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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Where the shuttle went wrong

Posted: Tuesday, October 14, 2008 7:40 PM by Alan Boyle


NASA
Click for slide show: See scenes from Columbia's last mission.

"Space Shuttle Disaster," a documentary premiering on public TV stations tonight, traces the bad decisions that led to the shuttle Columbia's fatal breakup in 2003. But this isn't just about a five-year-old tragedy: The show also demonstrates why the 27-year-old space shuttle program has turned into a dead end - and why investigators say NASA must resist the temptation to keep the space planes flying for any longer than absolutely necessary.

"Extending the shuttle is taking unnecessary risks that could doom the whole program if there were another shuttle accident," said John Logsdon, a space historian at the National Air and Space Museum who served on the Columbia Accident Investigation Board. "Even though the shuttle has been improved since its return to flight, it's still a risky vehicle."

If the shuttle is so risky, why was it built that way? Didn't NASA realize how risky it was? Such questions get a prime-time spotlight in "Space Shuttle Disaster," airing on PBS as part of the "Nova" documentary series.

Close observers of the shuttle program might not find all that much new in the program. In fact, Logsdon told me this week that developments since the Columbia tragedy have served only to confirm the conclusions reached by the accident investigation board, also known as the CAIB.

"It reflects what a comprehensive job CAIB did," Logsdon said. "I think we nailed the situation pretty well."

The show also nails the situation well, starting with its examination of the shuttle program's historical roots. Just after 1969's historic Apollo 11 moon landing, NASA and the Nixon White House settled on a plan to build a reusable shuttle fleet and an orbiting space station for the next phase of space exploration. The idea was that the shuttle would serve as a low-cost "space truck" to bring people as well as cargo into orbit on a weekly basis, with the station serving as a jumping-off point for further exploration.

But the development cost for the shuttle turned out to be so high that plans for the station had to be thrown into limbo. That served as an early indication that the shuttle concept wasn't as efficient or as elegant as NASA thought.

In 1986, the Challenger explosion showed that the shuttle wasn't as safe as NASA thought, either - due to a booster design flaw that had long been ignored. The shuttle and its seven crew members were lost as a result.

The space agency agonized over its "safety culture." It redesigned the booster O-rings and returned the shuttle fleet to service.

A similar set of warning signs was ignored in the run-up to the 2003 Columbia tragedy,. "Space Shuttle Disaster" focuses on the shuttle fleet's problems with foam insulation debris from the external fuel tank - which was a known issue well before Columbia's final launch. Investigators concluded that a chunk of flying foam, seen in close-up views of the shuttle's ascent, blew a hole in Columbia's left wing and set the stage for the shuttle's fiery, fatal breakup 16 days later.

During Columbia's flight, some engineers tried unsuccessfully to get a better fix on what the foam did to the shuttle. And even after Columbia's loss, some experts inside NASA didn't believe that a lightweight piece of foam could do such damage. "Space Shuttle Disaster" replays the actual tests that proved it could.

Once again, the space agency agonized over its "safety culture." It redesigned the external fuel tank and returned the remaining shuttles to service. But this time, it also decided to retire the fleet in 2010, once construction of the international space station is complete.

The designs for NASA's next generation of spaceships follow the safety recommendations made by the accident investigation board, Logsdon said.

"One of our recommendations was to be sure to separate the crew-carrying from the cargo-carrying function as you go to space," he said. "The approach that's being taken for the new Vision for Space Exploration does precisely that."

NASA's proposed Orion crew vehicle is meant to ride at the top of a rocket, where there's far less risk from flying debris. It will also have a built-in escape rocket system in case the launch goes awry. Once again, however, building the spaceship is turning out to be more expensive and time-consuming than NASA would like.

That has led some lawmakers - including Republican presidential candidate John McCain and his Democratic rival, Barack Obama - to call on NASA to consider the option of extending the shuttle's retirement date past 2010. Some would even like to keep the shuttles flying until the Orion is ready, in the 2015 time frame.

That would be a big mistake, Logsdon said. He pointed out that NASA has estimated the probability of losing the crew on any single post-Columbia shuttle mission at 1 in 80. Adding another 10 flights between 2010 and 2015 would obviously add to the risk of another disaster.

That caution doesn't rule out adding one or two flights to take care of some important unfinished business, such as the delivery of the $1.5 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer to the station. Right now, there's no room on the schedule for an AMS delivery, but some lawmakers want to give NASA more money to cover the cost of an extra flight.

"Flying one or two more flights in 2011 would not bother me very much," Logsdon said.

Looking beyond the shuttle, some space activists have suggested that commercial spaceships such as the SpaceX Dragon could help NASA fill the spaceflight gap. Logsdon said SpaceX's launch system - or Orbital Sciences' alternative, or still more spacecraft from Europe or Japan - would do a fine job for delivering cargo to the space station. But he would see cause for concern if NASA turned too hastily to unproven spaceships for crew transport.

"There are lots of variables at play in this," he observed. "It's a wicked, complex problem, but you can't risk human lives on unproven systems."

The best option, or the "least bad" option, would be to use those other spacecraft for cargo but continue using Russian Soyuz spaceships for crew transport, Logsdon said. Even though U.S. and Russian leaders may not see eye to eye on earthly matters, and even though NASA may wish things were different, the two nations are bound together in space for the foreseeable future.

Would things have turned out differently if NASA had stuck with the Apollo-Saturn system for space exploration, instead of starting from scratch with the shuttle? That's a topic worth chewing on in the comments section below. Feel free also to weigh in on whether "Space Shuttle Disaster" makes an accurate diagnosis of the shuttle program's problems, and whether Dr. Logsdon's prescription is the right one. If you miss the show on TV, never fear: You can watch the whole program online starting Wednesday.

Update for 9 p.m. ET: And now for something completely different ... NASA will air a documentary titled "50 Years of Exploration: The Golden Anniversary of NASA" on the agency's Public and Education channels at 9 p.m. ET Wednesday. Host for the 90-minute documentary is Apollo 11 moonwalker Neil Armstrong.

The show features interviews with former senator-astronaut John Glenn, Apollo flight director Gene Kranz, science-fiction author Ray Bradbury, Nobel-winning physicist John Mather and former Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton. "50 Years of Exploration" will be rebroadcast at 1, 5 and 9 p.m. ET on Thursday and Friday, NASA says in its TV listing. Some cable systems air NASA TV, but the most reliable way to find it is online.

NASA TV's YouTube channel offers what appears to be a sampling of the documentary for anytime viewing.

It's also worth mentioning that the Discovery Channel has served up some tasty footage in its documentary series "When We Left Earth: The NASA Missions." The series' six episodes, plus hours of extras, are now available on DVD.

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Comments

I know what a lot of people are thinking...if these 50 yr. old b-52's are still in service, and really doing a fine job, then why are we worried about the Shuttles? Because b_52's are held together with rivets, and welds, and are made of aluminum. Shuttles are styrofoam cups with engines, and are held together with duct tape. All things man-made reach their service life, and the shuttles are just about there. And the B-52's are in the process of being retired, too. Their replacement will pretty much be the UAV, the unmanned aircraft rapidly being put into service., and to some extent, the good ol' cruise missle.
To Hannah, John and a p,
The space shuttles were dangerous, complicated and expensive from the start.  Now they are old, too.  We needed a better vehicle back then.  We still need a better vehicle. The space shuttle is pointlessly complicated, creating more chances for something to break.  Solid propellants, with no "off switch" and no reserve for later maneuvers, have no business carrying people into space.  The boosters on the Challenger made it impossible to abort the flight – once lit, the mission has to go.

To Tom, Joe and Jason,
The Apollo program is what built America's technology, economy and military superiority.  It paid for the research that launched the electronics industry, and most of our military superiority now is based on satellites, especially GPS.  It took really bad mismanagment to get us into the situation we are in now after all of the brilliance of Apollo.  Thank you.  We have indeed forgotten.  Apollo and its predecessors were and are the best investment America ever made.  And we imagine that we will be better off if we "save" the money we are "wasting" on space.  It is an old argument that only works because we have trouble connecting space to the technology it spawned.
To Joe,
I do not trust any one contractor that has been guaranteed profits from the government for the foreseeable future.  Rockwell may have handled things in ways that were questionable, but once a monopoly government contract is awarded, there is no market pressure to do the best job possible.  Apollo was lots of contractors, and failure was not an option.
To Fred,
Thank you.  You are not alone in thinking America has lost its spirit.  Most of America has been too comfortable for too long.  Maybe a major economic depression will help us get our priorities straightened out.  Unfortunately, it will also make us an ex-superpower.
The reason the shuttle isnt what it should be is because of decisions made by politicians back in the 70s
General comments:

The new Constellation system calls for humans to go into space on solid-propellant boosters.  This would not have been acceptible to the Mercury astronauts, because it does not allow human control of the flight.  If Constellation's delays and cost overruns and re-engineering of supposedly proven technology are not red flags for anyone else, we have learned little from the failings of the shuttles.

When the shuttle was chosen, we had proven systems for ground-to-orbit, including the Apollo-Saturn 1B.  Another system that was turned down was to be called Big Gemini, building on the successful, practical and robust Gemini system.

Nixon wanted the shuttle - on a budget.  Corners were cut, and safety was compromised.  The space shuttle was the first manned system flown without an escape system, the first to use solid propellants (no "off switch"), and the first to drag most of its fuel along from the side.

When the Russians made their copy of the shuttle, they had the sense to put the rockets under their fuel tank.  When they decided it was a dead end (after only two test flights), they still had a good heavy-lift rocket left over from the effort.
Space is worth exploring.  Yes, people will lose their lives in doing that. Imainge how the world would be if our ancestors just stayed in one place and didn't go out and explore.  The human race would be extinct, I guess.  So yes to the continuing exploration of all space including this spaceship we all live on.
Until we move past apollo-like vehicles and implement nuclear-driven spacecraft, we'll remain confined and limited to the earth and moon. Whatever happened to progress at NASA? Rehashing old tech seems like a huge waste of money.
Despite all the problems and nay-sayers the Shuttle is
currently the only vehicle that can take up and
assemble items in space like the ISS.  Not too mention
repairing Hubble.  Do you think the new vehicle could
do a Hubble repair, in a word NO.  The next Hubble
repair will be the last.  Despite all the issues with
the ISS it does have a very important task and need
in the next few years.  The president told NASA to
complete the ISS and use it for research for more
exploration.  A manned trip to Mars would take a year,
possible a year and a half just to get there.  Once
landed the voyagers could not even walk for a month.
When the cosmonaut landed after a year on Mir he could
not walk and had to be carried.  The ISS is important
to solving the issues of bone & muscle loss over time
to allow us to proceed with further exploration.  As
to the flawed design of the Shuttle it was all
politics and economics.  NASA originally wanted a
totally reusable Shuttle that would have had a fly-
back booster.  The Nixon administration said it was
too much, and in retrospect would have been cheaper.
The current design took more money over time and much
longer to build.  Not entirely NASA's fault.
On a last note.  Without a new generation Shuttle what
will build the Mars craft in orbit?  A trip to Mars
can not be just launched from Earth.  You need too
much in fuel, supplies etc.  You will have to build
a craft in orbit.  How will it be built?  Without the
Shuttles the only thing that could do the task is the
ISS.  Remember the arm that was taken up recently?
We could launch Mar craft components to the ISS with
the Orion cargo vehicle.  The ISS then assemble them
into a vehicle for trips to Mars and beyond.
Let us remember an American Proverb that says;

"We choose to go to the moon... not because it it easy. But because it is hard!"         - JFK 1962
Time for the Big Dumb Booster, baby.

Expendable does not mean disposable -- every gram of metal, ceramic, plastic, rubber, you name it that doesn't come back can be captured and used for raw materials, at least until we grab a couple asteroids and maybe a comet for volatiles.

Our future is in space.  The Earth has just enough resources to bootstap ourselves into the galaxy -- not nearly enough to sustain human civilization indefinitely.

If we don't do it, the rats or roaches or whoever replaces us will.
Hi, Alan

Again, I am disappointed that nobody even mentioned the Saturn IB.  Every time I drive by the rocket garden and see it lying there I have to shake my head and wince.

This was the workhorse that enabled the entire Apollo program.  The first stage of the Saturn IB was a bunch of coupled together Redstones, and the second stage was the third stage of the Saturn V.  If we had kept building Saturn IB's, we would not now be reliant on Russia for their Soyuz launcher.

Why did we ever stop building it??

With block cycle upgrades every couple of years, the Saturn IB would now kick any nation's launcher out of orbit.  Where did we go wrong??

And don't worry, the stupidity has not yet stopped...  I just read this morning that the NASA Chief Advisory Council had recommended AGAINST buying more Delta II rockects for scientific launchs.  Only the MOST reliable unmanned rocket around.  Alan, I already copied you on the upgrades that could happen with the Delta II. But of course, Boeing wants to push the newer and more expensive Delta IV.

Why do we keep going down the wrong road???
"That the shutle couldn't go to the Moion was also noted in the documentary. My response to both is:

"Right. So?""

The point is that Congress seems to be incapable of funding more than one space program for human spaceflight at a time, so it had better be a program with as wide a range of capabilities as possible.  Within the range of missions to planet Earth, the shuttle was a really good choice.  To expand the mission range further than Earth, we either need other programs or a program that really can do it all.

If you want to get a human to orbit without using the shuttle, you either need to ask the russians or maybe china.
Space exploration is not dangerous or expensive. What is dangerous and expensive is "manned" space exploration.  Casinni, Galileo, the Mars Phoenix Lander, Mars rovers, Hubble, just to name a few - the science generated by these unmanned space exploration missions dwarf any science ever produced by the shuttle or ISS.
Okay, call me a dummy, but even as a 2x "SpaceCamp" alum from the 80's (damn those crickets and elmer's glue), I never could understand why the shuttle needed umpteen thousand unique tiles to protect itself. SURELY there is a better way to build larger tiles for the flatter surfaces, and then glue them on with more strength, OR, alternatively, create something more laminar, like the bedliner in a truck? I mean, I guess we could just mothball the fleet and put them in museums, but if you can solve the problem with larger tiles made and glued more robustly, wouldn't that work?

Lastly, and this is dumb, too, but I remember the arguments about the obsolescence of the flight system. At this time, are they still using 80386 cpu-style technology?
Would you get on a passenger plance that had a 1 in 80 chance of catostrophic destruction.  I think not.  
I remember watching the first man stepping on the moon. that was very awesome. I remember watching the first shuttle lifting off the launch pad. That give me some pride in the nasa program. now they need to update the program with newer techonology. any body can update their own computers. NASA can have a newer space craft designed on their own computers(which are probably 1,000 times smarter than the ones we use). Having the capability of taking off and landing like the U-2 spy plane(which flew in subspace). If you looked at that plane it had leaks on the ground. How many of those blew up taking off and landing. they also could be refueled in the air. Design a space shuttle with refuel capability means less weight needed to take off, once in the air can be refueled so they can travel into space. Now does that sound pausable.
Im pretty ignorant to this subject but I must admit this country needs the space program and the shuttle. Its a good thing we decided not to give up making automobiles because they rode rough or didnt go fast at first. I wish the shuttle would have been modified to meet the current technology of the day. Auto manufactureres are always improving thier designs and functions, I dont understand why it couldnt be done with the shuttle. Maybe make a smaller version with the kinks worked out of it. Maybe thats what Nasa is doing but in a diff. way.

Thinking about all that is out there and how we are all on this small planet is quite humbling and  frustrating to think about the quarrels this country and many other countries have against each other instead of pursuing greater challenges.
dock the shuttle in space, at the space station, then use it as it is named to shuttle us around space
Money, Money, Money--It's all about money the US no longer has.
I see lots of comments, not all that well informed.  The most recent are the last two.  Sorry Charlie, the US has plenty of money.  The problem is allowing the Federal government way to much control over how it is spent.  Gjc, you obviously have little or no idea of how the shuttle, or most other spacecraft/satelites work.  A space shuttle docked at the space station would not 'shuttle us around space'.  More like that space shuttle would 'shuttle us around a Rhode Island sized piece of space surrounding the space station only'.  Not exactly that useful.  Not to mention the cost and danger of keeping the main engine fuel tanks full for what amounts to local neighborhood joy riding.  And for Tom way back in the begining, well, you're right, if we still lived in caves we wouldn't have nukes.  Frankly, I personally think everything else that has come with the ability to build nukes is well worth it.  I would trade living in caves for what we have now, even with the nukes, in a heartbeat.  If YOU want to live in caves, no one is stopping you.

And for all those who talk about the 'wasted expense' and the 'need to focus on earhtly problems', well, you're idiots.  The only 'wasted expense' I see is that the Federal government was the one conducting the research, so what we got was way more expensive than it should have been.  Though then again, maybe not.  As so many other respondents pointed out, the technology inspired, spawned, developed, etc. as a result of the space program might never have come about without it.  Human curiosity, inqusitiveness, and even greed might have produced the same advances, but maybe not.  Never underestimate the value of having a goal to achieve in inspiring inovation.  It is easy to see the path to where we are now and see how it led through the space program.  It is much harder to see where we might be had there not been one.  I, for one, think it much more constructive to try and see exactly what the program has done for us and try to figure how we can use that knowledge to improve ourselves going forward.
"Expendable does not mean disposable -- every gram of metal, ceramic, plastic, rubber, you name it that doesn't come back can be captured and used for raw materials, at least until we grab a couple asteroids and maybe a comet for volatiles."

Used...how? Are you going to go to the trouble of creating an orbital recycling plant in orbit to seperate, melt down and otherwise reprocess what is not all that much material per year?

AND it's all scattered in various orbital altitudes and planes that takes propellant to get to, and get back from. It easily becomes cheaper to just launch new stuff.

I'm sorry, but this isn't like junkyards on earth where you have thousands of tons of stuff in one place, and an existing infrastructure that could use it. (or an asteroid, about which similar things could be said)

"
The point is that Congress seems to be incapable of funding more than one space program for human spaceflight at a time, so it had better be a program with as wide a range of capabilities as possible.  Within the range of missions to planet Earth, the shuttle was a really good choice.  To expand the mission range further than Earth, we either need other programs or a program that really can do it all."

Then it had better be the former, because the shuttle failed at just being an orbital transportation system for all users. To expect an orbital RLV to be good at lunar and Mars missions...is utterly impractical with any existing technology. Even Apollo used a seperate vehicle expressly for Lunar landing, it was simply possible to get it all on the same (expendable) vehicle.

Sadly, Lunar exploration the way NASA wants to do it (again), will end up being just as unsustainable as Apollo was.

At up to a billion dollars a launch, the shuttle has NEVER been a good deal. As it can only reach LEO, it has NEVER performed. Since alot of it is NOT reused, it has never lived up to it's billing. Since it takes many months to 'reset', it has never fulfilled the promise of rapid turnaround. Starting to get the picture?

The vast majority of what it does can be accomplished but ordinary rockets for far less risk and expense. Only really big things (like Hubble) NEED to go on the shuttle (and this only because we foolishly discarded the old Saturn rockets). And only really complex missions (eg Hubble servicing) require people at all. Even alot of good science experimentation can simply be prepackaged and sent up on a cheap rocket.

As for the 'space station', it's primary mission seems to be simply to give the shuttle a reason to exist. It does little science, is very expensive, and seems to have become just a tourist destination for the filthy rich (more tourists have visited it than actual scientists).

While I understand the Wow! effect the shuttle has, I have to question if that's worth the $$ getting poured into it. We actually get very little "ROI" from launching the thing. NASA has many wonderful programs; the shuttle isn't one of them. Many others are terribly under-funded as a consequence of our addiction to blasting people into space simply to go round and round. Almost no meaningful science is being done by these missions. Certainly not billions of dollars worth, which is what the manned program costs every year . . .). Oh, well, I guess this is just chump-change compared to the Iraq war and the 'bailout'.
There is a lot of naive misinformed opinions being released here, but I can't let this one go, from Daniel:

"The Apollo program is what built America's technology, economy and military superiority.  It paid for the research that launched the electronics industry..."

What a bunch of hogwash.  The Apollo program did nothing but prove what we could do with 1950s technology if we put our minds to it.  And someone alluded to Apollo 13 as an example of how robust the technology was.  Good Grief!  They only just made it back, and only because of half the planet racking their brains to think of some kind of chewing-gum and baling wire fix that might hold the thing together long enough.

I have seen the Apollo hardware, and I'd go over Niagara Falls in a wooden barrel before I would get in one of those capsules.

"It paid for the research that launched the electronics industry..."  

I don't think so.  As has always been the case, war in all its disgusting forms is where all these innovations come from.  Oh, yeah; that is, the ones that don't come from reverse-engineering the UFO they've got hidden at Area 51.


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