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Sobering Thot
There are precisely two nations on Earth right now that can put a man into space, at least on "Short Notice". And the United States of America is NOT one of them. (8-| I hope Poxmire is happy. Aloha mai Nai`a. -- "Please have your Internet License http://kapu.net/~mjwise/ and Usenet Registration handy..." |
#2
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Sobering Thot
Michael J Wise wrote: There are precisely two nations on Earth right now that can put a man into space, at least on "Short Notice". And the United States of America is NOT one of them. Oh, poop! We could gen up a shuttle launch in a month, easily, and I doubt that anyone else could do a lot better. We are choosing *not to* until it's "fixed" but if the need arose it would be a tradeoff between risk and reward. STS is a more-or-less functional system with some known vunerabilities. This came up after Challenger, too. There were several plans to launch certain critical national defense payloads with minimal crews, and had one or to dominos fallen differently, I have no doubt that they would have been exercised. Brett |
#3
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Sobering Thot
In article ,
Michael J Wise wrote: There are precisely two nations on Earth right now that can put a man into space, at least on "Short Notice". And the United States of America is NOT one of them. How long would it take for the United States to get a shuttle up and running if necessary? Do we know that China can put a man into space, and bring him back, on short notice? -- This address is for information only. I do not claim that these views are those of the Statistics Department or of Purdue University. Herman Rubin, Department of Statistics, Purdue University Phone: (765)494-6054 FAX: (765)494-0558 |
#4
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Sobering Thot
Michael J Wise wrote in
: There are precisely two nations on Earth right now that can put a man into space, at least on "Short Notice". For strange values of "short notice", perhaps. Russia builds Soyuz spacecraft one at a time; the next one *cannot* be made ready much before April 2004. Likewise, China has announced that the next Shenzhou will not be for another year or two; it can safely be assumed that, this early in their flight test program, they are still building spacecraft one at a time, based on lessons learned from the previous flight. If NASA *had to*, they could ready a shuttle for launch before either. Of course, such a launch would have to forego all the post-Columbia safety improvements that are now in work, but it is possible. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
#5
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Sobering Thot
Herman Rubin wrote:
How long would it take for the United States to get a shuttle up and running if necessary? The question becomes, for what values of "if necessary" would this be true? And I submit that there isn't anything that high a priority. Methinks that having Multiple "Human-Capable" launch systems is a Win. Too bad we don't have the money. Or the will. Aloha mai Nai`a. -- "Please have your Internet License http://kapu.net/~mjwise/ and Usenet Registration handy..." |
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