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The primary criticisms of the Space Shuttle program are:

Contents

Purpose of the system

The Shuttle was originally intended to launch once a week and give low launch costs through amortization. Instead it launches 4-6 times per year, and is very expensive. It was also intended for launching satellites, particularly military ones. However, after Challenger, the military began using expendable launch vehicles instead. [2]

The Shuttle was also intended for research, for example into human response to zero gravity. However the research could have been done on cheaper expendable vehicles, as the Soviets had done. [2]

Design issues

All systems as complex as the Space Shuttle inevitably have design issues:

Costs

Some reasons for the higher-than-expected operational costs are:

Cultural issues and problems

Some researchers have identified a cultural issue in the design and maintenance of the Space Shuttle in particular and in overall NASA operations in general. Anthropologist Diane Vaughan ("The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture and Deviance at NASA", University of Chicago press, 1997) examined in detail the engineering and managerial processes used in launching the shuttle. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration ( NASA, ˈnæsə is an agency of the United States government, responsible for the nation's public space program

She found recommendations such as "think like a manager and not an engineer", aired at a videoconference before the 1986 launch of Challenger, a "normalized deviance", which can be best described as a decrease of resources and emphasis given to safety at the expense of ontime launches. ManaGeR ( MGR) is a graphical Window system. The MGR server provides a builtin Window manager and windowed graphics Terminal emulation on color An engineer is a person professionally engaged in a field of Engineering. Safety-oriented values in the 1980s started to decrease, with full buy-in from NASA upper level managers but some resistance from engineers, relative to their values in the first decade of the Shuttle.

In addition, the late physicist Richard Feynman, appointed to the official inquiry on Challenger, published a personal statement as an appendix to the official report in which Feynman said that in some ways, NASA was trying to repeal the laws of nature in its aggressive launch schedules. Richard Phillips Feynman (ˈfaɪnmən May 11 1918 – February 15 1988 was an American Physicist known for the Path integral formulation of quantum [2]

Aggressive launch schedules, according to Vaughan, started in the Reagan years as attention turned to the space program in general and the Shuttle in particular (as America's only manned spaceflight after the final Apollo missions), not so much for scientific reasons but instead as a way to enhance America's prestige post-Vietnam. Vietnam (ˌviːɛtˈnɑːm Việt Nam) officially

Despite Feynman's warnings, and despite the fact that Vaughan served on safety boards and committees at NASA, follow-ups in the general and technical press have found that the NASA culture, described charitably as aggressive, comparatively as smaller concern for safety over ontime launches, and uncharitably as normalized deviance, persists to this day. Evidence for these claims exists in the disregard of small foam chunk breakage and assumptions that the lack of damage from past breakages made a larger and more serious incident less probable.

Shuttle operations

The Shuttle was originally conceived to operate somewhat like an airliner. After landing, the orbiter would be checked out and start "mating" to the rest of the system (the ET and SRBs), and be ready for launch in as little as two weeks. Instead, this turnaround process usually takes months; Columbia was once launched twice within 56 days. Space Shuttle Columbia ( NASA Orbiter Vehicle Designation: OV-102) was the first spaceworthy Space shuttle in NASA 's Because loss of crew is unacceptable, the primary focus of the Shuttle program is to return the crew to Earth safely, which can conflict with other goals, namely to launch payloads cheaply. Furthermore, because in many cases there are no survivable abort modes, many pieces of hardware simply must function perfectly and so must be carefully inspected before each flight. A Space Shuttle abort is an emergency procedure due to equipment failure on NASA 's Space Shuttle, most commonly during ascent The result is high labor cost, with around 25,000 workers in Shuttle operations and labor costs of about $1 billion per year.

Some shuttle features initially presented as important to Space Station support have proved superfluous:

Accidents

SRB O-ring "blow by" is what caused the Challenger accident
SRB O-ring "blow by" is what caused the Challenger accident

While the technical details of the Challenger and Columbia accidents are different, the organizational problems show similarities. The Space Shuttle Challenger disaster took place on January 28 1986 when ''Challenger'', a Space Shuttle operated by NASA, broke apart In both cases events happened that were not planned for nor anticipated. In both cases, engineers were greatly concerned about possible problems but these concerns were not properly communicated to or understood by senior NASA managers. The vehicle gave ample warning beforehand of abnormal problems. A heavily layered, procedure-oriented bureaucratic structure inhibited necessary communication and action. A mindset developed among senior managers that concerns had to be objectively proven rather than simply suspected.

With Challenger, an O-ring that should not have eroded at all did erode on earlier shuttle launches. An o-ring, also known as a packing or a toric joint, is a mechanical Gasket in the shape of a Torus; it is a loop of Elastomer with Yet managers felt that because it had not previously eroded by more than 30%, this was not a hazard as there was "a factor of three safety margin". Factor of safety ( FoS) can mean either the fraction of structural capability over that required or a Multiplier applied to the maximum expected load ( Force Morton-Thiokol designed and manufactured the SRBs, and during a pre-launch conference call with NASA, the Thiokol engineer most experienced with the O-rings pleaded with management repeatedly to cancel or reschedule the launch. Thiokol (variously Thiokol Chemical Company, Morton-Thiokol Inc He raised concerns that the unusually cold temperatures would stiffen the O-rings, preventing a complete seal, which was exactly what happened on the fatal flight. However, Thiokol's senior managers overruled him, dismissing his safety concerns, and allowed the launch to proceed. Challenger's O-rings eroded completely through as predicted, resulting in the complete destruction of the spacecraft and the loss of all seven astronauts on board.

Columbia was destroyed because of damaged thermal protection from foam debris that broke off the external tank during ascent. The Space Shuttle thermal protection system (TPS is the barrier that protects the Space Shuttle Orbiter during the searing 1650 °C (3000 °F) heat of A Space Shuttle External Tank ( ET) is the component of the Space Shuttle launch vehicle that contains the Liquid hydrogen fuel and Liquid oxygen The foam had not been designed or expected to break off, but had been observed in the past to do so without incident. The original shuttle operational specification said the orbiter thermal protection tiles were designed to withstand virtually no debris hits at all. The Space Shuttle thermal protection system (TPS is the barrier that protects the Space Shuttle Orbiter during the searing 1650 °C (3000 °F) heat of Over time NASA managers gradually accepted more tile damage, similar to how O-ring damage was accepted. The Columbia Accident Investigation Board called this tendency the "normalization of deviance" — a gradual acceptance of events outside the design tolerances of the craft simply because they had not been catastrophic to date. The Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB was convened by NASA to investigate the destruction of the Space Shuttle ''Columbia'' upon atmospheric [4]

The subject of missing or damaged thermal tiles on the Shuttle fleet only became an issue following the loss of Columbia in 2003, as it broke up on re-entry. In fact, Shuttles had previously come back missing as many as 20 tiles without any problem. STS-1 and STS-41 had all flown with missing thermal tiles from the orbital maneuvering system pods (visible to the crew). The first Space Shuttle mission STS (Space Transportation System-1, was launched April 12 1981, and returned April 14. STS-41 was the eleventh mission of the Space Shuttle ''Discovery''. The Orbital Maneuvering System, or OMS (pronounced /omz/ is a system of Rocket engines used on the space shuttle orbiter for orbital injection This image from the NASA archives shows many missing tiles on the STS-1 OMS pods. The problem on Columbia was that the damage was sustained to the reinforced carbon-carbon leading edge panel of the wing, not the heat tiles. Reinforced Carbon-Carbon ( carbon-carbon or RCC) is a Composite material consisting of Carbon fiber reinforcement in a matrix of Graphite On the same subject, a little-publicized detail about the first Shuttle mission, STS-1, was that it had a protruding gap filler that ducted hot gas into the right wheel well on re-entry, resulting in a buckling of the right main landing gear. Gap fillers, as used on the New York City Subway, are movable platform extensions used in certain stations where the curvature of the platform creates a significant gap between [5]

Looking back

Opinions differ on the lessons of the Shuttle. While it was developed within the original cost and time estimates given to President Richard M. Nixon in 1971 [3], the operational costs, flight rate, payload capacity, and reliability have been much worse than anticipated. In order to get the Shuttle approved, NASA over-promised its economies and utility. To justify its very large fixed operational program cost, NASA first forced all domestic, internal, and DOD payloads to the shuttle. When that proved impossible (after the Challenger disaster), NASA used the space station as a justification for the shuttle. Some speculate that, had NASA avoided the Shuttle program and instead continued to use Saturn and commercially available boosters, costs might have been lower, freeing funds for manned exploration and more unmanned space science. The domestic commercial booster industry could have been stimulated, with more resources directed towards lowering the cost of space access.

It can be argued that the general concept of a reusable manned launch vehicle was good, but the shuttle's implementation was flawed. To achieve a reusable vehicle with early 1970s technology entailed several design decisions that compromised operational reliability and safety. For example, an early point in the design phase, reusable main engines became a priority. This necessitated that they not burn up upon atmospheric reentry, which in turn made mounting them on the orbiter itself (the one part of the shuttle system where reuse was paramount) a seemingly logical decision. However, this had the following consequences:

Some maintain that the Shuttle program advanced the State of the Art, while others say the shuttle program only made incremental advances and pushed the early 1970s technology excessively to build a new capability. Some argue the high costs of the Shuttle program caused the cancellation of worthy manned (X-38, DC-X, X-33, X-34, etc. The X-38 Crew Return Vehicle (CRV was a prototype for a wingless Lifting body reentry vehicle that was to be used as a Crew Return Vehicle for the International The DC-X, short for Delta Clipper or Delta Clipper Experimental, was an unmanned prototype of a reusable Single stage to orbit launch vehicle built The X-33 was an unmanned sub-scale technology demonstrator for the VentureStar under the Space Launch Initiative. The Orbital Sciences X-34 was intended as a low-cost testbed to demonstrate "key technologies" integratable to the Reusable Launch Vehicle program ) and unmanned programs. The shuttle program also caused all other US boosters (ELVs) to be discontinued until the Challenger accident, thereby costing the US initiative in ELV technology.

Looking ahead

Future designers look to more economical and reliable launch systems with lower maintenance and operational costs. One approach is Single Stage To Orbit (SSTO), which would be 100% reusable and use a single stage. A single-stage-to-orbit (or SSTO) vehicle reaches Orbit from the surface of a body without jettisoning hardware expending only propellants and fluids NASA evaluated several concepts in the 1990s, and selected the X-33, which would eventually have been the VentureStar. The X-33 was an unmanned sub-scale technology demonstrator for the VentureStar under the Space Launch Initiative. VentureStar was Lockheed Martin 's proposed design for a Single-stage-to-orbit Reusable launch system. During design that program increased in complexity and development cost, encountered problems and was finally canceled.

Another variant of SSTO is a hypersonic, scramjet-powered, airbreathing vehicle. A single-stage-to-orbit (or SSTO) vehicle reaches Orbit from the surface of a body without jettisoning hardware expending only propellants and fluids In Aerodynamics, hypersonic speeds are speeds that are highly Supersonic. A scramjet ( s upersonic c ombustion ramjet) is a variation of a Ramjet with the distinction being that some or all of the combustion process This would be launched and landed horizontally like an airliner. It would achieve much of orbital velocity while still within the upper atmosphere. It was originally investigated by the U.S. Department of Defense, but passenger-carrying civilian versions were planned, sometimes called the "New Orient Express". The United States Department of Defense ( DOD or DoD) is the federal department charged with coordinating and supervising all agencies and functions of the government The official name was the Rockwell X-30. The X-30 National Aero-Space Plane (NASP was an attempt by the United States to create a viable Single stage to orbit (SSTO Spacecraft. Like the X-33, the X-30 encountered major technical difficulties, primarily due to the system complexity and materials required for hypersonic flight, and was also canceled.

Another approach is lower-cost expendable launch vehicles. NASA currently uses commercial ELVs for unmanned launches, and could use commercial ELVs for future manned launches. This would fit with NASA's mandate to promote commercial access to and use of space. However, NASA plans on rejecting the low-cost commercially available boosters, and instead, designing their own similar but competing boosters using modified shuttle components to build an expendable Shuttle-Derived Launch Vehicle. The Shuttle-Derived Launch Vehicle, or simply Shuttle-Derived Vehicle (SDV, is a term describing one of a wide array of concepts that have been developed for creating space This technology would be used to develop two separate launchers, one for manned missions and the other for unmanned heavy cargo. This contrasts with the current shuttle where astronauts and heavy cargo are launched in a single vehicle. Unlike the shuttle, this future launcher and associated crew exploration vehicle will have a launch escape system to greatly improve the chances that the crew can be saved in the event of a disaster. Orion is a Spacecraft design currently under development by the United States space agency NASA. A Launch Escape System (LES is a top-mounted Rocket connected to the crew module of a crewed spacecraft and used to quickly separate the crew module from the rest of the

The proposed CEV and CaLV bear a strong resemblance to the Saturn I & V rockets respectively - even to the point of the proposed launchers being numbered in honor of their predecessors: Ares I & V. In terms of flight profile, hardware design concept, and mission capabilities, there is actually little to choose between Ares and Saturn - though the proposed CEV is larger than the Apollo CM. Some critics have seized upon this as a serious indictment of the shuttle program. They argue that if a Saturn-type mission architecture is technically and economically viable for missions currently performed by the shuttle, then the Saturn launchers should never have been abandoned in the first place, and that the shuttle has been a massive waste of time and money.

The reversion of NASA to the capsule/booster technology of Ares/CEV/CaLV must be viewed as a clear rejection of the shuttle concept. Burt Rutan of Scaled Composites, the company that successfully designed, built, and flew the world's only privately-funded reusable spaceplane, SpaceShipOne, has had harsh words for NASA’s Shuttle and CEV programs. Elbert Leander "Burt" Rutan (born June 17, 1943 in Estacada Oregon) is an American aerospace engineer noted for his originality SpaceShipOne is a Spaceplane that completed the first privately funded Human spaceflight on June 21, 2004. Likening the agency's new Moon-shot efforts to "archeology", Rutan contends that the space program must encourage some risk in technological development in order to continue to innovate. He says of NASA's current strategy:

This echoes other arguments that NASA should utilize commercially available (Off the shelf) boosters where possible, and concentrate on space exploration, space science, and research and development to reduce the cost of space access. In finance or when buying things off the shelf refers to products that have already been designed and made compared to " Made to measure," (or " One-off These arguments assume that the Shuttle program has run its course, and needs to be retired to make way for a new generation of cost effective and efficient vehicles. Of course, Rutan also boasted after the first successful flight of SpaceShipOne that it must intimidate NASA,[5] so his statements concerning the Shuttle may not be entirely disinterested.

Many feel that the decision by NASA to spurn commercially-available Delta IV and Atlas V boosters, and instead design and develop their own versions, is unwise. They think government should use commercially-available products where available, rather than develop their own, and thereby reduce the cost of access to space. (In fact, the Orion capsule is being developed with off-the-shelf technology, but not the boosters for it. ) Many feel that NASA should instead promote private enterprise, and devote national resources to meaningful technology advancements rather than replicating existing ELVs.

References

  1. ^ Space Transportation Costs: Trends in Price Per Pound to Orbit 1990-2000 (PDF) (English). Futron (September 6, 2002). Futron Corporation, founded in 1986 is a minority-owned technology consulting firm based in Bethesda Maryland. Events 3114 BC - According to the Proleptic Julian calendar the current era in the Maya Long Count Calendar started See also 2002 (disambiguation Year 2002 ( MMII) was a Common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. Retrieved on 2006-11-02. Year 2006 ( MMVI) was a Common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. Events 1570 - A Tidal wave in the North Sea devastates the coast from Holland to Jutland, killing more than 1000
  2. ^ a b USATODAY.com - Critics scrutinize cost of shuttle
  3. ^ a b Columbia accident investigation board, public hearing. NASA (23 April 2003). The National Aeronautics and Space Administration ( NASA, ˈnæsə is an agency of the United States government, responsible for the nation's public space program Events 215 BC - A temple is built on the Capitoline Hill dedicated to Venus Erycina to commemorate the Roman defeat at Year 2003 ( MMIII) was a Common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. Retrieved on 2006-08-06. Year 2006 ( MMVI) was a Common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. Events 1538 - Bogotá, Colombia, is founded by Gonzalo Jiménez de Quesada.
  4. ^ Columbia Accident Investigation Board Report.
  5. ^ Foust, Jeff (2003-04-13). Year 2003 ( MMIII) was a Common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. Events 1111 - Henry V is crowned Holy Roman Emperor. 1204 - The Fourth Crusade sacks Constantinople John Young’s shuttle secret.

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