NASA Will Man Destruct Switch Just In Case 196
Ant writes "Popular Mechanics reports if the looming Discovery mission or any other between now and the spacecraft's retirement loses control, National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is prepared to ditch it in the Atlantic ocean — or blow it up. The article also shows complete no-fly-zone maps and a photograph of the switch."
Four Buttons? (Score:5, Funny)
I know, I know
Re:Four Buttons? (Score:5, Informative)
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All the more reason to use Test and Safe. Keeping a detonation system active on rockets that fall into the ocean [wikipedia.org] seems dangerous to fish and c^Hships (though a well-planned early detonation could allay risks if the boosters fall towards land or the aforementioned ships).
Sometimes you just have to blow 'em up on the way down, I guess.
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Re:Four Buttons? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Four Buttons? (Score:5, Funny)
Best use a time window, to allow for differences in 'local time' (a relative notion for space operations)
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That's like not running an emergency room on April 1st because a doctor might decide it is funny to cut a patients head off.
While I agree it wouldn't be funny, you picked a poor comparison because you can't choose when to have an emergency. I wouldn't put anything important on April 1st if it could be avoided, because people are all sorts of distracted making pranks, being subject to pranks, reading about other pranks and in general not focusing as well as they normally would. So no, I wouldn't hold a launch on April 1st.
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Re:Four Buttons? (Score:4, Funny)
They tried that... Not aesthetically pleasing.
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The solution is even simpler, it just adds a resistor in the circuit so that the current flowing through the detonators are below ignition current.
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Re:Four Buttons? (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Four Buttons? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Four (Identical) Buttons (and Switches)? (Score:4, Insightful)
I would just want to minimize as much as possible the chance that the destruct switch was accidentally activated if things got really hairy and fast moving and the range officer had to be prepared to blow the thing up.
I know they toggles have the red guards on them so the officer would have to flip it up before actuating, and from the article it appears to be a two-step process (arm then destruct), but four identical switches next to each other for such a critical function just seems a bit risky to me. I think I might even make it a two-person job where the 2nd could destruct only after the first armed.
But then I realize that by delaying the destruction, many more lives could be put in danger if the assembly was headed over populated areas. Still, four identical switches and buttons right next to each other, with such dissimilar functions seems a bit risky to me.
Button design... (Score:2)
Slashdot Translation (Score:5, Funny)
Test: ping
Arm: login root
Destruct: rm / -rf
Safe: logout
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CC.
Re:Four Buttons? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Four Buttons? (Score:5, Funny)
That button is for mission controllers that wanted to be astronauts but didn't make the cut. It blows up just one astronaut, but leaves the shuttle flying. Correct procedure when using this button is to laugh maniacally then yell "Who wants to be an astronaut now, bitch!" before flicking the switch.
photograph (Score:5, Funny)
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That tells me that somebody looked at the Space Shuttle self destruct buttons and said, "You know this 'test' button looks alot like the 'destruct' button. We should probably do something about that."
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More likely they put that piece of paper there so that people looking at the photograph would know what they're seeing. If you look closely, each of the individual buttons is clearly labelled with glowing text - it's j
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Oh, we can argue from now until doomsday about this switch and that switch (and probably will knowing this crowd) but in the end it is THAT switch.
It is a cool pic. At least it is not a button on a screen that could tell us "The application destroy shuttle has unexpectedly quit"
qz
Not news (Score:5, Informative)
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The correct answer to this is, of course: "Disgust. I would have got ten times the amount from the thirty life-insurance policies I took out if she'd been hit by the truck the assassin was driving."
Re:Not news (Score:5, Funny)
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Unfortunately, the Shuttle couldn't be equipped with such a device. For the two-minute period the SRBs are lit, a Shuttle launch cannot be aborted without destroying the vehicle.
I hope their communication channels are secure (Score:5, Interesting)
...would be pretty nasty if someone if someone figured out how the radio comms for this function worked.
Encoded Signals (Score:5, Insightful)
From the description in the document, it sounds like one coded signal to 'arm' and a second coded signal to 'fire'. I'd bet that due to the nature of the system, it's transmission method will be so simple that it rarely needs to be tested and as such gives little opportunity for homicidal black-hat analysis.
Finally, I'll also bet that the codes are as top-secret as to-secret can be (as in: Get caught with this and you'll disappear forever). It wouldn't surprise me if the codes are created and handled by just one person on the day of use and never used again. Or perhaps two people where only one person knows the arm code and the other the fire code before the system is finally set.
However it's done, I'd like to think that a hell of a lot of thought went into system security
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Well, there are only ten more Shuttle flights to go now (assuming they don't lose another vehicle.)
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Re:Encoded Signals (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm sure the codes are tightly controlled. It's really not hard to design a very secure system, when it only needs to send one message, and that very rarely. An arbitrarily long, purely random key generated and distributed to the transmitter and receiver under tight security would do it. Denial-of-service would be a more difficult problem to address, but then jamming the signals isn't exactly easy when you're competing with some fairly high-power transmitters on high-gain dishes aimed right at the receiver. And they've got RF measurement vans that I assume patrol for interfering signals, malicious or otherwise.
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Except we didn't end up shooting Von Braun (though the British wouldn't have minded, since he invented the V-missiles) -- we hired him and made him head of NASA :)
-b.
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destruct switches _should_ look like that. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Actually, before I saw the picture, I'd pictured it as something like a missile launch panel. Two keys, far enough apart to not be operable by one person, and both people have to turn the key to execute the action.
-b.
Already been used (Score:5, Informative)
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Sounds Familiar... (Score:3, Informative)
"Warp core overload initiated"
That's how they should do it...
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Bender: Hey, thanks, Takei, now everybody knows!
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Supposedly, the arming codes for US nukes were set to 00000000 for a long time...
What a kewl job (Score:2)
It's the job I want.
Re:What a kewl job (Score:4, Informative)
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Executioners often do their task repeatedly. Some countries even had what were basically family dynasties of executioners. It supposedly takes considerable skill to chop off a head, hang someone, or run an electric chair.
-b.
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It's the job I want.
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As if this is new.. (Score:4, Informative)
Ya, Right..... (Score:2)
More then one (Score:3, Interesting)
Two reasons for this come to mind, 1) The obvious not having to 'know' you were the only one who flipped the kill switch on people, and, 2) the effect of thinking it's only a one in some number chance it's really you flipping the kill switch means a faster response time (less emotional hesitation to interfere).
For all I know they do this already... it seems like a reasonable idea to me anyway.
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There are two guys on each launch. Plus there are several support guys who are also trained or in training Mission Flight Control Officers (MFCO). RSO is just the term NASA calls them. Besides manned missions, they work every unmanned mission at the Cape. While they do discuss whether or not to take out a launch before doing so, when necessary, it only takes one to activate the destruct system and both are capable. The same system and controls are in use for both manned and unmanned launches.
These fol
Other abort modes! (Score:5, Informative)
The Solid Rocket Boosters can't be stopped once they are started, but they have their own navigation system (rate gyro assemblies, and inertial measurement units) that are considered as/more reliable as those on the orbiter due to the rigidity of the SRBs. So the reason this "self destruct" button exists is because there is no "off" button for the SRBs, but, as far as I know, it is only an issue if its quad-redundant navigation system fails and somehow its thrust gets stuck in an unsafe vector, and that is very unlikely.
More detail, including why you can't jettison the flight deck with all the crewmembers: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle_abort_modes [wikipedia.org]
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Research of pictures confirms assumptions. (Score:2)
One of them is even marked "KABOOOM".
BZ Popular Mechanics... (Score:2)
Technical details (Score:5, Informative)
They Dont Call It (Score:2)
Retired astronaut Mike Mullane talked about this.. (Score:4, Informative)
In Mullane's book, he questions the the mindset of the NASA engineer who thought it a good idea to have the RSS system light an indicator lamp in the shuttle cockpit, giving the astronauts a second or 2 of notice (with no way to intervene) before the charges go off.
He also relates an amusing story of a fellow astronaut making obscene comments about the RSO's mother over the Air/Ground link as they sat on the pad waiting out a launch hold.
Re:People inside? (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, they are. They always have. *Every* NASA rocket launch includes a self-destruct to prevent ground casualties. This includes the manned missions. In such cases where it would be used, the crew is either dead or will unavoidably be dead very shortly, and the lives on the ground must be saved.
Re:People inside? (Score:5, Informative)
And if you need an example of why those destruct systems are required, watch this [youtube.com].
I've met at least one of the Range Safety Officers while working out at Cape Canaveral. It's not something they like to talk about much, when it comes to the Shuttle.
Re:People inside? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Space Shuttle Discovery (Score:4, Interesting)
As the parent said, remote destruct capabilities are simply par for the course when your strapping things to that much explosives and toxic chemicals. Really it should make us feel safer that NASA is honest about the risks and is willing to do what it needs to do to insure (as best as possible) public safety.
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At least it has been useful to launch a lot of various heavy items during it's time, among them the Hubble telescope. I don't know if there have been much military use in reality of that large cargo space, and I suppose that is has been a lot of waste since most military satellites has been a lot smaller
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http://slashdot.org/help [slashdot.org]
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Unlikely to be survivable, IMHO. The boosters can't be just switched off without blowing them up, and if they're "disconnected", they'll more likely than not veer into the Shuttle and kill the crew anyway. Worth a try, probably, but it's unlikely to affect the final outcome, unfortunately. Having said this, using solid rockets to launch humans is stupid. Go with solid-liquid rocket
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Columbia broke up on reentry due to a hole in the edge of the wing caused by a piece of the insulating foam from the external tank.
This does not stand up to examination.