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NASA United States Science

NASA Again Delays Launch of Troubled Webb Telescope (nytimes.com) 108

In a blow to NASA's prestige and its budget, America's next great space telescope has been postponed again. From a report: NASA announced on Wednesday that the James Webb Space Telescope, once scheduled to be launched into orbit around the sun this fall, will take three more years and another billion dollars to complete. A report delivered to NASA by an independent review board estimated that the cost of the troubled Webb telescope would now be $9.66 billion, and that it would not be ready to launch until March 30, 2021.
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NASA Again Delays Launch of Troubled Webb Telescope

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  • LOL. In fact, LOLOLOLOLOLOL.

    It was supposed to launch 11 years ago and cost less than $1Bn.

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2018 @01:39PM (#56855078)

    ... the cost of the troubled Webb telescope would now be $9.66 billion.

    Getting close to the $13 billion cost of the latest US aircraft carrier, USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) [marketwatch.com] and twice as much as the earlier Nimitz class [wikipedia.org] aircraft carriers at $4.5 billion each. AND I imagine the flight-deck on the Webb will be*much* shorter.

    I know they're apples and nuclear-powered oranges, but damn. The Hubble Space Telescope [wikipedia.org] only cost $4.7 billion by the time it launched.

    • by hipp5 ( 1635263 )

      I know they're apples and nuclear-powered oranges, but damn. The Hubble Space Telescope [wikipedia.org] only cost $4.7 billion by the time it launched.

      If those are 1990 dollars then Hubble actually cost around $9 billion in today's dollars. Though to be fair, I'm not sure if all of those 9.66 billion JWST dollars are in 2018 dollars.

      • Also, JWST is WAY more capable that Hubble. It is like comparing apples to watermelons.

        • The political problem with JWST's cost is that it might offer lots of things Hubble can't do, but unfortunately, JWST is more of a *complement* to Hubble than a literal *replacement* for it. When Hubble finally goes kaput, it'll be a loss for generations since there isn't even a true replacement on the table despite its official EOL approaching within a decade or so.

          We can only cross our fingers & hope that when the time comes, SpaceX will be in a position to step up to the plate & drag NASA kicking

      • by Teun ( 17872 )
        It is realy hard to cost such a project ahead of completion.
        Especially when it takes so long, technology is rapidly improving and they must have changed to newer camera's etc. since the first design.
        Just look at the technical and price development of an iPhone over this same period and you realise this increase is nothing special.

        Unless you want to launch 9 year old tech...
      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        If those are 1990 dollars then Hubble actually cost around $9 billion in today's dollars.

        Does that include the $1B or so it cost to fix Hubble? You have to remember when they launched Hubble, the mirror distorted a tiny amount causing it to produce blurry images (basically the mirror was distorted by less than the thickness of a sheet of paper).

        Hubble was the great white elephant that threatened science in the early years until they fixed it.

    • by Strider- ( 39683 )

      Yeah, but at least the JWST is useful.

    • Wow - i never considered comparing the astronomical (heh!) prices of space missions with the ridiculous prices the military sometimes pays! Thanks!
      Is there any way to see a detailed expenditure report of the Webb? Because that really is a truckfull of money.
  • Again? (Score:2, Funny)

    Why don't they take my recommendation and build a space factory and use that to build the telescope? They could mine asteroids to get the raw material. That would save us from having to build it on Earth and deliver it to space. It would already be there! We could then reassign those factories to build other useful things.
    • The cost of setting up a "space factory" would be orders of magnitude more than anything like this, especially because there are so many critical components which are extremely difficult to make. The primary cost of Webb isn't at all getting the material up there, it is getting very novel components to actually work and be engineered correctly. In general, space telescopes are still a pretty new thing, and the JWT is substantially larger than prior space telescopes. We're still learning a lot about how to m
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        No, I have it all worked out on my blog. It would work.
      • The cost of setting up a "space factory" would be orders of magnitude more than anything like this...

        You're also forgetting that such an endeavor would make it difficult for a politician to channel funds to his/her home district, thus they have no incentive to even consider it even if the other challenges were removed.

        Follow the money. Always follow the money. When billions of dollars are being flung about like they're pocket change you can bet decisions are driven by whose pockets are being lined instead of what actually makes sense for the project.

  • Another year (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Tailhook ( 98486 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2018 @01:54PM (#56855174)

    It was only four months ago [slashdot.org] that they kicked JWST out to 2020. SLS got delayed to 2019 and is now being audited by the OIG; expect that report to be another shit show, followed by another delay to 2020.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Ridiculous. And SpaceX has been regularly delivering reusable rockets and landing them again. Private business is obviously superior.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        SpaceX was able to deliver the Falcon 9 and Heavy, the world's most advanced orbital rockets, in less time than NASA has spent on the SLS and with the chump change NASA paid them to develop them. NASA of course would be incapable of doing the same with that same money, the SLS proves it. They really should get out of the rocket building business. The should focus on exploration and buy seats on commercial flights. As for JWST, sadly there is no SpaceX equivalent in the probe market. I wonder if maybe they a

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Private business was happy to suck up NASA funding for decades. Elon Musk is obviously superior, a guy driven by a long term goal (Mars) rather than shareholder value.

    • Just Kill SLS, fund BFR and save money. Keep the Atlas and Delta for high priority military projects (these are actually used by Air Force). Given the 30 year lead up to Webb, probably better launch that on a Delta IV for now. Use Space X, Blue Origin, Orbital/ATK etc for everything else. SLS is threatening to become another shuttle white elephant for NASA, sucking up the money leaving little left for actual science.

      • by Strider- ( 39683 )

        JWST will be launching on Ariane 5 out of Kourou, French Guiana. The launch is part of the ESA's contribution to the project.

      • If you kill the SLS, be ready for all state support for NASA to dry up soon after. It so happens NASA's congressional support is dependent upon it injecting a good deal of federal funding into local state economies nation-wide.

      • by mentil ( 1748130 )

        Threatening? Look at the NASA budget breakdown -- the vast majority is tied up in boondoggles. The portion devoted to actual science and ongoing missions is pitiful.

  • It's not good news, however considering potential science return it's still worth. This telescope will have capability of taking spectras from exoplanets - potentially finding signatures for habitability or even life.

    With regard to the cost, treading into unknown is inherent to any discovery, thus the costs are hard to predict, "we do it not because it's easy, but because it's hard". In my opinion unlimited fund is not OK, however little bit over the current cost is acceptable (even though so much over-bud

  • Who came up with the idea of naming it after a bureaucrat who knew practically nothing about astronomy?
  • Yawn (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Green Mountain Bot ( 4981769 ) on Wednesday June 27, 2018 @03:47PM (#56855920)
    I'm old enough to remember when the Hubble Space Telescope was an expensive boondoggle that would never produce valuable science. How did that turn out?
    • by lazarus ( 2879 )

      I'm old enough to remember the industrial revolution, but I don't remember the Hubble being an expensive boondoggle. It was delayed by the Challenger disaster and had to be powered up and kept in a clean room for three years which was costly, but that wasn't the fault of the project itself. When it was proposed Congress agreed to fully fund the program, but the Senate cut the budget by 50%, which was then made up by ESA.

      If you have evidence that it was an expensive boondoggle, I'd like to see that. It co

      • Don't forget to add the cost of the shuttle servicing missions to Hubble's total cost. And don't forget about the primary mirror being the wrong shape. Hubble is one of humanity's greatest accomplishments, but it has not been cheap.

        • by lazarus ( 2879 )

          Only the first servicing mission (STS-61) was to correct the flawed lenses. The rest were upgrades. The entire shuttle mission was devoted to the fix at a cost of $450M adjusted for inflation. Total cost is still under $500M or 1/20th of the Webb.

          Look, I'm not saying that the Webb is not worth it. I'm just saying that the Hubble wasn't a boondoggle. It was cool science on a low budget that may have needed some fixes and upgrades, but it wasn't a boondoggle.

      • I'm criticizing the critics, not the project. Hubble *was* called an expensive boondoggle, especially after the first blurry pictures came down. That the solution was going to add even more expense to the project didn't help public perception at the time.

        But after it was fixed, the real science started, and it was freaking amazing. It didn't take long for people to start to see the value of it. I expect the same to happen with the Webb once it's online and results start coming back.
  • Twenty years ago, the Green lobby tried to stop the development of astronomy in Arizona, first with a fake endangered species argument and then with a fake native claims argument:
    https://link.springer.com/chap... [springer.com]

    At the time, they claimed that Hawaii was a better location for ground-based telescopes than Arizona because the University of Hawaii owned an astronomy reserve on the summit of Mauna Kea, which was well supported by both the international science community and by the local economy. What happened, a

  • This behemoth is sitting in a high bay at Northrop Grumman in Huntington Beach at the well known Space Park. Other contractors that worked on it let you tour and take pictures as it's a public funded item. NG has it in a secured facility and no pictures allowed. Delayed over and over again, it's not so much a NASA problem as a NG engineering debockle. They punish their support groups by demanding overnight calibration services as downtime is the devils work, using "work stoppage" and "deadlines" as justif

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