<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/20/opinion/20porco.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1>

NASA Goes Deep

By CAROLYN PORCO
Published: February 20, 2007

Boulder, Colo. — AFTER years of spending our 
nation’s space budget building an orbiting space 
station of questionable utility, serviced by an 
operationally expensive space shuttle of unsafe 
design, NASA has set a new direction for the 
future of human spaceflight. Once again, we have 
our sights on the Moon ... and beyond. We are 
finally, bodily, going to make our way into space, this time to stay.

It is an opinion long and widely held within the 
space-exploration community that the Nixon 
administration’s termination of the program that 
built the Saturn V Moon rocket was a gargantuan mistake.

One of the biggest challenges in exploring space 
is propulsion — that is, getting from point A to 
B efficiently, safely and quickly. And when the 
cargo is human, the challenges are even greater. 
One of our crowning technological achievements 
during the 1960s was the Apollo program and, in 
particular, the development of the Saturn V 
rocket. The Saturn V was the largest, most 
powerful vehicle the United States had ever 
built. It had a launching capacity more than five 
times greater, a developmental cost 25 percent 
lower and a build-and-operate cost less than half 
of that of today’s space shuttle.

In those early days, the possibilities for human 
space travel were intoxicating. Back then, NASA 
plans called for an aggressive integrated human 
flight program that would expand on the 
developments of Apollo: the establishment of a 
50-person lunar base, a 100-person Earth-orbiting 
space station and human landfall on Mars, all by 
the mid-1980s. Those plans also included a 
50-person semi-permanent Martian base by the end 
of the 20th century. Instead, we went nowhere.

Why? Because, largely for political reasons, we 
renounced the Moon, abandoned Apollo and the 
Saturn V and retreated to low Earth orbit, where 
we’ve spent the last 25 years going around in circles.

The cost to the nation of this misstep was 
enormous. For starters, we lost an investment, 
adjusted for inflation to 2007 dollars, of $160 
billion. That was the cost to get to, land on, 
walk on, drive on and otherwise explore the Moon. 
(Of that amount, $29 billion, in 
inflation-adjusted dollars, was the approximate cost of the Saturn V.)

What’s more, the production facilities for the 
Saturn V and the other lunar exploration 
components, like the command and lunar modules, 
were all closed. At that point, we lost both the 
technological means for human deep space 
exploration and the collective knowledge of tens 
of thousands of engineers and scientists trained in human spaceflight.

Equally troubling is what we put in place of 
Apollo. The $38 billion developmental cost of the 
shuttle has gotten us nowhere in the solar system 
fast. And the International Space Station could 
have been built with only half a dozen Saturn V 
launchings instead of the more than two dozen 
shuttle trips that will be required to finish it. 
The bottom line: a colossal misuse of funds and a 
disheartening lack of progress and loss of time.

The termination of the Saturn V program also had 
a stifling effect on the robotic exploration of 
other planets. In essence, we lost the ability to 
deliver larger, and in some cases faster, 
payloads elsewhere in the solar system.

Take, as an example, the 5,600-kilogram Cassini 
spacecraft, which was launched in 1997 and is now 
in orbit around Saturn. Its launching was timed 
so that after spending two years looping around 
the inner solar system to pick up speed, it could 
rendezvous with massive Jupiter for an additional 
boost that would send it to Saturn. All told, its flight time took seven years.

Had the Saturn V, modified with an appropriate 
fourth upper stage, been used to launch Cassini 
directly to Jupiter first, its flight time to 
Saturn could have been cut by more than half. In 
space, as on Earth, time is money, and the money 
saved could have been spent elsewhere.

Alternatively, for the same flight time, a 
vehicle of greater launching capacity can deliver 
a heavier payload. Take as an example the 
480-kilogram New Horizons spacecraft, launched 
over a year ago to fly by Pluto in 2015 and 
eventually to explore the Kuiper Belt of icy 
debris that lies beyond it. Had it been launched 
on a modified Saturn V rocket, New Horizons could 
have carried a payload that was 15 times heavier 
and far more scientifically capable.

In the end, instead of having a ubiquitous 
presence throughout the solar system, humans 
haven’t set foot on the Moon in 35 years, and 
even our robotic explorations in that time have 
been throttled because we deliberately reduced our access to deep space.

Today, however, NASA is again looking up and out. 
Vigorous efforts are under way to complete the 
space station in order to fulfill international 
commitments that would be unwise to violate. When 
that is done, the plan is to retire the space 
shuttle in 2010 in favor of a new program to 
return to the Moon, with a party of humans, by 
2020. A mainstay of this program is the Ares 
launching system, capable of sending 65 metric 
tons to the Moon — exceeding the capacity of the 
Saturn V by more than 40 percent.

The official plans call not for flag-planting and 
grab-a-few-rocks-and-go but, by 2025, a 
solar-powered, human-tended, continuously 
inhabited research outpost rising from either the 
north or south pole of the Moon, where sunlight 
is persistent and water ice may be present. 
Sustainability, made possible in part by the use 
of lunar resources, is one goal. Another is 
on-site preparations for a push to the next outpost, Mars.

And human spaceflight is not the only enterprise 
to benefit. Robotic reconnaissance, which by 
necessity must precede the dispatch of humans, 
has been ongoing for nearly 50 years. In that 
time, all the simple things have been done. 
Future missions to the planets and their moons 
will be more ambitious than anything yet tried.

As one example, imagine what our future robotic 
travels around Saturn might be like. The Saturn 
planetary system includes Titan, a cold 
Mercury-sized moon with a dense, organic-laden, 
hazy atmosphere and a strangely Earth-like, 
variegated surface sculptured by winds and 
hydrocarbon rains. It also includes Enceladus, a 
moon one-tenth the size of Titan, whose jets of 
water vapor and fine icy particles extend 
thousands of miles into space and may very likely 
erupt from organic-rich liquid water reservoirs 
just below its surface — making this satellite 
arguably the most promising target we have 
available to us for astrobiological investigation.

A scientifically comprehensive mission to this 
part of the solar system, using Ares and a 
Cassini-like trajectory to Saturn, could easily 
include several exploratory vehicles. One would 
be a Saturn orbiter far more capable than 
Cassini. This vehicle, in turn, would be large 
enough to carry and deliver a fully equipped 
balloon-borne scientific payload to float through 
the atmosphere of Titan and study its surface up 
close, and an Enceladus lander with equipment 
that could determine the moon’s physical 
properties and ascertain whether or not 
pre-biotic chemistry, and perhaps life, has arisen there.

In other words, robotic exploration, and the 
insights that will be gained from it into the 
character, development and evolution of planetary 
bodies and even life itself, will be taken to new 
heights and, in turn, pave the way for the 
eventual arrival of humans throughout the solar 
system. Anyone up for an extreme excursion to the 
Enceladus Interplanetary Geyser Park?

All told, the subtext is invigorating and 
unmistakable: Humanity’s future need not be 
confined to mere survival on our home planet. 
Other worlds beckon, we know how to reach them 
and we will once more be outward bound.

And we will not be alone. China, India and 
Russia, all eager to be or remain prominent 
players on the world stage, have independent 
plans to stride the lunar surface. And Australia, 
Canada, Japan and the member nations of the 
European Space Agency will be pooling their 
resources with us in the return to the Moon — a 
circumstance that will bring the cost of the 
effort to any one nation within reason.

THIS won’t be a space race so much as a global 
exodus undertaken by an international community. 
And peaceful cooperation among nations, as a 
tangible means to build strong lasting 
international partnerships and defuse tensions 
and conflicts in the future, will be a welcome result.

In hindsight, maybe the pace of progress was 
predictable. Humans first explored Antarctica in 
the early 20th century. Decades passed before we 
had the technology that would allow us to 
establish a permanent presence. History will 
indicate the same for our interplanetary forays. 
Our initial “small step for a man” on the Moon 
took place in 1969. A half-century later, we will 
be there anew, to live and work.

To reach that future will require two critical 
ingredients: adequate financing and a long-term 
cross-administration commitment that supports 
steady, uninterrupted progress. Our first reach 
for the Moon took us from President Kennedy’s 
spoken words to the lunar surface in little over 
eight years under a budget profile that saw peaks 
in annual NASA budget of more than $30 billion in 
current dollars — a shocking number by today’s 
standards and a good measure of how important we then considered the endeavor.

While sustained budgets of that magnitude are out 
of the question today, what is not out of the 
question is our ability to pay to keep the goal 
front and center. We are now spending in Iraq, in 
a single month, $9 billion — more than half the 
annual budget NASA needs to stay on course.

Forty-five years ago today, John Glenn Jr. became 
the first American to venture into orbit around 
the Earth. Just 9 years old, I knew at that 
moment that the future would be big and wide, and 
that I might go places no one had ever been before.

There could be no better way today to encourage 
an equally optimistic belief in the future than 
to embark on an odyssey that presents tremendous 
challenges, demands discipline and rigor, 
requires decades-long focus, inspires 
international cooperation, promotes lasting 
peace, improves life for all and paints a 
stirring vision of an expanded human presence 
beyond the Earth. There could be no better way to 
say: the future is boundless, and it belongs to us.

Carolyn Porco is a planetary scientist, the 
leader of the Imaging Science Team on the Cassini 
mission and director of the Cassini Imaging 
Central Laboratory for Operations. Cassini images 
of Saturn can be viewed at ciclops.org

-- Ronn!  :)

"Earth is the cradle of humanity, but one cannot remain in the cradle forever."
-- Konstantin E. Tsiolkovskiy



_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to