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"Al Jackson" wrote:
http://www.spacedaily.com/news/hubble-03a.html What cha think? Pure and utter fantasy. Firstly, there is no way for the Soyuz to capture Hubble (it has no arm), no way to berth Hubble, and thus no way to reboost Hubble (which is the bare minimum for extending Hubble's life, even without adding any instruments). Secondly, Soyuz does not have near the proper storage areas for transporting new instruments, let alone for holding them in place while an EVA is performed to swap out old for new. Both the axial and radial instruments are too large to fit inside the Soyuz, let alone fit through the orbital module hatch. Building a sub-spacecraft capable of doing all that would be remarkably costly. And a manned Soyuz launch from Kourou is just about as equally fantastical. Most importantly though, the flights for Hubble servicing missions always came free, so the missions were pretty cheap (mostly just instrument costs and incremental launch / training costs). And even then people are balking at the additional cost, adding the cost of 1) a whole new sub-spacecraft capable of rendezvousing with, capturing, and berthing the telescope, as well providing docking capability with a Soyuz, *and* carrying several instruments, 2) the launch and operations costs of such a vehicle, 3) the cost of transporting a Soyuz-TM from Russia to Kourou and (more importantly) all the testing that needs to be done in Kourou to make sure the vehicle is operational, 4) the cost of upgrading Kourou's launch facilities to be able to handle a manned Soyuz launch, and finally 5) the actual cost of such a launch. At a bare minimum I'd think this would at least triple the cost of a servicing mission, which would probably be larger than the cost of launching a whole new observatory of a new design. |
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"Christopher M. Jones" wrote in
: "Al Jackson" wrote: http://www.spacedaily.com/news/hubble-03a.html What cha think? Pure and utter fantasy. Firstly, there is no way for the Soyuz to capture Hubble (it has no arm), no way to berth Hubble, and thus no way to reboost Hubble (which is the bare minimum for extending Hubble's life, even without adding any instruments). Secondly, Soyuz does not have near the proper storage areas for transporting new instruments, let alone for holding them in place while an EVA is performed to swap out old for new. Both the axial and radial instruments are too large to fit inside the Soyuz, let alone fit through the orbital module hatch. Building a sub-spacecraft capable of doing all that would be remarkably costly. Not to mention that the modern Soyuz TM and TMA are highly evolved station ferry vehicles, with very limited (4.2 day) standalone flight duration. The days of extended standalone Soyuz missions are long gone, preceding even the Soyuz T. The TM and TMA would be hard-pressed to support even one Hubble-style EVA, and most shuttle missions to Hubble have 4 or 5 EVAs. The original author's proposal to split one shuttle flight among two Soyuzes is mental masturbation, nothing more. Making Soyuz a standalone vehicle capable of supporting multiple EVAs will require modifications, and will not be free. And a manned Soyuz launch from Kourou is just about as equally fantastical. Right. A lot of people confuse the Soyuz U/FG *launchers* with the Soyuz TM/TMA *spacecraft*. They're *not* synonymous, and the current Soyuz plans at Kourou do *not* accommodate the spacecraft. Most importantly though, the flights for Hubble servicing missions always came free, so the missions were pretty cheap (mostly just instrument costs and incremental launch / training costs). To elaborate a bit, it matters not that Soyuz costs are cheaper than shuttle costs. The shuttle exists and is in operation, so adding a shuttle mission to Hubble requires the government to pay the "marginal cost" - the costs you mention, plus one external tank, plus one pair of rebuilt SRBs. That comes to about $100 million, plus the instrument costs (which would be incurred with the Soyuz as well). Soyuz, on the other hand, would have to be purchased commercially. So the figures of merit here are Soyuz "retail price" versus Shuttle "marginal cost". And the retail price of a Soyuz mission to HST will undoubtedly be far more than the $20 million Russia charges for a single seat on a three- seat Soyuz that is headed for ISS anyway. Back when NASA was considering buying Progress flights to ISS (prior to the Iran Nonproliferation Act of 2000), RSC Energia quoted a price of $130 million per flight, which was reduced to $65 million by the intervention of RSA chief Yuri Koptev. A Soyuz flight would undoubtedly cost more. 3) the cost of transporting a Soyuz-TM from Russia to Kourou and (more importantly) all the testing that needs to be done in Kourou to make sure the vehicle is operational, 4) the cost of upgrading Kourou's launch facilities to be able to handle a manned Soyuz launch... Which, at a minimum, would involve pad modifications to allow crew ingress/egress while the vehicle is vertical, which IIRC is not part of the current plan. and finally 5) the actual cost of such a launch. At a bare minimum I'd think this would at least triple the cost of a servicing mission, which would probably be larger than the cost of launching a whole new observatory of a new design. Agreed. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
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"Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
Not to mention that the modern Soyuz TM and TMA are highly evolved station ferry vehicles, with very limited (4.2 day) standalone flight duration. The days of extended standalone Soyuz missions are long gone, preceding even the Soyuz T. The TM and TMA would be hard-pressed to support even one Hubble-style EVA, and most shuttle missions to Hubble have 4 or 5 EVAs. The original author's proposal to split one shuttle flight among two Soyuzes is mental masturbation, nothing more. Making Soyuz a standalone vehicle capable of supporting multiple EVAs will require modifications, and will not be free. An excellent point that I had not considered. The Shuttle may have evolved first as a standalone vehicle then toward favoring station operations, but it still has a lot of standalone capability, whereas the Soyuz TM variants have evolved most of that capability into nonexistance. Mostly because the Russians have not had a non-station-centric manned spaceflight program for what? two decades? And before that it was just a "put men in orbit to show that we can" type thing a la Gemini or Mercury. And also because they haven't upgraded the payload capabilities of their launcher in, well, basically forever. They had planned to swap it for the Ukranian Zenit, I think, but that kinda fell through when the USSR split up *and* the Russian economy went on the rocks. In short, the only way to get more use out of the Soyuz spacecraft (which weighs about twice as much as Gemini, FYI) with the very limited mass budget was to trade off one thing for another. The obvious tradeoff is the unused standalone flight capability. And a manned Soyuz launch from Kourou is just about as equally fantastical. Right. A lot of people confuse the Soyuz U/FG *launchers* with the Soyuz TM/TMA *spacecraft*. They're *not* synonymous, and the current Soyuz plans at Kourou do *not* accommodate the spacecraft. I've seen a similar phenomenon with the Shuttle ET station fantasies. People confuse having a pressure hull in orbit with a nearly complete spacestation. Maybe on Earth, in, oh, the 1900s maybe, a mere building was enough of a shelter to live in and call close enough to a house, but in space a pressure vessel isn't hardly the 10th part of a functioning space station. Also, there are plenty of empty stages in fairly accessable orbits, if it were such a good idea why hasn't anyone used those yet? To elaborate a bit, it matters not that Soyuz costs are cheaper than shuttle costs. The shuttle exists and is in operation, so adding a shuttle mission to Hubble requires the government to pay the "marginal cost" - the costs you mention, plus one external tank, plus one pair of rebuilt SRBs. That comes to about $100 million, plus the instrument costs (which would be incurred with the Soyuz as well). Up until very recently the Shuttle often didn't have enough to do to pad out its flight rate. Which is why they jumped at the chance to do Hubble servicing missions for rock bottom "prices". And for a while the servicing missions were just about the most important thing the Shuttle *ever* did. But ISS came along and gave the Shuttle plenty to do, though they still give the same deals for the servicing missions out of tradition, and because it's still a high prestige job, and out of a lack of care for proper cost accounting (it's not like the Shuttle needs to turn a profit). Soyuz, on the other hand, would have to be purchased commercially. So the figures of merit here are Soyuz "retail price" versus Shuttle "marginal cost". And the retail price of a Soyuz mission to HST will undoubtedly be far more than the $20 million Russia charges for a single seat on a three- seat Soyuz that is headed for ISS anyway. Back when NASA was considering buying Progress flights to ISS (prior to the Iran Nonproliferation Act of 2000), RSC Energia quoted a price of $130 million per flight, which was reduced to $65 million by the intervention of RSA chief Yuri Koptev. A Soyuz flight would undoubtedly cost more. For this you'd have to buy a whole Soyuz, because you need to use it and use it *up*. The seats weren't buying Soyuzes, they were just buying rides on flights which would fly regardless. It's like the difference between buying a taxi ride and buying an autmobile. Although in this case because the taxi rides are so rare the ticket price was pretty steep, but I think that gets across the general difference in usage. And don't forget that #2, the launch of the instrument carrier / rendezvous magical doohicky. At a minimum that's going to be around a tenth of a gigabuck even for a Delta II or Sea Launch launch, but more likely it would need a Delta IV, Atlas V, or Arianne 5, due to the mass. 3) the cost of transporting a Soyuz-TM from Russia to Kourou and (more importantly) all the testing that needs to be done in Kourou to make sure the vehicle is operational, 4) the cost of upgrading Kourou's launch facilities to be able to handle a manned Soyuz launch... Which, at a minimum, would involve pad modifications to allow crew ingress/egress while the vehicle is vertical, which IIRC is not part of the current plan. Quite. and finally 5) the actual cost of such a launch. At a bare minimum I'd think this would at least triple the cost of a servicing mission, which would probably be larger than the cost of launching a whole new observatory of a new design. Agreed. And I didn't even begin to think about the major programatical difficulties something like this would entail. It's like a mini version of Shuttle-Mir or ISS. International agreements (and perhaps treaties) would need to signed, and since the Baikonur launched Soyuz can't reach Hubble that means that the US, the ESA (a partner in Hubble), the Arianne countries, and the Russians (and who knows who else) would have to sit at a table and hammer out agreements and time schedules and, erg, it makes my head hurt just thinking about it. And consider the historical difficulties with international government run ventures of this sort, usually they go for some sort of service or hardware swap, almost never do they actually buy something directly from another country. Even in the case of Zarya / FGB it was a subconctractor (Boeing) which bought it from the Russians (and even that was bad enough in the eyes of the government). I can only imagine what would be involved with buying a Soyuz from the Russians, launching it from Kourou, docking it with this new thingamajig, doing who knows what else with it that the Russians never thought of doing. And then, what? where are they going to land? Hubble's orbit doesn't pass over Russia or Kazakhstan, it just barely passes over part of the lower US. And then this automated docking module with cargo capability thing comes in, gee, it's not like that won't cost anything to build. Especially when it has to rendezvous with something that was not designed for automated rendezvous operations. The Europeans are having a hard enough time building their ISS cargo vehicle and it has a much, much easier task. And I suppose Canada's going to sell someone a miniature version of the SRMS at a deep discount, or something? Scratch all of that out. Get back to the HST and the science. Are any of the PIs going to be even remotely interested in doing something so risky with *their* instruments? The more I think about it the crazier it sounds, and it was already crazy to begin with, so that says a lot. |
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"Christopher M. Jones" wrote in message ...
"Jorge R. Frank" wrote: Not to mention that the modern Soyuz TM and TMA are highly evolved station ferry vehicles, with very limited (4.2 day) standalone flight duration. The days of extended standalone Soyuz missions are long gone, preceding even the Soyuz T. The TM and TMA would be hard-pressed to support even one Hubble-style EVA, and most shuttle missions to Hubble have 4 or 5 EVAs. The original author's proposal to split one shuttle flight among two Soyuzes is mental masturbation, nothing more. Making Soyuz a standalone vehicle capable of supporting multiple EVAs will require modifications, and will not be free. What are the required mods to lengthen Soyuz free flight time? Note that Space Adventures is offering a free flyer mission Real Soon Now. |
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(MSu1049321) wrote:
if all you wanted wsa to reboost Hubble into a storage orbit for later use, I could imagine a simple, short, adapter being made to plug in where the Canadarm did. The problem with this is that the Canadarm plugs into the *side* of the Hubble, not the base. D. -- The STS-107 Columbia Loss FAQ can be found at the following URLs: Text-Only Version: http://www.io.com/~o_m/columbia_loss_faq.html Enhanced HTML Version: http://www.io.com/~o_m/columbia_loss_faq_x.html Corrections, comments, and additions should be e-mailed to , as well as posted to sci.space.history and sci.space.shuttle for discussion. |
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JRS: In article , seen in
news:sci.space.policy, Derek Lyons posted at Mon, 25 Aug 2003 18:18:55 :- (MSu1049321) wrote: if all you wanted wsa to reboost Hubble into a storage orbit for later use, I could imagine a simple, short, adapter being made to plug in where the Canadarm did. The problem with this is that the Canadarm plugs into the *side* of the Hubble, not the base. Unimportant. ISTM that the delta-vee needed will be of the *order* of 1 km/s. One gee is 10 m/s^2, and gives 1 km/s in 100 s which is about a milli- day. So the required force corresponds to an acceleration of a milligee, applied for a day. Given the time taken for launch & rendezvous, there should be no great difficulty in allowing a day or more. Hubble must weigh no more than of the order of 25 tons, so the force required is no more than the order of 25 kg equivalent. A large ball of sisal (string), weighing perhaps 7 lbs, was measured by me as four times a very considerable distance; at least a total of 500 m. So all that is needed is a few balls of string tied together; one end tied to a suitable part of Hubble, the other to the tug-ship. The small towing-engines can without much loss of efficiency be pointed symmetrically well away from Hubble. A large but thin sheet of mylar could be used to protect Hubble from residual impingement. -- © John Stockton, Surrey, UK. Turnpike v4.00 MIME. © Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQqish topics, acronyms & links; some Astro stuff via astro.htm, gravity0.htm; quotes.htm; pascal.htm; &c, &c. No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News. |
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On Sat, 23 Aug 2003 16:00:36 -0500
"Christopher M. Jones" wrote: snip And a manned Soyuz launch from Kourou is just about as equally fantastical. Yes, apart from the other objections to this which I have seen I wonder about the consequences of ditching into the ocean after a failed launch. Is Soyuz the only capsule design which can _not_ safely land on water? It always seems to wind up on its side after a normal landing and this makes me think that it is top heavy and would float on it's side, with the hatch potentially under water. ---- Michael Smith Mail address and GPG key available from www.netapps.com.au -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE/T0KVVBAeZyhLJFgRArlYAJ0d//BpKyhAs6l6gwB+p4tiarWQzgCgmCz/ 12uxMFjONf8a+bt/WOi3mVQ= =/QEl -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
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Michael Smith writes:
On Sat, 23 Aug 2003 16:00:36 -0500 "Christopher M. Jones" wrote: snip And a manned Soyuz launch from Kourou is just about as equally fantastical. Yes, apart from the other objections to this which I have seen I wonder about the consequences of ditching into the ocean after a failed launch. Is Soyuz the only capsule design which can _not_ safely land on water? Soyuz _can_ safely land on water. Well, for what "safely" means in an emergency situation. It always seems to wind up on its side after a normal landing and this makes me think that it is top heavy and would float on it's side, with the hatch potentially under water. There's an inflatable balloon helping the capsule stay upright in case of a water landing. Look at http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/history/...e-blacksea.htm for some first-hand information by Mike Foale. Jochem -- "A designer knows he has arrived at perfection not when there is no longer anything to add, but when there is no longer anything to take away." - Antoine de Saint-Exupery |
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