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NASA Moon

NASA To Test Rocket In The Next Step Towards Returning To The Moon (npr.org) 52

NASA is counting down to what should be the final major test of the massive rocket it is building to put the first woman and the next man on the moon. From a report: More than 700,000 gallons of supercold propellant will fill up the tanks of the 212-foot tall core stage so that it can fire its four engines without actually blasting off. The goal is to simulate what will happen during its first launch, a mission to send a capsule with no crew around the moon and back. That lunar mission is currently targeted for November, says NASA's acting administrator Steve Jurczyk, who notes that this rocket "is going to be the most powerful rocket ever developed." The window for the rocket test opens on Thursday, March 18, at 3 pm EDT, and the core stage of the rocket is set up at NASA's Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. In a firing test earlier this year, one of the rocket's engines had a failure that forced an early shutdown after only 67 seconds.

"We can understand exactly what happened in the first test and what cut it short," says Jurczyk, who explains that one test parameter had been set too narrowly and that's now been fixed. "Start up on the first test went really well, and so we're reasonably confident we're going to have a good test this week." The test should last around eight minutes, to simulate the entire flight profile of this rocket stage, he explains, but the minimum of what they'd like to see is around 4 minutes. If all goes well, the rocket will move on to Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where the rest of the launch hardware is already waiting. Under the Trump administration, the agency had been aiming to get boots on the lunar surface by 2024, which would have been in a second term if the former president had been re-elected. That deadline was a goal that most in the space community felt was unrealistic. These days, NASA admits that there's no way to get people to the moon that quickly, given the recent appropriations given by Congress.

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NASA To Test Rocket In The Next Step Towards Returning To The Moon

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  • "one test parameter had been set too narrowly and that's now been fixed."

    This is exactly the type of thing that lead to the shuttle explosions.
    • I was thinking that too. Those parameters were set by people with actual engineering knowledge I would assume. So who made the decision to change the parameters rather than fix the hardware so it stays within parameters? Managers with minimal engineering knowledge? Committees of people trying to keep the cash flowing? I'd be really curious how this decision was made.

      That said, I still wish them luck. More space avenues are better than less space avenues. Even if this particular route seems to be the

      • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
        I'm sticking to fail early fail often philosophy... I hope it blows up and is never manned... flying hardware designed like was once the norm but compared to SpaceX and a few other new comers to space...its the wrong strategy for building reliable hardware and certainly wrong for building cost effective hardware.
        • it is about a decade too late for "fail early"

          people need to stop looking at SLS as a rocket system and recognize that it is really a federal welfare program for the state of Alabama

          • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
            It's never to late to fail early. That's kind of the entire point... its would be better for it to blow up on the pad, than to get some astronauts killed or for it to continue to waste more money.
            • what you are suggesting is failing late, that ship called "early" has sailed

              • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
                No.. failing late, is after you've killed someone or after you have already committed to ordering a bazillion more of them.

                You are just pushing a sunk cost fallacy ... it is never to late.
      • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
        I'd be more curious if it was something that was intentionally set too narrow, or someone flubbed some mundane detail.
        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Like not setting the clock? Surely an experienced organization like Boeing wouldn't let something like that happen.

      • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

        I was thinking that too. Those parameters were set by people with actual engineering knowledge I would assume.

        Having done some engineering (although not at such a scale), I can say that there's a tendency to be conservative in setting test parameters when you've never ever run the hardware before.

        So who made the decision to change the parameters rather than fix the hardware so it stays within parameters?

        The correct aproach is look at the results, analyze whether the system going outside of parameters actually was a indication of impending failure or if it was a false alarm, and then either change the parameter, or change the system, depending on what is indicated. And, sometimes both.

        You learn by testing.

      • by jbengt ( 874751 )
        Reminds me of an incident (totally unrelated to space flight). We had complaints about an HVAC system we designed. For one thing, the variable flow supply fan system kept setting off low pressure alarms. Rather than investigate, the "commissioning" agent had the contractor set the alarm to a much lower value, because the system was "operating fine at the lower pressure". During a meeting at the building we objected and had technicians trace down the sensor installation. It turns out the tubing had been
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      The Boeing testing scheme is very interesting. This test for example. It's the last one before the thing flies for real and they'd like to see it fire for a minimum of half the time it actually needs to.

      Apparently Boeing's safety factor is 0.5.

  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @04:00PM (#61169416) Homepage

    The SLS is behind schedule and drastically over budget. The entire program will only be able to launch at most once a year and will cost a billion dollars each launch. And since it uses the really nice RS-25 engines from the space shuttle but uses them in an expendable fashion, every single launch dumps a whole bunch of reusable rocket engines into the sea. There's good reason this system has been derisively nicknamed the "Senate Launch System"- this was always more about jobs, and congress (especially Shelby of Alabama) dictating to NASA what this would be in minute detail to make all the old shuttle contractors happy rather than anything with a coherent goal. And now even NASA is trying to figure out how to reduce its cost https://arstechnica.com/science/2021/03/nasa-has-begun-a-study-of-the-sls-rockets-affordability/ [arstechnica.com].

    This was a good idea at the outset. Using some of the old shuttle parts had a chance to substantially reduce cost of the new system. But it is now many years behind schedule and over budget. It really should just die. Unfortunately, too many people in too many states are getting paid for this for that to happen.

    • I'm in favor of using it to launch the Senate into orbit. It should have the heavy lift capability. We can work out reentry later, I'm sure.
  • "Count down" has a special meaning in this context.

    NASA will do a count down for this test.

    "The window for the rocket test opens on Thursday, March 18, at 3 pm EDT"

    NASA is NOT currently "counting down" for this test.

    Please stop just posting here the first nonsense you think of without first thinking again about whether it is correct or not.

  • by Iamthecheese ( 1264298 ) on Wednesday March 17, 2021 @04:44PM (#61169588)
    The Angry Astronaut [youtube.com] made some awesome videos explaining how and why Boeing is screwing up the SLS.
  • They're probably going to consume that huge number of gallons in a minute or two. Rockets suck up fuel faster than a redneck's coal burning youtube vehicle.
  • We have yet to solve the radiation shielding issue before returning to the moon.
    • We have yet to solve the radiation shielding issue before returning to the moon.

      Ah, where would we be without the irrational fear of radiation.

      Oh right. Half a century ahead in important technological development.

      Radiation shielding is easy. Water does it. Rock does it. The Moon is a little short of readily accessible water but there's plenty of rock. Pile up enough of it and the hourly radiation dose from living in a Lunar habitat can be lower than it is at sea level on Earth. Artemis astronauts probably won't have that much shielding, at least at first, but if there is a sustai

      • And, you Sir: you grasp the difference between an X-Ray (what kind of radiation it is) and "radiation in outer space"?

        Are you certain?

    • We have yet to solve the radiation shielding issue before returning to the moon.

      Since radiation is basically solved by living underground, perhaps it would be wise to start deploying robotic diggers. Is this really that hard to solve?

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        I'm intrigued by the lunar lava tubes, some of which are kilometers in diameter and hundreds of miles long. My dream would be for the winners and high scoring competitors of the DARPA Subterranean Challenge to have their robots sent to explore the lava tubes (of course the blimp and the flying drones would have to be left behind), but that would mean military spending actually doing something useful so it will never happen.

  • Had forgotten that was scheduled for today. Wonder if the wife will be able to hear it from her office....
  • awkward.
    nasa has already been to the moon.
    if nasa wants to lead.
    then nasa would put a permanent base on the moon.
    just throwing it out there

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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