Posted on 02/01/2003 9:25:09 AM PST by LS
In light of today's Columbia disaster, it is perhaps time to revisit the intentions behind the now-cancelled National Aerospace Plane (the X-30) program. That program, in many ways, addressed what are apparently many of the problems that led to this explosion and loss of life.
In the early 1980s, the Reagan Administration, through DARPA (the Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency) formed a team of services (the Air Force, Navy, Strategic Defense) and NASA to design and build a scramjet-powered spaceplane that had aicraft-like operational characteristics. The goal was to make a space plane that was genuinely reusable, unlike the shuttles, which require tremendous overhead, support, and time to launch. As much as anything, this feature of the Aerospace Plane would have afforded quick response to emergencies in space---something we simply do not have today. More than that, its design, operation, and construction, while not eliminating all of the problems that have plagued the shuttles, offered some solutions to those we have seen.
Briefly, the X-30 was conceived as a 50-000-lb. swept-wing aircraft that "was" a flying engine. The forebody was an intake; the aft, an exhaust. Several giant scramjet engines were conceived to power this vessel on liquid slush hydrogen fuel. But the beauty of the scramjet was that it mixed the hydrogen with the air outside, giving off water vapor as a by-product. The significance of this concept should not be minimized: by using rockets, a shuttle essentially is like Columbus needing to take the water he sails through along with him. But the X-30 proposed to use the medium of air as PART of the fuel mixture.
Ultimately, the scramjet technology halted the whole program. In 1995, it was killed because the scramjets had not come along as fast as hoped. This, it turned out, was a flaw, not in the techology itself, but in the way the program was "sold" to the administration and the congress. I will return to this in a moment. What is important, though, is that the design of the aircraft used radical new materials for a thick "skin" that eliminated the need for the Shuttle-type tiles---which apparently is where some of the problems originated with Columbia. But even if this is not the case, in voyage after voyage, the expensive tiles simply burn up, and must be completely replaced after one flight. That is not a characteristic of "routine" flight!
How could the Aerospace Plane keep cool enough to survive the phenomenal temperatures? Again, the key was in the frozen slush fuel. In another radical design---and one aspect of the program that appeared to work to perfection---the frozen slushy hydrogen was pumped THROUGH the aircraft, to the leading edges of the wings and nose first, then to less hot areas, then finally to the engines, where it was burned. Thus, the fuel's journey heated it for burning, while cooling the aircraft's (already radically improved) metal edges.
In the seven years I served as the NASP program historian, the engineers and scientists made light-year leaps in materials, producing and manufacturing radical new compound materials that jacked up the ability of a leading edge to sustain heat. During that same time, the program effectively made, stored, pumped, and burned hydrogen slush fuel---one of its most visible triumphs.
This comes only a few days after the President announced a new government initiative to research hydrogen power for cars. It is an idea whose time has come, although Ronald Reagan thought of it first when he embraced the X-30 program.
There were several, substantial, technical hurdles in the program, but most were overcome. The greatest obstacle remained getting the scramjet to perform at levels that would allow speeds of Mach 10, Mach 20, and Mach 25 to reach orbit. Needless to say, this was a titanic feat. Still, the potential benefits of aircraft-like performance addressed several issues that have plagued the shuttles.
*Powered landings. If a shuttle had power in descent, rather than free-falling like a rock, and problems developed, having the ability to pull up or even slow the descent might make the difference between life and death. Certainly if the vehicle gets below 20,000 feet, power can make all the difference in the world. NASP would have had it; the shuttles don't.
*Routine aircraft-like operations (i.e., horizontal take-off, for example) eliminate the massive infrastructures of the shuttles, and could allow rescue attempts for astronauts stranded in space, or to ship needed repair items or equipment to them. Such an option does not exist today.
*X-30 design promised to eliminate many of the tile-related/o-ring related problems of the shuttles. There would be certainly very little rocket fuel aboard (only enough for space-maneuvering rockets). There would OBVIOUSLY be new challenges, and new equipment failures, but we could at least escape some of the weaknesses of the shuttle system.
So what happened to the Aerospace Plane? Robert Williams, the genius behind the program, determined that he could only get funding if he "sold" the administration and Congress on an actual aircraft---not scramjet engines or tests. Thus, he put the cart before the horse, but did get his funding. A further hurdle involved the fact that the U.S. HAS NO wind tunnels of testing any speed higher than Mach 8, and then only for fractions of a second. Instead of building massive new tunnels, Williams planned to make the aircraft into an X-15-type flying test bed, but on a much grander scale.
Unfortunately, the program could not suffer any technical setbacks, because setbacks caused schedule extensions, which cost more money, which caused Congress to stretch out the program yet again. Ever stretch-out ended up taking money from tne X-30 budget, until finally, all the program could do was to fund scramjet tests---exactly what it should have done when the program first started, but which were politically inexpedient.
The U.S. needs to come to grips with the reality that the shuttles are not "routine space access" vehicles, and never will be. Instead, we need to re-focus our space program on a new, hydrogen-fueled vehicle with airplane-like operations, with or without rocket assist.
When our space missions receive no media coverage, or draw no spectators, only then will we have achieved truly "routine" space access. (When was the last time people shook hands and cried when you started your car?)
Shuttles were a good design for the 1970s. It's time for NASA, and America, to come into the 21st century with a new spaceplane that acts like a taxi or a truck, not the Titanic.
To an extent, the Aerospace Plane did take steps in that direction. First, several air contractors participated in the main program (McDonnell Doug., Rockwell, P&W, Rocketdyne, GD, and, earlier, Lockheed and Boeing). I'm convinced that had the program put a usable prototype out, you WOULD have seen private-sector copycats fairly soon.
One of my jobs was to figure out how to advance the technology and make recommendations. I recommended a national prize for single-stage-to-orbit, wherein I'm convinced a private firm would quickly give us the technology we want for a fraction of the cost of NASA's programs.
But realistically, if you think the U.S. is going to disband NASA, it won't happen, and therefore REALISTICALLY the best we can do is to constantly push NASA toward more privatization in every area. (BTW, Soyuz is a government program).
With all due respect, I really wonder how much grieving I can do for people whose names I never even knew until this morning. There's authentic emotion, and then there's the synthetic kind which intellectually intimidated people like using in order to belittle those who are intellectually capable of thinking up solutions to prevent future tragedies.
Technically-knowledgeable people often respond to tragic circumstances by trying to think up solutions. This is not coldly insensitive; it is wonderfully appropriate. And in its own way, it is the sincerest form of demonstrating true grief.
Hear, hear. I ask everyone to consider that this sort of response is exactly what the shuttle crew themselves would consider an appropriate honor. After all, they didn't go into space because they wanted to live forever -- they went to learn and achieve. The risk of life balances the potential win of each mission. They could minimize it, but it never goes away.
Dare nonetheless.
Rather than grieving for those who perished today, I feel more inclined to honor them, and then to look postively towards the future of America in space. Let us not let the world come to know us as a nation of crybabies, but a nation of bold explorers, a nation in which all citizens have some measure of "The Right Stuff".
I would rather have three minutes of wonderful than a whole life of nothing special.
There is safety in staying home.... but little chance for complete and absolute amazement.
I feel the role of the government should be examined as well. Look at what has happened to all of the alternative launcher initiatives on the part of industry. Any that looked competitive with NASA were sabotaged financially by NASA. A program viable in all other respects must still operate with NASA's blessing.
All that is left of the fallen is an investigation, a memorial, and compassion for family and friends. We owe it to ourselves and the future to not let them die in vain. If we learn anything we must apply those lessons learned. And we must also look back to what is already well known, This is where I climb up on my soapbox, and please don't take this the wrong way.
Asking for a government solution here is asking for more of the same. NASA should be a research organization contracting out research. Building and operating a space fleet should not be in the NASA charter. There do exist current, viable contenders to NASA's space flight and research operations. This includes the Russian program, and private concerns currently operating outside the missle-launcher industrial complex, for example Kistler Aerospace comes to mind. We don't need cadillac programs. The most successful operating spacecraft available today is Soyuz, arguably 1950's era technology. If we want a replacement, a government program is the most backasswards solution, if at all possible. The competition and initiative required for a succesful NASP or SSTO is verifiably not present in the FedGov, or they would have already succeeded after 40 years of trying!
For further insight look up links to the Space Access Society. You won't find it at NASA, except in research.
NOTHING is completely safe.
Explorers do it for love of knowledge and maybe a little fame, later come the pioneers who die learning the best way to survive, and then the settlers who truly make it part of man's domain.
The explorers are still the only ones going into space.
One way of looking at it is this: I wouldn't think of driving down I95 in a 20-year-old car; why would anybody want to go to space in a 20-year-old space vehicle?
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