).
Re:100% (Score:2)