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Linkfest!
05/11/04 00:00:00
The Day Job® and spending 4 hours on the tarmack at O'Hare have conspired to keep me from blogging several recent developments that need the attention. In no particular order:
<ul>
<li>Jon Goff, part of the BYU Space Development Club, is working on a <a href="http://www.et.byu.edu/groups/sdc/IgniterProject/">sparkless igniter</a> that uses catalytic ignition of gaseous hydrogen to create a super reliable ignition system.
The Moon Society will be joining the alliance soon.
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Just Something Neat To Do On Thursday Evening
05/11/04 00:00:00
It seems that the ISS will eclipse Jupiter this coming Thursday evening and the path of totality passes directly over my house. I'm willing to bet that will be the day that one of these scattered afternoon thunderstorms that conspire to rain everywhere but my yard decides to park itself directly overhead.
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CSXT Space Shot
05/07/04 00:00:00
May 6, 2004 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Amateur rocket space shot scheduled for May 17th, 2004.
The CSXT (Civilian Space eXploration Team) has received approval from the Federal Government to conduct its historic space launch later this month. �We�re confident that our �Go Fast� Space Shot 2004 Rocket will be the first rocket built by amateurs to be launched into space,� says CSXT founder, Ky Michaelson.
The CSXT team was formed with two goals: to achieve something that has never been done before and to open the doors to low cost space launches for the private sector - proving that space is open for exploration and use by everyone and not just the world�s governments.
The CSXT team is comprised of 18 rocket and space enthusiasts from across the country led by Program Manager Jerry Larson, �I am proud to be part of a group of such talented and resourceful people � the team is destined to win the amateur space race.�
�This will be a great milestone for civilian rocketry,� says project co-leader and avionics team manager, Eric Knight, who has designed a state of the art avionics package that provides real-time mobile video and tracking information, including engine performance, speed, and altitude.
The 21-foot �Go Fast� rocket will reach a speed of over 4000 MPH in less than 9 seconds and reach a maximum altitude of 69 miles.
The �Go Fast� rocket is sponsored by Go Fast Sports & Beverages Co. (www.gofastsports.com) and Fuscient, LLC (www.fuscient.com)
Ky Michaelson
W: 952-884-5870 F: 952-884-3424 C: 612-799-5277
kytec@spacestar.com www.civilianspace.com
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Aldridge Hearings Review
05/05/04 00:00:00
The President's Commission on Moon, Mars and Beyond held its last public hearing today in New York. This session included some interesting additions. Due to legal requirements the commission had to have 'public deliberations' of some kind, so we were treated to presentations on various topics by commission members instead of the usual witnesses. Some of the comments made it clear what some of the recommendations might be but that the details were either still to work out or were simply out of scope for their deliverable. Read on.
Other reports on the last hearing are here:
Music To My Ears – Rand on this Mark Carreau article.
NASA Chief Says Agency Must Revamp Organization to Reach Moon, Mars (Space.com)
Panelists want more focused space vision Associated Press via MSNBC
All of the presentations still stressed three major themes: directly involve the public, NASA isn't capable of doing this alone, and the output must be a viable and sustainable industry that is based on innovative private enterprise with multiple customers, not just one large government customer. There was also considerable discussion about how to fix the governmental aspects of the program from a project management perspective. This includes a lot of discussion around the military's techniques for the Joint Strike Fighter and the Future Combat System projects. The two management buzz words that stuck were “spiral development” and “systems of systems”. I had to keep reminding myself that this discussion wasn't about some attempt to manage a 'program' in the old Apollo sense, but simply how to bring the best practices found in other agencies to the entire project, and specifically to NASA's portion of the overall strategy.
Sean O'Keefe presentation was interesting since he had been in on the development of the vision itself from the very beginning and since several commission members had been doing site visits at several NASA centers. He said the right things in terms of “not a program, but an strategy”, “build an industry”, “facilitate private industry”, etc. But as we all know, the details about how the agency implements those ideas can determine their eventual failure. Carly prompted him with a question about the difference between “transformation” of the agency and a simple “reorganization” of it. If he can pull of a real transformation then he might be able to put those principles into action, but that's an awfully big agency to transform.
One of the more interesting exchanges with O'Keefe was around why Congress was having issues with the budget requests from the Whitehouse for the implementation of the vision. O'Keefe felt that the main reason is that many in Congress wanted a simple, discrete program with a single price tag when what is actually being sold is a strategy. As someone in R&D in his own organization I can understand that frustration. Many in management or financial positions simply refuse to think strategically, instead choosing to focus on discrete components and nothing more. The other point, brought up by Neal Tyson, was that NASA has developed a reputation of very unreliable cost estimates and Congress had simply been burned to many times to take NASA's budget forecasts at face value.
While these two issues are probably the major contributors to the problem, along with simple election year posturing, my reading of things suggests that many are simply waiting to see what this committee recommends in order to find out what the total picture might look like. At many points during the hearings I felt that the committee was asking for support before anyone had seen their output. Especially when it came to the space advocacy groups (NSS, Planetary Society, etc). Several commission members asked them why they weren't motivating their members to write their congressman to support NASA's budget requirements. I was disappointed that none of them said that everyone was really waiting to see what this committee had to say. If, as every witness has said, NASA can't do this alone, no one is going to support this effort based solely on what NASA has said so far. That's business as usual. That's Apollo/Shuttle/ISS thinking. None of us are going to put our “political muscle” behind something without some evidence that this really is something new and that it will be executed as specified. We've all heard from commissions like this before so, like Congress, we're not willing to take this at face value anymore. If the Commission's report says what they're suggesting it will say and the President executes on it without regard to the entrenched constituencies who prefer the status quote, then we will get behind it, but not before that.
This hearing also gave us the best insight into what the recommendations will look like. They will be in the form of a dozen or so recommendations in terms of management and strategy. They won't get be getting into vehicle design or anything like that. Here's the list that I could glean from the time available:
- Carly Fiorina talked about political sustainability and reasons for doing the whole thing. Specifically she suggested that while glory, exploration, inspiration, etc are nice, the pragmatist in all of us can’t justify the cost based solely on that. Instead the justification is that “if we don’t, someone else will.” It may take longer, but that someone else will own space and will also have created the technological powerhouse that endeavor requires. And since power in the 21st century is based on technological leadership, the country that does it will be definition be a superpower. So, while it isn’t a classical Space Race™, it is a move to preserve our standard of living and place of preeminence in the world. Toward the end she did have to stick in a point that this requires a robust, private sector, space industry. (I think they gave the topics to those not typically tied to a subject but that Carly felt compelled to insert something about private enterprise in there anyway. Good for her.)
- Lester Lyles discussed the governmental and programmatic aspects of of the vision and the fact that NASA couldn’t do it alone. Specifically that the National Space Council needed to be reconstituted and that it needed to coordinate all of the agencies, not just NASA.
- Michael Jackson discussed interfacing with the private sector but didn’t give any great details. It was basically the statements of “we will need to build a space industry” and that “NASA should only do those things that NASA alone can do”. Not a lot of detail here.
- Laurie Leshin reiterated the need for an educational component but didn’t give any specifics.
- Neal DeGrasse Tyson discussed scientific needs and made several points that the ability of science to do things grows as technological capability grows. He chided scientists who find technology crude and somehow ignoble as naive and that it was technology that made the science possible. Beyond that he was also short on exact details.
- Paul Spudis discussed ISRU and that without the utilization of space based resources the entire plan would fail because it was simply to expensive to take everything with us each time. He suggested that NASA needed to create a new capability around surface based operations, even calling it the Office of Planetary Surface Engineering. He also stated that routine access to cislunar space would radically change the economics of the entire satcom industry since satellites would become re-usable resources instead of launch-‘em-and-leave-'em. But also that this exploration creates all sorts of commercial opportunities. NASA is good an pioneering but is horrible at operations. This area is ripe for commercialization.
- Bob Walker gave a nice rundown of why NASA just isn’t capable of doing this themselves and that they aren’t capable of transforming themselves from the inside out. Some suggestions were that NASA centers become more economic centers, that entrepreneurs should feel welcome at NASA centers (that would be transformational!). Beyond that, not much detail.
- Maria Zuber talked specifically about the NASA Centers and how they should be moved to more of an Federally Funded Research and Development Center (FFRDC) which is how JPL, Ames and Lawrence Livermore are organized. This would mean large numbers of civil servants being moved to state agencies instead of as federal employees. She also discussed being more aggressive with requirements that people move between Centers and that no one should view Center employment as a lifetime thing anymore. Apparently they were surprised to find that 'a permanent civil service job" was not a great motivator for recruitment for young people. I still think its odd that anyone ever wanted to work for one employer for their entire life.
Below are some other noteworthy highlights from the hearings:
- During the Q&A for the “Lunar and Other Space Science” section Dr. Tony Tether (head of DARPA) interjected the point that the early space program promised that at some point soon everyone would get to go but that never materialized: bq. “What NASA seemed to forget was that then, we all wanted to go,” Tether told commissioners. “We were forgotten about.” He repeated this several times, driving the point home that he (and the rest of us) felt gypped by NASA and that the only real way to build a constituency is to deliver on that promise. The Commission came back to this point several times latter in the day. I’ll have more extensive comments on this latter.
- During the press conference an AP reporter asked about the price tag and their reluctance to deliver one. This prompted a long answer from several members. The best sound-bite was Aldridge’s statement that, again, this is a strategy, not a program. And that as a strategy, it would be “pay as you go”, which means that NASA would have to implement all of this within its existing budgets, which would remain at its current $16 billion (in 2004 dollars). No balloon payments, etc. So far this meme has been picked up by the Orlando Sentinel, CNN, and others. Maybe this will finally put a stake in the heart of that silly $1 trillion story.
So, am I still optimistic? Yes. But as I said earlier, I'm not going to do anything to actively support it until I see the actual recommendations and the President's response to them. And even then it will have to be earned support and it will be on a per-issue basis. There is still a huge potential for politics and bureaucracy to completely screw this one up.
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Aldridge Commission Meeting Today at Noon
05/02/04 00:00:00
The Aldridge Commission posted the agenda for todays meeting which starts at 1:00. A few items of note are
- Dr. Tether from DARPA who will surely get the “Does NASA need its own DARPA questions”.
- The space organization crowd: NSS, Federation of Galaxy Explorers, Association of Space Explorers, and the Planetary Society.
- Boeing gets its own segment on Sustainability and Management?
- The Prosperity and Resource Development section seems interesting: SpaceVest, Princeton Synergetics, and Morgan Stanley.
- After the press conference the commission will hold public deliberations for possibly an hour.
Their report is due in early June so they have roughly 1 month to get it to the Whitehouse so we might be able to deduce some direction from the public discussion. As usual I will be providing live commentary on the #arocket IRC channel. (I'm also upgrading my main workstation to Fedora Core 1 from Mandrake 9.0 so I may be doing all of this from my laptop. Wish me luck!)
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Other SA '04 Reviews
04/27/04 00:00:00
As usual, Clark's level of detail is way beyond what I get into. His review goes into detail on every single presentation, with links. So if you're looking for details, go read the whole thing.
Update:
In A Legislative Breakthrough? Rand analyzes Jim Muncy's legislative update which was extremely interesting since some of the proposed rule changes coming up are quite sane (assuming they make it through the sausage grinder intact).
Rand also comments on JP Aerospace's progress, saying that “it's not obvious that it won't work”. Its things like this and space elevators that keep rocket propulsion guys awake at night.
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Scaledologists
04/26/04 00:00:00
I met Alan Boyle last week and I've added him (and others) to the new blog roll. Alan has an excellent review of last SA '04. Among other things he jumps into the fun speculation on when Scaled's attempt will be:
bq.
I'll throw in my totally unscientific guess, based more on the holiday calendar than on any inside information. Let's say the first spaceflight comes on July 4, with a fireworks display worthy of the Fourth. Then the suspense could build as the two-week deadline ticks down to the second, prize-winning flight on July 17. That's the anniversary of the 1962 X-15 flight that made Air Force pilot Robert White the first human to earn astronaut wings for a rocket plane flight. If that's the way it happens, you heard it here first.
His suggestion makes me think that the date will be a complex negotiation between Scaled and the Xprize folks for maximum press impact and a reasonable test regime. The only problem with the 4th is that people will be distracted, so while the 17th might be correct, I'm not so sure about the 4th. But then again, Alan knows a lot more about the inner workings of the news cycle than I do.
Hmmm…. with no reported damage from the last set of tests I think we might be due for a new flight sometime within the next week or so.
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Space Access '04 Trip Report
04/25/04 00:00:00
This was my first time at a Space Access meeting. I tried the grand conference tour last year but was only able to get to ISDC. I must say that the difference is significant. ISDC participants simply aren't in the thick of building businesses at the point that SA participants are. At this meeting the primary discussions were around regulations, insurance, updates on businesses plans, and actual flight hardware. Things that show that people are building real businesses for real markets with real risks and rewards.
But it also had its fair share of history and mythos. It has its curmudgeons, plenty of greybeards, and still some wild eyed dreamers. The similarities with my first IETF were downright spooky. I can easily correlate certain personalities and companies between the two communities. There is internal strife that disappears when presented with a common enemy. There are companies with practices that irk some others as the community tries to find a balance between enabling the industry to develop and succeed without directly enabling your own competition. Intellectual property regimes are starting to make some people nervous.
I was able to put names (and in some cases just email addresses) with faces. I was able to meet the heavy weights of the space policy blogosphere: Rand Simberg, Clark Lindsey, and Jeff Foust. All very nice guys. We were all lamenting the lack of network access. Jerry Pournelle is an excellent stand up comedian in addition to having been there for most of the history of non-traditional space access. Henry Spencer has forgotten more about orbital mechanics that I will ever know. Henry Vanderbilt and his cadre of volunteers held an excellent conference with an extremely reasonable price tag. About the only thing I'd change is making sure that the hotel offered wireless network access in the conference room.
The things that people were talking about at the meeting were XCor's new little igniter, the amazing progress that JP Aerospace has made (and how scary it would be if, like space elevators, really big balloons made rockets almost irrelevant). The poor guy from NASA's Office of Space Exploration was literally mobbed with people trying to tell him how to structure that program. You have to give that guy some considerable credit for presenting that program at this organization. Everyone agreed that Barbara Thompson is just a fun person to be around. XCor getting their license was the climax of the meeting and served to prove yet another data point along the trend line.
There was some discussion of holding more than one meeting per year since its becoming hard to fit a quickly evolving industry into a 3 day a year conference. The suggestion was to add an extra day to the Space Frontier Foundation's yearly conference (in October this year) and have it be dedicated to Space Access Society.
During the 'open mike' session on the last night (equivalent to an IETF open plenary) there was considerable discussion about how to get the under 25 crowd involved. To start planting the seed corn to use a vastly overused phrase. I had to say that I felt there really wasn't a problem. The number of startups being created by people in their late 20s and early 30s has quickly surpassed the number of companies run by the earlier generation. Those startups have the energy that will attract those kids. But more importantly, when people like XCor, Scaled and Space Adventures start showing consistent profits, the kids will show up. The same way they showed up in 1994 and created things like Google.
In addition to all of the above there were several developments that aren't public yet so check back over the coming months for updates.
So, I have to say that I really enjoyed myself. The money spent generated an excellent return. If you can make it to future meetings I highly recommend it.
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NASA is speaking about prizes and the president's vision
04/24/04 00:00:00
Brant Sponberg from NASA's Office of Exploration is giving an Introduction to NASA's Centennial Challenge Program. I have to say he's a brave man for standing up in front of this crowd. Jerry Pournelle has already yelled at him. ;-) I hope to have some more insight into NASA's view of the President's vision and what the Aldridge Commission is up to. It does appear that at least this year's budget is having political issues.
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No Big Announcements from The Xprize
04/23/04 00:00:00
Peter Diamandis gave an update on the Xprize but there were no new announcements. One of my thoughts about when Scaled might make their attempt was that there might be an announcement here. But sadly no, so I'm going to going back to my 2 month estimate.
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