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RAND consultant: cancel $pace Launch $ystem now....

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  • RAND consultant: cancel $pace Launch $ystem now....

    ....and use SpaceX's Falcon Heavy, propellant depots, Exploration Gateway etc.

    RAND being a major global policy think tank.

    SLS is a massively expensive, and massively over-budget, NASA booster rocket that by the time it's finished will be too expensive to fly more than once every 4-5 years.

    Providing business-critical information, predictive intelligence and connections to the global aerospace, airline, defense, space, MRO and business aviation industries.


    Kill The Space Launch System To Save Human Spaceflight

    By Peter Wilson (RAND)

    Even in the face of a budgetary spending cap and the ever-looming possibility of new cuts, NASA continues investing in a robust and diverse human spaceflight program. But with fiscal uncertainty expected to continue, America's space agency should consider reordering its spending priorities, particularly those aimed outside low Earth orbit (LEO).

    The human spaceflight program includes the operation of the International Space Station (ISS) as both a national and international orbital laboratory until 2020 and the funding of the Commercial Crew Integrated Capability (CCICap) to provide for a “space taxi” to service the ISS. Then there are the components with missions beyond LEO: the Space Launch System (SLS) super-heavy-lift launch vehicle and the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle.

    By the mid-2020s, the return on investment from human spaceflight in LEO will be determined by the collective human experience with the ISS, a smaller Chinese space station and possibly one or more commercial space stations. Much more uncertain are U.S. plans for human spaceflight beyond LEO. Currently, NASA plans to spend approximately $3 billion per year on SLS and Orion during this decade, the bulk of which would go toward the launcher program.

    The plan is for Orion to fly around the Moon unmanned in 2017, with a similar, manned flight to follow in 2021. Consistent with the “flexible pathway” philosophy put in place after the cancellation of the Bush administration's plan to return to the Moon, a long-duration human mission beyond LEO has not formally been decided, much less robustly funded. At present, the candidates include: construction and deployment of a small space station operating at a Lagrange point over the near or far side of the Moon, a flight to land on an asteroid or a manned orbital mission to Mars. The NASA plan is to develop this beyond-LEO human transportation system in the hopes that substantial U.S. and multinational funds will emerge late in this decade to pay for one or more of these missions.

    But that is a risky plan. Without a credible long-duration human mission, this space transportation system could end up mothballed, possibly well before that first manned flight planned for 2021. Clouding the picture further are the likelihood of new cuts to the top line of NASA's budget as the result of the spending and deficit battles in Washington, not to mention the emergence of an alternative launch vehicle—the SpaceX Falcon Heavy. To keep the SLS program alive during a period of continuing budgetary austerity could mean gutting the CCICap and other worthy NASA space science programs. Furthermore, the Falcon Heavy with its payload to LEO of more than 50 tons is now a much lower-cost alternative than the SLS.

    Although the SLS program has powerful political allies, cancellation or mothballing down the road is a plausible scenario. To avoid this kind of fiasco, NASA and Congress should give serious consideration to a major restructuring of the current beyond-LEO human spaceflight program.

    Simply put, the SLS program should be canceled now to free up approximately $10 billion programmed for this decade. This money could then be redirected to continue the planned flight tests of the Orion spacecraft with the much lower-cost Falcon Heavy booster while making a robust investment in a first-generation space station in the vicinity of the Moon. An investment in such a cislunar station would provide—by the early 2020s—a multifunctional platform to act as a fuel depot, a workstation for robotic operations on the Moon and a habitat to protect against the more intense radiation environment outside of the Earth's magnetic field. This station could even be used as a habitat during longer-duration human missions to an asteroid and eventually to Mars.

    Such a revised program would give NASA a real mid-2020s destination along with a rationale to help mobilize and sustain public, congressional and multilateral political and budgetary support during a period of federal fiscal austerity.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    He may be right, but there's little in his bio that would indicate that he's more qualified than any other collage graduate to have an opinion on that.
    He has BA and MA degree's in Political Science and the closest he has come to this subject is being part author of a 2006 study for RAND concluding that we will probably keep using chemical multi-stage rockets for the foreseeable future to get in to space.
    There doesn't seem to be any published work on this actual subject.
    Chuck
    秋音的爸爸

    Comment


    • #3
      He's qualified by having years of experience in evaluating related fields including military rocket programs and other aerospace issues.

      The use of multi-stage chemical rockets is a given with the state of current tech, that paper was correct, and SLS is a multi-stage chemical rocket too. Space elevators have been shown impractical, electric propulsion doesn't provide enough thrust, and nuclear thermal presents too many safety hazards for ground launch so it's limited to Earth orbit departure stage that are launched in an inert state.

      Single stage to orbit hasn't worked out for large payloads, though that may change with SpaceX's Raptor methane engine(s) in a reusable stage with a new integrated crew/cargo spacecraft + upper stage Raptor engine that's being hinted at.

      This op-ed says it pretty well -



      Space Launch System is a threat to JSC, Texas jobs

      By Chris Kraft and Tom Moser
      >
      For all these reasons, the current NASA exploration strategy is a plan for the withering or even destruction of JSC, and with it the stagnation and decay of the Texas space industry.

      SLS is killing JSC. SLS is killing Texas jobs. SLS is killing our national space agenda.

      We are wasting billions of dollars per year on SLS. There are cheaper and nearer term approaches for human space exploration that use existing launch vehicles. A multicenter NASA team has completed a study on how we can return humans to the surface of the moon in the next decade with existing launch vehicles and within the existing budget. This NASA plan, which NASA leadership is trying to hide, would save JSC and create thousands of jobs in Texas.

      It is time for Texas' elected members of Congress to wake up and do something about it before it is too late.

      Kraft is former director of NASA's Johnson Space Center and former director of JSC Mission Control; Moser is former director of JSC Engineering, and former director of NASA's Space Station Program.
      Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 4 April 2013, 14:07.
      Dr. Mordrid
      ----------------------------
      An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

      I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

      Comment


      • #4
        I don't disagree.
        My point was that saying he was a RAND consultant made it sound like it was the result of a study, instead an opinion piece by a reasonably well informed layman.

        Now this
        A multicenter NASA team has completed a study on how we can return humans to the surface of the moon in the next decade with existing launch vehicles and within the existing budget.

        is something I would like to read.
        Chuck
        秋音的爸爸

        Comment

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