Posted on 02/03/2003 9:34:25 PM PST by kattracks
OUSTON, Feb. 3 Even if flight controllers had known for certain that protective heat tiles on the underside of the space shuttle had sustained severe damage at launching, little or nothing could have been done to address the problem, NASA officials say.
Virtually since the hour Columbia went down, the space agency has been peppered with possible options for repairing the damage or getting the crew down safely. But in each case, officials here and at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida say, the proposed solution would not have worked.
The simplest would have been to abort the mission the moment the damage was discovered. In case of an engine malfunction or other serious problem at launching, a space shuttle can jettison its solid rocket boosters and the external fuel tank, shut down its own engines and glide back down, either returning to the Kennedy Space Center or an emergency landing site in Spain or Morocco.
But no one even knew that a piece of insulation from the external tank had hit the orbiter until a frame-by-frame review of videotape of the launching was undertaken the next day. By then, Columbia was already in orbit, and re-entry would have posed the same danger that it did 16 days later.
Four other possibilities have been discussed at briefings or in interviews since the loss of Columbia, and rejected one by one by NASA officials.
First, repairing the damaged tiles. The crew had no tools for such a repair. At a news conference on Sunday, Ron D. Dittemore, the shuttle program manager, said that early in the shuttle program, NASA considered developing a tile repair kit, but that "we just didn't believe it was feasible at the time." He added that a crew member climbing along the underside of the shuttle could cause even more damage to the tiles.
Another idea, widely circulated on the Internet in the last few days, was that the shuttle could have docked with the International Space Station once the damage was discovered. But without the external fuel tank, dropped as usual after launching, Columbia had no fuel for its main engines and thus no way it could propel itself to the station, which circles the earth on a different orbit at a higher altitude.
"We have nowhere near the fuel needed to get there," said Bruce Buckingham, a spokesman at the Kennedy Space Center.
Another shuttle, Atlantis, was scheduled for launching on March 1 to carry supplies and a new crew to the space station, and it is possible to imagine a Hollywood-type series of events in which NASA rushed Atlantis to the launching pad, sent it up with a minimal crew of two, had it rendezvous with Columbia in space and brought everyone down safely.
But Atlantis is still in its hangar, and to rush it to launching would have required NASA to circumvent most of its safety measures. "It takes about three weeks, at our best effort, to prepare the shuttle for launch once we're at the pad," Mr. Buckingham said, "and we're not even at the pad." Further, Columbia had enough oxygen, supplies and fuel (for its thrusters only) to remain in orbit for only five more days, said Patrick Ryan, a spokesman at the Johnson Space Center here.
Finally, there is the notion that Columbia's re-entry might have been altered in some way to protect its damaged area. But Mr. Dittemore said the shuttle's descent path was already designed to keep temperatures as low as possible. "Because I'm reusing this vehicle over and over again, so I'm trying to send it through an environment that minimizes the wear and tear on the structure and the tile," he said at his news conference on Sunday.
Today he added that he did not know of a way for the shuttle to re-enter so that most of the heat would be absorbed by tiles that were not damaged, on its right wing. "I'm not aware of any other scenarios, any other techniques, that would have allowed me to favor one wing over the other," he said.
Even if that had been possible, it would probably have damaged the shuttle beyond repair and made it impossible to land, requiring the crew to parachute out at high speed and at high altitude. He said there was no way managers could have gotten information about the damaged tiles that would have warranted so drastic a move.
Gene Kranz, the flight director who orchestrated the rescue of astronauts aboard the crippled Apollo 13 in 1970, said that from what he knew about the suspected tile damage, there was probably nothing that could have been done to save the flight. "The options," he said in a telephone interview, "were just nonexistent."
Sure.....send up a "self Serve" Chevron station....who's going to get out and filler up!!?? They have said there were no space walk suits onboard....which brings up another thing.....WHY!!??...what if there was an easly fixed problem that would keep them from reentering???? Can you imagine looking out the shuttle window at the problem but can't get there???? It would be like having a flat in the middle of death vally with no car jack!!!! I see the easily fixable problem but i'm gonna die from the heat anyway....
Typo on my part. What I meant was STS-95.
Typical landing weight for a Shuttle "deployable mission" runs right around 200,000 lb., plus or minus about 5,000. So the number sounds about right.
BTW: STS-58 landing weight was close to this mission: 229,753 lb.
Excellent example of dead on sarcasm that does seem to reflect the thinking of some, It would apply equally to the War With Iraq naysayers. They say, we can't start a war, we don't know how it will turn out, we don't know how long it will take, how costly, how many lives will be lost, how can we win the peace even if we do win the war?
and by the way, this article very accurately reflects what Dittimore said in his press conference yesterday, I'm astounded. ....and I'm worried. Because not only do I think I understood much of what he was saying, I believed him.
If they could get into the cargo pay (even if it necessitated venting the cabin), couldn't they have used a hundred or so feet of rope or cable (electrical or otherwise) to make a really crude tether (tie one end to one side of the cargo bay, walk the rest of the spool/bundle to the other end, and throw the cable out; if done right, the cable should loop back to over the cargo bay. Tie it off, then use that as an anchor point for a sliding cable which can then be used as a launching point for another cable.
Nowhere near as good as proper EVA gear, but I would think something could be made to work.
Of course, there would be substantial risks with such an operation; unless they're smaller than the risks of doing nothing, it's not worth throwing the mission out the window to do such things.
Calculating the price of a human life is an everyday occurence in business. Businesses are capable of making products that are 100% safe. However, making a 100% safe product is not always profitable. Therefore, businesses will calculate the probability that a product will fail at various levels of quality. Then, businesses will forecast their likely average payout for a lawsuit and then maximize their profit based on calculations that include the above. So, putting a price on a life is a way of life in business.
An example of this is a friend I have that had a section of his colon removed because of cancer. The staples used to sew him back up failed. Of course, everyone went out of their way to make it right for him, including the doctor and the hospital. He also found out that the manufacturer of the staples had calculated a failure rate of 1 out of every 100,000 staples. The company decided that this level of quality was an acceptable risk so and they knew how much profit they could expect after figuring in legal costs related to the staples.
As a side note, if an assumption is wrong about product failure rates, or if they get hit with an unexpectedly high jury award, they then scream tort reform.
I agree. Data from your link:
Class: Manned. Type: Rescue. Nation: USA. Agency: NASA. Manufacturer: NASA Johnson.
Also known as ACRV (Assured Crew Return Vehicle), CERV (Crew Emergency Return Vehicle) and PLS (Personnel Launch System). NASA Langley design for a manned spaceplane as a backup to the space shuttle (in case it was abandoned or grounded) and as a CERV from the Freedom space station. Lifting body re-entry vehicle based on the Russian BOR-4 design. Designed for two flight crew, eight passengers, piloted landing at airfield on landing gear. During launch a fairing from the Titan IV booster to the spacecraft would have had solid rocket motors (154,000 kgf) for launch abort, with parachutes for a tail-down water landing. Although studied by contractors and a full size mock-up was built, the design was not selected for further development. Soyuz was designated as the International Space Station CERV. When doubts about the availability of Soyuz developed in 1995, NASA proceeded with development of the X-38, a NASA Johnson concept - a smaller version of the X-24 lifting body with a parafoil.
Just this morning I thought of this very same thing. How 'bout a spray-on ablative coating.
(great minds think alike)
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