NASA to get more money, but must scratch moon plan

Posted In: R&D Daily | Government Funding | Science Policy | Spacecraft | Ames Research Center (NASA) | Glenn Research Center (NASA) | Goddard Space Flight Center (NASA) | Jet Propulsion Laboratory (NASA) | Langley Research Center (NASA) | Marshall Space Flight Center (NASA) | Aerospace | Space

By Seth Borenstein, AP Science Writer

Friday, January 29, 2010


newsvine diigo google
slashdot
Share
Loading...

WASHINGTON (AP)—President Barack Obama is essentially grounding efforts to return astronauts to the moon and instead is sending NASA in new directions with roughly $6 billion more, according to officials familiar with the plans.

A White House official confirmed Thursday that when next week's budget is proposed, NASA will get an additional $5.9 billion over five years, as first reported in Florida newspapers. Some of that money would extend the life of the International Space Station to 2020. It also would be used to entice companies to build private spacecraft to ferry astronauts to the space station after the space shuttle retires, said the official who was not authorized to speak by name.

NASA to get more money, but must scratch moon plan

NASA, Alliant Techsystems (ATK) and Lockheed Martin performed a ground test of a full-scale attitude control motor for the launch abort system of the Orion crew exploration vehicle. The test was conducted at ATK's facility in Elkton, Md. The motor operates to keep the crew module on a controlled flight path in the event it needs to jettison and steer away from the Ares I launch vehicle in an emergency, and then it reorients the module for parachute deployment and landing. Together, the eight-proportional valves can exert up to 7,000 pounds of steering force to the vehicle in any direction upon command from the crew module. Image Credit: ATK

The money in the president's budget is not enough to follow through with NASA's Constellation moon landing plan initiated by President George W. Bush. An aide to an elected official who was told of Obama's plans, but who asked that his name not be used because of the sensitivity of the discussions, said Obama is effectively ending the return-to-the-moon effort, something that has already cost $9.1 billion.

It all comes down to money. The six-year-old Bush plan, which a former NASA chief called "Apollo on steroids," sputtered when promised budget increases didn't materialize. And now money is a big consideration in NASA's latest shift in focus.

A new direction for NASA has been on hold for several months while an independent commission studied options and the White House weighed them. Obama's choice will be made clear Monday, when he releases his 2011 budget proposal.

"It certainly appears that the Bush moon mission not going to be included" in future funding, said a senior NASA official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk about the plans.

Space policy scholar John Logsdon, who was on an Obama space campaign advisory committee and has served on NASA advisory panels, said Obama is adopting the preferred option of a White House-appointed outside panel of experts last year. That concept includes reliance on a commercial spaceship, a space station that functions for five more years than planned, and a "flexible path" for human space exploration. That might mean trips to a nearby asteroid, a Martian moon or a brief visit to the moon, instead of the Bush plan for a moon base by the end of the decade.

"What kills the moon mission is the decision to extend the space station to 2020," Logsdon said. That means the Bush goal of "moon by 2020 is dead. We can't afford using the station for five more years and going to the moon."

While the Constellation program "is dead, exploration is not dead and that's really important," Logsdon said.

Already proponents of the moon mission and thousands of workers in space centers in Florida, Alabama and Texas are upset. Congressional officials in those states have denounced such ideas and some of them sit on key committees where they could fight Obama's plans. For example, Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., chairs the space subcommittee in the Senate. And the chairwoman of the House space subcommittee, Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., is married to a space shuttle astronaut.

The budget numbers were first reported this week by the Orlando Sentinel and Florida Today.

In a statement, Rep. Suzanne Kosmas, D-Fla., said, "The president's proposal would leave NASA with essentially no program and no timeline for exploration beyond Earth's orbit."

Ken Matthews, a member of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers in Huntsville, Ala., said his members worry about "jobs that won't be there."

Stennis1-sized

Construction on the A-3 Test Stand at NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center continued throughout 2009 with erection of the structural steel frame and installation of several liquid oxygen, isopropyl alcohol and waters tanks at the site. Now, the focus falls on several construction milestones to be reached in the new year. Scheduled for completion in 2011, the new stand will allow testing of the next generation of rocket engines at simulated altitudes of up to 100,000 feet. Such testing is critical for engines that will carry humans beyond low-Earth orbit once more.

If Obama does cancel the Constellation program, it "leaves NASA and the nation with no program, no plan and no commitment to any human spaceflight program beyond that of today," said former NASA Administrator Michael Griffin in a statement.

He said this would be recommending "that the nation abandon its leadership on the space frontier," Griffin said.

Kosmas and others raised questions about the safety of switching to a privately run space travel system that NASA would pay to carry astronauts. Companies pursuing such business include Space Exploration Technology Corp. which is already building a new rocket, called Falcon, and capsule, called Dragon. The company is run by PayPal founder Elon Musk.

And a recent report by NASA's Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel warned NASA not pursue unproven technology and abandon the Ares I rocket — the first rocket in the Bush moon program and one based on the Apollo design.

The report called such a path "unwise and probably not cost-effective."

But the Obama administration official said the Bush program was so underfunded that it wouldn't get astronauts to the moon until 2028 or 2030.

The Bush moon plan was announced after the 2003 Columbia accident that killed seven astronauts. After that disaster in which the shuttle broke apart as it returned to Earth, a special investigative panel said NASA needed a new goal. In January 2004, Bush proposed the return to the moon. It would have involved the Ares I rocket, carrying astronauts in a capsule called Orion. Another Ares spacecraft would carry heavier cargo.

So far NASA has spent $3.5 billion on Ares I and $3.7 billion on Orion and nearly $2 billion on other moon mission work. In the mid-1990s, NASA went through a similar stutter-step that meant abandoning plans that cost billions. That involved President Ronald Reagan's Freedom space station, which ran into trouble after costing $11 billion without building any hardware. President Bill Clinton had the space station redesigned and restarted.

Associated Press writer Jay Reeves contributed from Birmingham, Ala.

NASA Constellation Program

Obama Plan Privatizes Astronaut Launches - NYTimes

Obama to get $6 billion to outsource crew ferry - BusinessWeek

Read more about Orion crew module

Read more about the Stennis project

 

5 Comments

  • I live in the shadow of the Apollo Test stands. Occasionally I hear the sounds of rocket motors being tested but more often I hear the window rattling booms of the latest generation of 'death from afar'. The Government has shifted our priorities from exploring the great beyond to killing our neighbors.
    NASA of today is not the bright dreamers of yesterday. Today they are old men and old companies trying to justify their high price contracts. They have hung a sign on the door, "GEN X NEED NOT APPLY".
    If there is any hope, it lies in the non-NASA people who are keeping the dream alive. In two months, our little group will be sending our next self-funded, self-engineered payload aloft in the very shadow of the artifacts from the last time America reached for a dream.

  • The catch? Helium-3 is only available on the Moon, not the Earth. Detractors who claim that ICF fusion doesn’t work should look up the “Tsar Bomba” on Wikipedia. Good news: Evidence of intelligent life has been discovered on Earth in China, Japan, and India: During 2009, 3 polar orbiting lunar satellites belonging to these nations were surveying the Moon for resources (including water at both lunar poles). Should Obama change his mind and decide to go back to the Moon in 2020, he’s going to have to ask for permission to land!

  • Europeans won’t be surprised by the Obama Administration’s short-sighted termination of George Bush’s tardy plan to colonize the Moon, potentially the most valuable real estate in the Solar System and our “stepping stone to the stars.” America’s former bold plan for colonizing another planet took its “first step” 41 years ago during the Apollo Program, after which NASA dropped the ball. Knowledgeable Americans shouldn’t be surprised about either the lack of vision or scientific comprehension in Washington, D.C. Going to the Moon was, after all, originally a German idea developed in the 1930s. Dr. Werner von Braun and his team of scientists guided the design and construction of the Saturn-V rockets which did the heavy lifting. We Americans got to watch on TV! Without German rocket technology, both the Russian and the American space exploration programs would have suffered, perhaps fatally. Hardly anyone in America seems to appreciate the fact that the Apollo Program’s return on investment has been without precedent—it spawned the computer age and satellite-related businesses which have generated trillions of dollars in revenue. Other, less well known dividends were contained in the hundreds of kilograms of moon rocks and dirt returned to the Earth for analyses. Apollo discovered readily accessible helium-3 in the lunar soil—estimates run that of trillions of tons are available on the Moon, providing future lunar residents the perfect fusion fuel with an energy density 10 million times that of gasoline. Thanks to the Solar Wind, this fusion fuel resource is “renewable.” Using the DoE abandoned Prometheus inertial confinement fusion (ICF) power plant technology in which 10 billion $ was invested, helium-3 could become the ideal fusion fuel, obviating the need for heat exchangers, steam generators, or turbines to generate thousands of megawatts of electricity directly from the electric current generated by the protons produced when helium-3 is fused to form helium-4. Th

  • Actually the first universities founded in Middle Age Europe were set up by the Church. Rocket scientist Werner Von Braun was a believing Christian.

  • Americans want growth in religion and not technology. Most feel that the end is nigh and as a result see little use in spending money on technologies which they claim will never be used. NASA is going to die as well as the other science based technology developments in the USA particularly when the European Large Hadron Collider begins to take their people to the next level of learning more regarding fundamental physics and the real creation of all that we know. Religions have always wanted poorer education systems in order to maintain control of their masses and those groups seem to be winning today in the good old USA - the nation which once led this world into the next generation but from this point on, particularly after there is no real end to life as we know it, will far farther and farther behind the rest of the world when it comes to factual learning. The Chinese will be the next national group which will dominate the development of non-earth assets. They will be the first to actually begin mining this world's only remaining territory. I hope that they never fall prey to the stupidity of mankind and as a result fail somehow to take the Christopher Columbus approach where they fail to set the stage for real learning and technological developments via living away from earth. If they can do it they will most likely also open the door for few of us who would like to be included in the move to the next New World.

blog comments powered by Disqus

New To Market

more

JEOL to launch world's smallest solid-state NMR probe
JEOL to launch world's smallest solid-state NMR probe

According to JEOL Resonance, a new benchmark for resolution and benchmark will be set with its introduction next week of a new 0.75-mm solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) probe. The probe is capable of high resolution sample analysis by spinning the sample at 110 kHz, the world's fastest spinning speed for NMR.

Energy Harvesting Subsystems for Wireless Sensors

Nextreme Thermal Solutions has developed two new energy harvesting subsystems for the plumbing and HVAC industries. The subsystems are the latest additions to Nextreme's Thermobility energy harvesting platform that uses thin-film thermoelectric technology to convert available thermal energy into electric power for a variety of autonomous self-powered applications.

Tools & Technology

more

Portable Logic Analyzer
Portable Logic Analyzer

Oscium has announced the launch of LogiScope. LogiScope is a logic analyzer, designed for the iOS family of products like the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch, with the real-time data analysis capabilities of an oscilloscope.

Phase Monitor for Visual Observation of Materials

Supercritical Fluid Technologies Inc.'s SFT Phase Monitor II is a tool for determining the solubility of various compounds and mixtures in supercritical and high-pressure fluids. It provides direct, visual observation of materials under conditions precisely controlled by the researcher.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Top Stories and Headlines
EVERY DAY!

FREE Email Newsletter