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« Eighteen Years Ago | Main | Keep It Up, Terry »

A Haunting Past

Late January has developed a reputation as a grim and fatal period in NASA's history.

Thirty-seven years ago this Tuesday, on the 27th, Apollo astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chafee died horribly, of asphyxiation and rapid incineration in an Apollo capsule on the Saturn launch pad. Destined for the moon, they never got off the ground in the vehicle that was to take them there.

The event caused a massive overhaul of the Apollo program, but NASA recovered, and two and a half years later, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon and, per President Kennedy's audacious goal, returned safely to the earth.

Eighteen years ago today, on January 28th, 1986, the space shuttle orbiter Challenger was torn apart by aerodynamic forces as it separated from a collapsing fuel tank and its solid boosters. Just as their mission was beginning, seven astronauts fell to their deaths, from a great height, in what remained of the vehicle.

That accident resulted in two and a half, in fact almost three, years of delay until the shuttle flew again, as well as a supposed change in NASA management.

Apparently, there wasn't enough change, because now, in 2004, coming close on the heels of those two tragedies, NASA has another sad date to commemorate. This coming Sunday, February 1, will be the first anniversary of the loss of the orbiter Columbia with its seven gallant crew.

How long it will be before shuttles fly again is now anybody's guess. The goal is late this year which, if it occurs, will be shorter than the hiatus from Challenger, but there's also a good chance that it will stretch into 2005.

Is there any reason, physical or psychological, for this close clustering of fateful anniversaries?

Probably not.

Certainly the Apollo I fire had nothing to do with the season--it occurred in a controlled environment that was indifferent to the weather outside.

Challenger would arguably not have occurred in the summer, since it was caused by an O-ring below rated temperature, but there are many weeks that it gets cold in central Florida, not just January's end.

If the prevailing theory about Columbia is correct, the damage to its thermal protection system was caused by falling foam, not ice, and even if it was ice, this can happen any time of year due to the cryogenic temperatures of the external tank. It could have occurred regardless of the date--it was purely bad luck. Or perhaps a better description, to be more in line with the findings of the Gehman Commission, is a string of luck running out on a flawed mindset.

It's just coincidence, but engineers--even NASA engineers--are human, and in any future manned spaceflight activities this time of year, one suspects that they'll have their fingers crossed, even if hidden in their pockets, for many years to come.

But in light of such a history, just how risk averse, how devoted to crew safety, should NASA be? Were our past decades' achievements in space worth the cost, in lives and treasure?

To some, the answer is obvious. No expense, no course of action, should be spared to prevent the deaths of astronauts, even if that means they don't fly at all. They should not risk their lives on any mission "needlessly." This is the argument often used by opponents of manned spaceflight in general.

Of course, such a position makes no sense when even cursorily examined. If that philosophy were applied to other endeavors in life, we'd remain in the caves today, or perhaps even in the trees. No minerals would be mined, nor autos driven (did you really need to go to the store for that ice cream?), no bridges or skyscrapers would be built, because sometimes, in these activities, people die. Any activity resulting in human progress entails risk.

And who is to decide what "needlessly" means? Certainly, if you have no interest in putting people into space (as, for instance, is the case with many scientists), then any manned spaceflight is needless. "No, no," they say. "We just mean that we shouldn't be doing things in space that can be done better with robots."

But that of course begs the meaning of the word "better."

Why don't we mine coal exclusively with robots? Why didn't we develop robots in the 1930s to build the Golden Gate Bridge, an undertaking that cost dozens of lives? In some cases we do, of course, but not to achieve a risk-free state (which isn't possible) so much as to save costs through increased productivity. But that's not the argument that people who say we shouldn't "risk lives" for "needless activities" seem to be making.

Let's take a concrete, and topical example. NASA has effectively decided to deorbit the Hubble Space Telescope, an instrument that has opened up vast new vistas of the universe. Some have decried this decision as the first casualty of the president's new space initiative.

Of course, it's not that simple. Hubble was designed to use only the shuttle for servicing, but the shuttle is now focused on the ISS. We will have limited shuttle flights available, even after we return to flight, and we have international commitments to the latter, but not the former.

But the real issue is that, as a result of last year's tragedy, we have made a policy decision to never again send an orbiter into the wilderness--to an orbit from which the vehicle cannot be easily inspected and the crew easily rescued. This means effectively that all future shuttle flights must go to ISS, and barring some alternative means of saving it, Hubble will come down.

That's not the decision I would have made, if the only choices are using a Shuttle or letting Hubble die. Yes, Shuttle missions are expensive, but we're flying them anyway--we might as well do something that's of clear value with them. Yes, astronauts' lives will be at risk, but that's their decision to make, not pundits and scientists. Yes, another orbiter will be at risk, but we've already decided to phase out the program, and it actually could limp along on two through ISS completion, if necessary.

In any event, it's not really that risky. We went seventeen years without a loss of an orbiter. The probability that we'll lose another in the next two or three years is pretty low. We're may be playing Russian Roulette, but that's a misleading analogy for a gun with a hundred empty chambers and a short game.

On the other hand, the decision may prove a blessing in disguise, because there may in fact be other options to save Hubble, if NASA can expand their thinking and contemplate alternative and innovative approaches. This may be a golden opportunity to see if some new, non-government players can start to undertake risky but worthwhile ventures, free of the fear of Congressional inquisitions, and undaunted by deadly anniversaries.

[Update at 4 PM PST]

As some probably guessed, this is today's Fox column.

Posted by Rand Simberg at January 28, 2004 11:51 AM
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Save the Hubble
Excerpt: I hope this movement gains momentum: Astronomers were stunned when Nasa's chief, Sean O'Keefe, decided on 16 January to cancel the fifth, and final, visit of the space shuttle to service the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). A service call is...
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Tracked: January 29, 2004 05:16 AM
Save the Hubble
Excerpt: I hope this movement gains momentum: Astronomers were stunned when Nasa's chief, Sean O'Keefe, decided on 16 January to cancel the fifth, and final, visit of the space shuttle to service the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). A service call is...
Weblog: The Speculist
Tracked: January 29, 2004 05:18 AM
Comments

That late January set of coincidences really intrigues me.

While I agree with you Rand that space should be easy, the way we -- as a nation -- are doing it now seems to be "space is hard -- and it damn well should be!"

I've written a bit about how whacked out space people can be -- whether the committed enthusiasts of the space movement or the committed professionals who manage to get paid to do space work. Too many of our folk try to ignore human realities. They think they can decide to work 60, 80 and even 100 hour weeks with no consequences except getting more done.

There's a phenomenon known as "seasonal affective disorder" -- SAD for short. People get a bit depressed during this time of year. The shorter days and the cold weather seem partly responsible. During December there's quite a bit of partying that goes on. That's pretty much over now. By late January, people are pretty down, compared to, say, May. So you get vaguely unhappy people taking poor care of themselves making critical decisions.

Perhaps this phenomenon has had some impact on the various decisions that caused Apollo 1, Challenger and Columbia.

Then again, maybe I'm just engaging in wild speculation.

Posted by Chuck Divine at January 28, 2004 01:22 PM

Is it too dangerous?

If we were forcing people to go it just might be I could inclined to say yes. But everyone who flys goes of their own free will.

They understand the risks and accept them readily.

Nobody wants to die. And no one wants to do anything that contributes to the death of others. But sometimes failures occur. It is the nature of the beast.

We must admit and accept that from time to time these things are going to fall out of the sky and people are going to die. Again it is the nature of the beast.

To have or to propose as a policy that these things will never happen and we will do anything to prevent accidents is not reasonable because we cannot achieve such a thing.

Our policy should be that we will do the best we reasonably can, not everything we can, to be safe but accidents will ocassionally happen. And when they do we will mourn our losses and keep on keeping on.

Any other approach is just plain stupid.

If given the change I would fly under such a policy.

Just my opinion.

Posted by Michael at January 28, 2004 03:25 PM

I don't guess there's any chance Burt Rutan could service Hubble...is there?

Posted by Alan K. Henderson at January 28, 2004 11:55 PM

Rutan ? No, but Orbital Recovery Corp. probably could
http://www.orbitalrecovery.com/viewpoint.html

Posted by at January 29, 2004 01:12 AM

Michael writes:

Our policy should be that we will do the best we reasonably can, not everything we can, to be safe but accidents will ocassionally happen. And when they do we will mourn our losses and keep on keeping on.

I must comment that I don't think we are doing the best that we can. Others seem to think the same thing.

The CAIB report is pretty damning. It depicts a culture where problems are actually made more likely by practices that appear quite unwise.

Yes, we should accept that deaths will occur as we move out into space. But to give a bye to flat out incompetents when they screw up is wrong and counterproductive.

Posted by Chuck Divine at January 29, 2004 07:53 AM

I am in the Yay for hubble being written off camp. It just presents a perfect oppurtunity for private groups to really sink their teeth into a worthwhile space project. Nasa already did the hard part of getting the big ole' telescope up there in the first place. But it never did really make sense to always have to use the same vehicle that carried the telescope into space in the first place to service it from there on out. Thats like a tower technician that would always drive the 10 story crane they used to build a telecommunictions tower out to the site everytime it needed to have a light bulb replaced on the very top. Its cool and all, but a 1/4 ton pickup truck would have worked just as well and much faster and cheaper.

Posted by Hefty at January 29, 2004 08:20 AM

Not to be pedantic, but Apollo 1 was not "destined for the moon." Nor were the astronauts incinerated: they suffered only minor, survivable burns, and died purely from asphyxiation.

These are minor points, I suppose, but they highlight the tragedy of Apollo 1: the astronauts died in a routine test as the result of a trivial failure that was made fatal by poor decision-making.

NASA learned some important lessons from that event, and there is a good argument to be made that the Apollo program would not have succeeded without the fire. Unfortunately, those lessons seem to have a limited shelf life, since NASA seems to need to learn them again every decade or two.

Posted by Robert at January 30, 2004 01:25 PM

Not to be pedantic, but Apollo 1 was not "destined for the moon."

You're not just pedantic, but mistaken, since I never claimed otherwise. I said that they never got to the moon in the vehicle that was meant to take them there.

And the burns might have been survivable, but they weren't minor--suit material was fused to the melted nylon of the spacecraft.

Posted by Rand Simberg at January 30, 2004 11:53 PM


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