Sunday, 1 March 2015

The dark future of American space exploration ~ NASA's golden age is about to come to a thudding halt







One by one they flickered to life. Venus, first, in 1962, and two and a half years later, Mars.

Our spacecraft flew by those planets, orbited them, and became manmade

meteors streaking toward the first soil we couldn’t generically call

“earth.” Later, when we grew ambitious and confident in our abilities,

humanity reached for the outer planets, probing Jupiter and Saturn in 1973 and 1979.

Each mission turned conjecture into fact, invalidated old assumptions,

and brought us closer to one day answering the two fundamental questions

of existence: where did all this come from, and where is it headed?


Mission successes don’t happen in a void. For every newly lighted

world there are crashed probes, lost spacecraft, and rockets destroyed

on launch pads. The exploration of other worlds is a cumulative art, and

with a steady cadence of missions comes an institutional knowledge for

scientists and engineers. Every setback is its own library of insights.

In 1964, when probe Mariner 3 missed Mars, its target, due to equipment failure, Mariner 4 was three weeks behind, and succeeded where its twin had failed.


The cadence cannot be interrupted, which is why many planetary

scientists now eye warily their calendars. America’s starvation budget

for planetary exploration has stopped good missions from going forward,

and keeps new missions from reaching the launch pad. One by one over the

next three years, as missions end and spacecraft die, the outer planets

will again go dark.




If NASA’s New Horizons mission to Pluto is extended beyond

2017, the entire active human presence at the outer planets will consist

of a single probe the size of a grand piano. If the mission is not

extended, humanity’s 43-year exploration of the outer planets will end,

and humanity’s horizon will shrink by about 2.5 billion miles. Worse,

because of the time necessary to build a spacecraft and the harsh

reality of orbital mechanics, the earliest a new mission could be sent

beyond the asteroid belt is sometime in the 2020s.


The consequences of a diminished planetary science portfolio go

beyond the loss of new wallpaper for desktop computers. Planetary

exploration has changed the way we think about everything from the air

we breathe to the oceans we sail. By exploring Venus, for example,

scientists observed the full expression of the greenhouse effect, which

in turn reshaped environmental priorities back on Earth. Meanwhile, the

search for life on other planets inspired scientists to find life in

unexpected places here at home.


“The more we learn about the other planets out there, the more

we learn about Earth,” said Dr. Curt Niebur, a program scientist for

NASA.


The next three years of outer space exploration are going to produce

spectacular scientific data. Very little is known about Pluto, for

example, but that will change in July when New Horizons makes its approach. Once New Horizons

completes its possible extended mission to an object in the Kuiper

Belt, though, there is nothing budgeted in the pipeline to take its

place. Yesterday invested in today. But we are not investing in

tomorrow.




The value of planetary exploration



For all the scientific breakthroughs it produces, the space program

in general — and planetary exploration in particular — is an inexpensive

enterprise. “People grossly overestimate the budget that NASA gets,”

said Niebur. The president’s fiscal year 2016 budget calls for $18.5 billion overall for NASA — 0.46 percent of the federal budget. “Most people think it’s 10 times that much.”


Of that, the allotment for planetary science has been cut to $1.36

billion — the fourth such proposed cut by the Obama administration, and

far short of what is needed by the program. (The rest of NASA’s budget

goes to earth science, human space exploration, and operation of the

International Space Station, among other things.) According to the Planetary Society,

a nonprofit space research and advocacy organization, for the planetary

science division to run well, the United States should spend at least

$1.5 billion every year to explore other worlds — “less overall,” they report, “than what Americans spent on dog toys in 2012.”


Planetary exploration has changed the way we think about the air we breathe and the oceans we sail
Fiscal year 2013 saw the White House’s Office of Management and Budget call for slashing planetary science

funding by one-fifth. Though Congress restored much of the money, the

program has yet to fully recover, and with the doleful figures in the

2016 budget, it is again up to Congress to find money to keep the

program funded.


In that regard, planetary science is at a disadvantage compared to

other federal programs. During the budget standoff in 2013, for example,

national parks were closed, which prompted an immediate backlash from

the public. But because it generally takes several years for spacecraft

to reach the outer planets, they are already funded by the time they

start returning data. In other words, the ticket is purchased before the

flight arrives at its destination. As such, from the public’s point of

view, the planetary science program will seem stronger than ever,

returning spectacular images of alien worlds, while in fact the program

is hobbling along, ill-prepared for the future due to consecutive years

of reduced budgets.






Missions can take decades to see through to completion. In 2014, the European Space Agency landed a robot on a comet. It was the culmination of a very long project. When the mission, called Rosetta, was first approved in 1994,

new computers came installed with Microsoft Windows 3.1. It then took a

decade to plan the mission and design and build the spacecraft and

lander. Facebook was less than a month old when the spacecraft launched

in 2004, and another decade would elapse before it arrived at comet

67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. When the Philae lander made contact

with the comet, the mission had been in progress for 21 years, not

including the years of research that preceded its approval.


Cassini-Huygens, NASA’s ongoing flagship mission to Saturn, was launched in 1997. New Horizons was approved in 2001 and launched in 2006. It will arrive at Pluto in July 2015. Juno, which is set to orbit Jupiter for a year starting in 2016, was launched in 2011.

Such lengthy timelines mean that planetary exploration is largely

incompatible with jarring starts and stops. A steady launch/arrival

tempo must be sustained; as one spacecraft is returning science, another

should be en route to another celestial body. An interruption in the

cadence means that the clock is reset.


Niebur said there are two major consequences to cutting the outer

planet exploration budget. “First, we stop making new discoveries,” he

said. “The pace of the scientific research and scientific discoveries

slows down.” More importantly, perhaps, is that the scientists working

on these missions only get older, and absent active missions they retire

or find work in the private sector. Meanwhile, without ongoing

missions, it gets harder to attract young scientists into the field.

“The field slowly begins dying,” said Niebur. “You start losing a lot of

the knowledge that we’ve built up. And then when you finally do decide

to begin missions again, you’ve got to spend the resources to rebuild

that knowledge.”




A new field, vulnerable to attack



The exploration of other worlds began in 1962 with the launch of the Mariner 2

space probe to Venus. Modern planetary science is a relatively new

field, and resides at the intersection of multiple scientific

disciplines to include astronomy, geology, oceanography, and atmospheric

science, among others. Historically, it has lacked the political and

cultural influence of astronomy or astrophysics. Because of this, it has

remained particularly susceptible to cuts and even cancellation.



That almost happened in 1981, when the White House proposed slashing NASA’s budget. The Reagan administration attempted to defund Galileo, the storied spacecraft that would eventually study the Jovian system. It also considered eliminating

the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the agency’s research and development

center. The White House stopped taking calls from James Beggs, NASA’s

administrator at the time. A position paper issued by the Office of

Management and Budget noted,

“OMB staff believe that lower priority programs such as planetary

exploration must be curtailed — even if they have been successful in the

past.” George Keyworth, Reagan’s science advisor, told the White House budget review board “the cut in planetary exploration represents an example of good management.” Galileo was only saved at the last minute when Howard Baker, the Republican Senate Majority Leader, personally intervened, reaching out to the White House in support of the mission, eventually brokering a compromise to keep the planetary science alive.


The situation then was much more perilous than it is today. Planetary

science is presently bolstered by its maturation over time as a field

of study, and by its demonstrable successes. While NASA’s human

exploration program retools for the exploration of Mars

(or the moon, or an asteroid, depending on the whims of whomever is

elected president), the robotic program is garnering impressive

headlines. The landing of Curiosity on Mars, for example, must surely rank as an engineering wonder of not one but two worlds. New Horizons‘s flyby of Pluto is likely to be one of the biggest stories of 2015, and part of science textbooks forever.


“It serves as reminder of what planetary exploration can do for the

image of NASA and the public consciousness of NASA,” said Casey Dreier,

the advocacy director of the Planetary Society. “[The European Space

Agency’s] Rosetta was a great antidote for the dismal other news

that was happening in the world at the end 2014. We had all this nasty

stuff with ISIS and terrorists and international politics with an

aggressive Russia, but here you have suddenly, oh yeah, look at this:

here’s a robot landing on a comet for the first time. This is what

humanity can do as an expression of pure curiosity. It was an

unambiguous reminder that we’re not all bad.”


Still, the Obama White House has been particularly uncompromising

about cutting the budget for solar system exploration. In 2013, the

Office of Management and Budget proposed cutting planetary science, specifically, by 21 percent, to $1.19 billion. The following year it proposed a budget of $1.22 billion, and in fiscal year 2015, it wanted

$1.28 billion — each far below the $1.5 billion dog toy standard. The

proposed cuts in 2015 went beyond belt-tightening, removing funding for

NASA to operate the Mars rover Opportunity and the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, which is currently circling the moon. (The president’s proposed 2016 budget again attempts to kill Opportunity

and the orbiter.) In each case, Congress found ways to reinsert much of

the lost funding. Without the institutional support of the White House,

however, NASA cannot count on the money materializing each year. The

space agency cannot make five-year contracts and simply hope that

Congress appropriates the money.




Our Magellan



In times of budgetary uncertainty, NASA is forced to proceed with

only the most reliable mission proposals. This means a lot of thrilling

plans to explore other worlds fall by the wayside. The most notable of

these, perhaps, was the Titan Mare Explorer. TiME, as it was called, was a low-cost mission proposal in 2009

to send a spacecraft to Titan, one of Saturn’s moons. The spacecraft

was also a boat, and would have splashed down onto one of Titan’s lakes.

There, it would have sailed around, analyzing the chemistry of the sea

and the makeup of the air above it. It would have taken photographs of

the lake and its waves. It would have even had a microphone to hear

Titan’s waves lapping against its side. The very idea of such a mission

outpaces the fever dreams of science fiction. Sadly, lacking funding,

the mission never left PowerPoint, and the launch window is now closed.

(A successor mission — this time using a submarine — has since been proposed.)


Another mission that didn’t survive the proposal stage was the Europa Jupiter Science Mission-Laplace,

a joint mission with the European Space Agency. NASA would send a probe

to Europa, one of Jupiter’s moons, and the European Space Agency would

send a probe to Ganymede, another moon of Jupiter. Having two highly

capable spacecraft in the same place at the same time would have greatly

improved the quality of data produced because of the addition of

interactive analysis systems. NASA pulled out of the mission in 2011 for budgetary reasons.


“The field slowly begins dying. You start losing a lot of the knowledge that we’ve built up.”
The European Space Agency has vowed to carry on with its side of the

deal, and has since reorganized its Ganymede mission as the Jupiter Icy

Moon Explorer — the unfortunately abbreviated JUICE. Set to launch in 2022 and arrive at Jupiter in 2030, JUICE will examine Ganymede’s magnetic field (it is the only moon in the solar system to have one) as well as its topography, oceans, and atmosphere.


Because of starvation budgets, it is nearly impossible to get a

mission onto the launch pad and into space, though with seemingly

superhuman perseverance it can be done. Consider the New Horizons mission to Pluto, humanity’s last great hope to maintain an active presence in the outer planets from 2017 until a planned mission to Europa is underway. Dr. Alan Stern, the principal investigator of the New Horizons

mission and former associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission

Directorate, first conceived of a Pluto mission in the late 1980’s. New Horizons was the sixth Pluto mission of which he was a part. The previous five were canceled before being realized.








“The timescale and the cost and the complexity all end up on the

‘hard’ side of easy-to-hard to do outer planet missions,” he said.

Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, each of the Pluto missions that

NASA studied grew in cost to the point that the agency felt they were

untenable. “There was only so much desire and so much budget, and when

it got out of control on budget there wasn’t enough desire to stomach

the cost increases. So they put their pencils down. And then the

scientific community would come back and say, ‘We really want this

mission. Try it again. Let’s think of a different approach.'”


The Pluto mission was thus opened up to any organization that wanted

to make a proposal, with NASA choosing the most promising entry. Stern’s

team won the competition in 2001. “I was convinced as the project

leader that if we ever got out of control on cost that we would be

canceled as well. So I made sure we stayed in the [cost] box, which we

did. And one of the breakthroughs of New Horizons is that it is a much lower-cost outer-planets mission than any in a long time. In fact, if you compare it to Voyager, its cost is about two dimes on the dollar. Twenty percent as much.”


But even using the long timelines that characterize the exploration

of the outer solar system, Stern and his team worked a long time — 14

years — to see New Horizons through from a concept to takeoff. “Persistence is something that we talk a lot about at New Horizons. We feeland did from the beginningthat we were kind of the stewards of this. I felt a lot like this was probably the last chance.”


As a result of the work and doggedness of the New Horizons

team, the first probe to each planet in the solar system will have been

launched by the United States. Such firsts transcend even the exciting

research that results from a robust planetary exploration program, and

will feature in classrooms for centuries to come. “In our own time it

very much exemplifies best in our country to people of other countries,”

Stern said. “We do this with our dollars but we share the knowledge

with all mankind. And even in foreign countries that don’t get along

with the United States, kids still learn about the exploration of

planets and they know that the United States did it without having to be

told. The names of programs like Apollo and Voyager are in textbooks in

every language.”




All these worlds are yours except Europa?



If humanity has a future in the outer planets, it is on Europa. For the second time running, the Decadal Survey,

which represents a scientific consensus concerning the most pressing

goals for planetary exploration, has recommended a Europa mission. (The

most recent survey gave slightly higher priority to a Mars sample

retrieval mission). In December’s continuing resolution to fund the

government, Congress specifically earmarked $100 million to study a possible Europa mission, and the proposed fiscal year 2016 budget

likewise endorses a such a mission, meaning Congress and the White

House might be in rare agreement on something of consequence.


Meanwhile, mounting evidence

of the Jovian moon’s habitability helps along the idea of such a

mission. The conditions on Europa do not merely suggest that the moon

contained microbial life 100 million years ago. The conditions suggest

that Europa might have life today, and that life might be more

complex than a microbe. Either way, there are staggering implications

for our understanding of habitability and life in the universe. If life

is found on Europa, it would mean that there are at least two habitable

worlds in a single solar system, suggesting a galaxy teeming with life.

Conversely, if Europa, with its ideal survival conditions, is found to

be barren, it might mean a much lonelier universe. If the mission were

in fact fully approved and funded, it wouldn’t launch until sometime in

the 2020s, before making the long journey to the Jovian system.


Dr. Louise Prockter, a planetary geologist and the assistant

supervisor of the Science Branch at the Johns Hopkins University Applied

Physics Laboratory, would serve as one of two deputy project scientists

on the mission. She was the chair of Europa’s science definition team,

and much like Alan Stern has spent years working to turn a mission

proposal into a spacecraft on the launch pad. She and her team have

internalized the lessons of the collapse of the last Europa mission, the

Europa Jupiter System Mission-Laplace.


“People have been slowly but surely buying into the fact that, yeah,

maybe Europa is the place that we should be going as a community,” she

said. “That this is really a important target.”


Her team’s efforts are part of a larger endeavor that involves

developing the science of Europa, finding ways to trim mission costs,

and keeping the community of planetary scientists on board while

attracting new supporters. The team’s efforts seem to be paying off,

helped along by the growing scientific evidence that favors Europa. “The

other thing that’s helped Europa is that astrobiology has become a much

bigger aspect of science,” Prockter said. “And Europa, we think, is

probably the best place in the solar system to go and look for life

outside of the earth. It’s taken years and years and years of plugging

away and showing up and presenting our studies and knocking down the

issues every time they come up, every time there’s a problem, just

figuring out a way around it. … We are finally getting close to the

finish line.”


Concerning the cost of what would be a flagship-class mission for

NASA, she said the lessons learned from a previous Europa proposal have

informed how this one is designed. “We were forced to go back to the

drawing board and rethink our whole concept and it forced us to really

get down to the basics about what is really important here, and how can

we do that at a lower cost? The concept we have today — the Europa

Clipper concept, as it’s called — is the result of the last two or three

years of really concentrated study, and that has allowed us to get to a

really sophisticated level of detail.”








Taking from the lessons of previous canceled missions to other

worlds, her team is not anticipating technology that may not

materialize. The Europa mission does not rely on instruments that should be smaller, or materials that might

be lighter, which means the mission is ready to go, technologically.

“One of the concepts we tried to keep in our minds while we were

thinking about the science for Europa: we would think about no miracles,”

Prockter said. “No technology that didn’t exist or that couldn’t be

adapted fairly readily from existing technology. … So that we didn’t

need to wait another 10 years for anything new to be developed; we could

start with what we have now. And that also helped us keep the cost

fairly low.”


If elected officials are waiting for a mission worth funding, short

of discovering a field of alien-built oil wells on Pluto, the scientific

consensus holds that there is nowhere in the outer planets more

promising than Europa. There is some poetry in that moon being the

future of planetary science; it was also part of the field’s origin. In

1610, when Galileo discovered Europa

and three other moons of Jupiter, he made humanity’s tentative first

step toward establishing planetary science as a field of study. Provided

lawmakers write the check, however, the challenges only just begin.

When asked what happens after a “yes” call from NASA, Prockter launched

into an astonishing, off-the-cuff list of considerations.


“Every spacecraft has different parts, different subsystems,

different elements. We’ve been studying this for a long time. We have

already been investigating launch vehicles. We have investigated power.

We are now going to solar power; we were originally going to be a

nuclear powered spacecraft. We’ve spent years investigating what power

would we need.” Her team has worked with a science definition team to

take scientific objectives and translate them into mission requirements.

If, for example, someone wanted to resolve an image of Europa’s surface

at a certain resolution, a host of issues must first be addressed.

“What kind of instrument do I need? What focal length of my camera do I

need? Do I need a color filter? How close to the surface do I have to

be? If I’m flying by, what speed do I have to fly by at to not smear

that image out? So there are so many elements to every little decision

that you make, every trade that you make.”


“With the US doing fewer missions, you’re having a shrinking of the human presence in the solar system”
The hardware considerations aren’t limited to measurement instruments

and imagery. “We have propulsion. We have thermal. We’re out at Jupiterit’s

pretty cold out there, but we have to survive for years. And we have to

get enough power to power our solar panels. We have planetary

protection. How do we not take bugs from Earth and contaminate the

environment? How do we not crash into Europa? How do we make sure that

that doesn’t happen, or that if it does happen that we’re prepared for

that? Radiation: how do we shield all that radiation, all those

particles? Do we know enough about them? What do we need to do while

we’re out there? Trajectory: we’ve tried several different trajectories

to try and minimize the radiation.”


There’s also the basic question of building the spacecraft itself.

 “Where do you put things? How do you communicate with the ground? What

sized antenna do you need? Can you get coverage from the ground stations

on earth at the times you need them? There are a million different

decisions to be made, but we’ve already made a lot of those trades, so

we have this concept, and so when we get the go-ahead, when we’re

finally ready to go, we would actually start implementing that.” Some

decisions and trades must still be made. “Right now we don’t have an

actual payload. If NASA selects a payload from these instruments, they

might not select the ones we’ve recommended. They might select other

things because they think they’re better, or their panels say they’re

better. So then we have to go back and if they gave us a different

instrument, we’d have to figure out what science we can do with that

instrument, and how do we accommodate that onto a spacecraft? It’s

pretty cool.”




Beyond 2017



As NASA’s exploration of other worlds contracts, foreign space

agencies are beginning to stack triumph upon triumph. Two months before

European Space Agency achieved the first soft landing on a comet, the

Indian Space Research Agency
put a probe in orbit around Mars. In December, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency launched Hayabusa 2, an asteroid sample return mission. In 2013, China set a lander and rover on the moon

as part of an aggressive plan to put Chinese footprints on the lunar

surface. There are some things, however, that only NASA can do.


“Nobody can do deep space like NASA can,” said Emily Lakdawalla, the

senior editor of the Planetary Society. “Other nations can go to the

moon, Mars, and to the inner solar system like Venus and Mercury. But

they don’t have nuclear power sources. They don’t have radioisotope

thermoelectric generators — only the United States and Russia have

those. Right now, nobody but the United States can go beyond Jupiter.

With the US doing fewer planetary missions, you’re having a shrinking of

the human presence in the solar system and fewer missions out into the

deepest part of the solar system. But there will be a lot more stuff

going on at the moon and Mars and asteroids.”


These robots will likely run much longer than their expected

end-of-mission dates. “The fact that we have so many active missions at

the same time — it’s great but it’s also a headache for NASA bookkeepers

because it doesn’t cost nothing to keep these missions going.” Going

forward, she said, NASA should consider a new way to plan for success so

that extended missions of spacecraft don’t take money from other

planned missions. “You kind of wish that when a government agency were

super successful that they might throw a little bit more money at that

government agency.”


In the meantime, the lights in the outer solar system will continue

to switch off, one probe and planet at a time. NASA will continue to

absorb broadsides from the Office of Management and Budget and do its

best with such halfhearted executive mandates as the asteroid redirect

mission. “If we’re not inspired by that, it’s not NASA’s fault — it’s

our leadership’s fault,” said Lakdawalla. “And we

need our Congress and our president and the people of the United States

to stand up and say, ‘This isn’t good enough. I want my moon base. I

want my Mars base, and I’m willing to put the money forward to make that

happen.’ And if you’re me, I want my outer planets missions. I want a

Uranus orbiter. I want go back to Jupiter. I want to fly to the plumes

of Enceladus. I want a boat on Titan. Those are what I want. I

understand that not all of the American public agrees with all of those

goals, so I’m not going to get them all. But I would like at least one

of them.”




Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/KxKrCwW9d7Q/the-dark-future-of-american-space.html



No comments:

Post a Comment