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This is news. From congressional testimony reported at:
"http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=753&e=1&u=/ap/20050412/ap_on_go_co/nasa_chief&sid=84439559" " Griffin also agreed with senators that there was an unacceptable gap between the planned retirement, no later than 2010, of the space shuttle, and the launch some five years later of the next-generation manned vehicle, called the Crew Exploration Vehicle." Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (news, bio, voting record), R-Texas, who heads the Commerce Committee's panel on science and space, said such a hiatus was "a security issue for our country." Griffin concurred: "I do not believe we would wish to see a situation where the United States is dependent on any partners, reliable or unreliable" for access to space." |
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"Ed Kyle" wrote in
ups.com: This is news. From congressional testimony reported at: "http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=753&e=1&u=/ap/20050412/ap_o n_go_co/nasa_chief&sid=84439559" " Griffin also agreed with senators that there was an unacceptable gap between the planned retirement, no later than 2010, of the space shuttle, and the launch some five years later of the next-generation manned vehicle, called the Crew Exploration Vehicle." As I suspected would be the case; the retirement of the Shuttle will have to be pushed back, or funding and development of CEV pushed up. More likely the former than the latter, given the way Congress does things. --Damon |
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On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 17:48:21 -0500, in a place far, far away, Damon
Hill made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: " Griffin also agreed with senators that there was an unacceptable gap between the planned retirement, no later than 2010, of the space shuttle, and the launch some five years later of the next-generation manned vehicle, called the Crew Exploration Vehicle." As I suspected would be the case; the retirement of the Shuttle will have to be pushed back, or funding and development of CEV pushed up. More likely the former than the latter, given the way Congress does things. It doesn't say that it has to be closed--just that four years is unacceptable. Griffin obviously plans to move the 2014 date up. |
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Damon Hill wrote:
As I suspected would be the case; the retirement of the Shuttle will have to be pushed back, So who exactly do you think will be brave enough to take responsibility for keeping the shuttle flying past 2010? Currently we have a fixed date to stop flights, and if a shuttle is lost then Congress can blame NASA for screwing up. If Congress tell them to keep flying til 2014 and a shuttle is lost after 2010, NASA will blame Congress for telling them to keep flying. Do you think there's a single person in Congress with the balls to take that responsibility? Mark |
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In article ,
Jorge R. Frank wrote: So who exactly do you think will be brave enough to take responsibility for keeping the shuttle flying past 2010? Currently we have a fixed date to stop flights, The "fixed" date is in fact completely arbitrary, so stretching it will not require much bravery. It would require the courage, or maybe the cowardice, to contradict a direct and explicit promise from the President of the United States to the American people. -- /\ Greg Kuperberg (UC Davis) / \ Home page: http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~greg/ \ / Visit the Math ArXiv Front at http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/ \/ * All the math that's fit to e-print * |
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wrote:
Damon Hill wrote: As I suspected would be the case; the retirement of the Shuttle will have to be pushed back, So who exactly do you think will be brave enough to take responsibility for keeping the shuttle flying past 2010? How does that differ from taking responsibility for pressing earlier into service a brand new human spacecraft, complete with all of its bugs? Remember AS-204, Soyuz 1, etc? - Ed Kyle |
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In article ,
Rand Simberg wrote: Stating a policy is not a "direct and explicit promise to the American people." What part of "In 2010, the Space Shuttle will be retired from service" do you not understand? -- /\ Greg Kuperberg (UC Davis) / \ Home page: http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/~greg/ \ / Visit the Math ArXiv Front at http://front.math.ucdavis.edu/ \/ * All the math that's fit to e-print * |
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Ed Kyle wrote:
How does that differ from taking responsibility for pressing earlier into service a brand new human spacecraft, complete with all of its bugs? Remember AS-204, Soyuz 1, etc? Well, I don't think Congress will do either (most likely the shuttle will stop flying in 2010 and CEV will never happen), but if they did decide to bring CEV forward and gave NASA the money to do so, they could blame NASA if they lost one. If they ignored Bush and told NASA to keep the shuttle flying after 2010, they'd be the ones blamed, instead... after all, having lost two, 'everyone' knows the shuttle is a death-trap now. Mark |
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wrote:
Ed Kyle wrote: How does that differ from taking responsibility for pressing earlier into service a brand new human spacecraft, complete with all of its bugs? Remember AS-204, Soyuz 1, etc? Well, I don't think Congress will do either (most likely the shuttle will stop flying in 2010 and CEV will never happen), but if they did decide to bring CEV forward and gave NASA the money to do so, they could blame NASA if they lost one. If they ignored Bush and told NASA to keep the shuttle flying after 2010, they'd be the ones blamed, instead... after all, having lost two, 'everyone' knows the shuttle is a death-trap now. We've discussed this before, so you might do a search on shuttle vs. soyuz reliability. Shuttle's record is no worse than Soyuz or Shenzhou or Apollo, etc.. There is no reason to expect that CEV would be much better. If shuttle is a "deathtrap", it is no more or less a "deathtrap" than any other human spaceflight system. What shuttle has failed to do is to meet unrealistic expectations that near-perfect spaceflight reliability was possible. I think everyone knows the reality of the risk now. And, during a time when U.S. soldiers are dying in combat for national goals authorized by Congress, I think there is an acceptance of spaceflight risk for national purposes if the missions are deemed worthwhile and if reasonable efforts are made to minimize the risk as much as possible. Think about how many test pilots "augured in" during the 1950s-60s efforts to advance the state of U.S. aeronautics. They were given ejection systems, etc., to try to minimize the risk, but the risk could never be eliminated. No U.S. Congress I've ever seen would let U.S. human spaceflight end. CEV, or something like it, is going to happen. - Ed Kyle |
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