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If I understood O'Keefe correctly, he says we should let Hubble rot
because it would be too risky to send another mission there. That doesn't make sense on many levels (like past missions for example), but I want to discuss something else here. If we can ask 25 year olds to risk their life in battle (Irak or elsewhere) for whatever reason, why can't we ask 40+ year olds to do the same for science. Clearly they would be willing (at least some of them, I suspect all of them). If America as a nation can spend dozens of billions of dollars on a project, but can't "take risks" with peoples lives for exploration, then it is probably finished as far as human exploration goes. Or is it just that O'Keefe has a problem here? And what about these human trips to Moon or Mars anyway? I bet that they will be a lot risker then matching Hubble's Orbit and bolting a few new pieces on to it. There might be other good reasons to trash Hubble, but I think the reason O'Keefe gave is surious (to put it politely). What do you think? |
#2
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There might be other good reasons to trash Hubble, but I think the
reason O'Keefe gave is surious (to put it politely). I wasn't aware he could drop a few billion more in his purse if he really, really just wanted to. |
#3
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In article , MikeWise wrote:
If I understood O'Keefe correctly, he says we should let Hubble rot because it would be too risky to send another mission there. That doesn't make sense on many levels (like past missions for example), but I want to discuss something else here. If we can ask 25 year olds to risk their life in battle (Irak or elsewhere) for whatever reason, why can't we ask 40+ year olds to do the same for science. Clearly they would be willing (at least some of them, I suspect all of them). There are plenty of forty-year-olds; finding a shuttle crew willing to take a risky flight is not hard. Finding a good, experienced shuttle crew willing to take a flight percieved as riskier might be trickier, but still not difficult. (It's not really the most risk-averse segment of the population...) Losing a shuttle, though, and trying to keep an ISS flight rate up with only two orbiters... -- -Andrew Gray |
#4
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Andrew Gray wrote:
In article , MikeWise wrote: If I understood O'Keefe correctly, he says we should let Hubble rot because it would be too risky to send another mission there. That doesn't make sense on many levels (like past missions for example), but I want to discuss something else here. If we can ask 25 year olds to risk their life in battle (Irak or elsewhere) for whatever reason, why can't we ask 40+ year olds to do the same for science. Clearly they would be willing (at least some of them, I suspect all of them). There are plenty of forty-year-olds; finding a shuttle crew willing to take a risky flight is not hard. Finding a good, experienced shuttle crew willing to take a flight percieved as riskier might be trickier, but still not difficult. (It's not really the most risk-averse segment of the population...) The next generation one goes without the expectation of humans going to fix it. Why not use Hubble for a bit of practice with robot repair technique? Though adaptive optics have increased terrestrial scope power that must increase further by adding in Hubble and its wider spectrum. Or is it insignificant? Might be good using adaptives between Hubble and the NGST. Losing a shuttle, though, and trying to keep an ISS flight rate up with only two orbiters... What do the humans do that robots can't, or won't be able to? Where are the economic studies of these trade-offs? -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#6
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In article ,
Andrew Gray wrote: In article , MikeWise wrote: If I understood O'Keefe correctly, he says we should let Hubble rot because it would be too risky to send another mission there. That doesn't make sense on many levels (like past missions for example), but I want to discuss something else here. If we can ask 25 year olds to risk their life in battle (Irak or elsewhere) for whatever reason, why can't we ask 40+ year olds to do the same for science. Clearly they would be willing (at least some of them, I suspect all of them). There are plenty of forty-year-olds; finding a shuttle crew willing to take a risky flight is not hard. Finding a good, experienced shuttle crew willing to take a flight percieved as riskier might be trickier, but still not difficult. (It's not really the most risk-averse segment of the population...) Losing a shuttle, though, and trying to keep an ISS flight rate up with only two orbiters... Yet will such a solution stop the next space disaster? Almost certainly not. The US has had three incidents in which astronauts have lost their lives in a space vehicle: Apollo 1, Challenger, and now Columbia. Each happened at a different point and (even with the two shuttle losses) in a different way and with a different cause. Sooner or later another vehicle and its crew will be lost. If manned space travel and manned space exploration are to continue then next loss is only a matter of time. When it does happen it will probably happen in a different way yet again, with a different cause, and in a fashion most people at the time will least expect (but which everyone afterwards, with the wisdom of hindsight, will say they *should* have been expecting). If it's not a shuttle, it will be a CEV or whatever comes after the CEV. Suppose for the sake of argument a CEV was lost. What then? Does America stop going to the Moon or Mars as a consequence and return to pottering around in LEO, for no better reason than because there astronauts will be most safe and least likely to incur the risk of winding up dead, and the least money need to be spent on ensuring such an accident does not happen again? -- Stephen Souter http://www.edfac.usyd.edu.au/staff/souters/ |
#7
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In article ,
Andrew Gray wrote: In article , MikeWise wrote: If I understood O'Keefe correctly, he says we should let Hubble rot because it would be too risky to send another mission there. That doesn't make sense on many levels (like past missions for example), but I want to discuss something else here. If we can ask 25 year olds to risk their life in battle (Irak or elsewhere) for whatever reason, why can't we ask 40+ year olds to do the same for science. Clearly they would be willing (at least some of them, I suspect all of them). There are plenty of forty-year-olds; finding a shuttle crew willing to take a risky flight is not hard. Finding a good, experienced shuttle crew willing to take a flight percieved as riskier might be trickier, but still not difficult. (It's not really the most risk-averse segment of the population...) Losing a shuttle, though, and trying to keep an ISS flight rate up with only two orbiters... Yet will a solution that only sees the Shuttle go to the ISS stop the next space disaster? Almost certainly not. The US has had three incidents in which astronauts have lost their lives in a space vehicle: Apollo 1, Challenger, and now Columbia. Each happened at a different point and (even with the two Shuttle losses) in a different way and with a different cause. Sooner or later another vehicle and its crew will be lost. If manned space travel and manned space exploration are to continue then the next loss is only a matter of time. When it does happen it will probably happen in a different way yet again, with a different cause, and in a fashion most people at the time will least expect (but which everyone afterwards, with the wisdom of hindsight, will say they *should* have been expecting). If it's not a Shuttle, it will be a CEV or whatever comes after the CEV. Suppose for the sake of argument a CEV was lost on its way to the Moon or Mars. What then? Does America stop going to the Moon or Mars as a consequence and return to pottering around in the comparative safety of LEO? -- Stephen Souter http://www.edfac.usyd.edu.au/staff/souters/ |
#8
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On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 13:13:49 +1100, in a place far, far away, Stephen
Souter made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Losing a shuttle, though, and trying to keep an ISS flight rate up with only two orbiters... Yet will such a solution stop the next space disaster? Almost certainly not. So? It's unlikely to happen again before the Shuttle retires. |
#9
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![]() MikeWise wrote: If I understood O'Keefe correctly, he says we should let Hubble rot because it would be too risky to send another mission there. That doesn't make sense on many levels (like past missions for example), but I want to discuss something else here. If we can ask 25 year olds to risk their life in battle (Irak or elsewhere) There's that spelling again. Don't you know that means you aren't part of 'we'. |
#10
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"MikeWise" wrote in message
om... If America as a nation can spend dozens of billions of dollars on a project, but can't "take risks" with peoples lives for exploration, then it is probably finished as far as human exploration goes. Or is it just that O'Keefe has a problem here? Its very simple. He wowed to follow the CAIB recommendations to the letter. Thus, shuttles wont be going anywhere but ISS and end of story. -kert |
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