Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: BradGuth <bradguth@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 27 Nov 2008 04:33:28 -0800 (PST)
On Nov 26, 7:20 pm, Brian Thorn <bthor...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 20:41:05 -0800 (PST), Totorkon
<aertr...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
What if it is a shorted wheel motor or broken gear on a field
expedition. Humans can't repair it without parts or in a clumsy
pressure suit. Loss of a machine mission to faulty equipment is a
setback far better than the first corpses on mars.
Right. Spare parts cannot be carried. Designing the rover to have
easily replaceable critical parts like the Hubble Space Telescope is
never going to happen, and its is totally impossible to have a
redundant rover on standby back at the base in the worst case
scenario. Oh, wait...
Pheonix offers an example of an automated lab.
Which wasn't much of a lab by terrestrial standards and barely worked.
A crewed mars mission was part of the Bush VSE.
Only by Bush 43 saying "and eventually to Mars" in his VSE
introduction speech. Otherwise, no details whatsoever, and the
emphasis was hugely on the Moon. There is no Mars expedition in the
planning stages.
Think of what a lunar rover robot with solar wings or an rtg could
do. It could easily cover half the moon in a year.
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over? We already know what solar powered rovers
can do. Spirit and Opportunity have done a few miles between them in
nearly five years. The RTG-powered Mars Science Laboratory is being
designed with expectations of a 12 mile excursion, and that's for two
years.
The Moon is not an easier destination. In fact, it may be harder due
to harsher nightime conditions and 100% vacuum.
It could dwell at
interesting selenological sites sending back millions of pictures at a
full range of magnifications. It could send back more than a ton of
samples for a landed weight equal to one lem.
One LM was 33,000 lbs.
Mars Science Laboratory will be about 2,000 lbs and is running $1.9
billion so far. You do the math. These wonderful robots ain't cheap.
Given a $100B pricetag for iss (closer to twice that),
It's somewhere around $30 billion, actual hardware costs to date. Add
in another $3 billion a year for the Shuttle launches and we're in the
$50-75 billion range (depending on whether you count the entire
Shuttle budget to ISS, despite Hubble missions and the like). Clinton
capped its budget at $24 billion, and of course it blew past that,
causing Bush 43 to cut things like the Hab module and CRV (that's why
he put O'Keefe the beancounter in charge of NASA.)
The oft-reported "$100 billion" cost figure originates in NASA
forecasts back before Columbia, but included Station and Shuttle
support through 2015, the original ISS end of mission. Of course, with
Shuttle retiring in 2010, a big chunk of that high cost will be
reduced after 2010.
Why do so many critics keep throwing around dishonest numbers like
"$200 billion"? Scare tactics when all else fails to sway bystanders
to your side?
estimates range up to $1T to put a crew on mars.
Cite? Even the outrageous Space Exploration Initiative under Bush 41,
which included everything and the kitchen sink, was "only" $500
billion. And NASA was laughed off of Capitol Hill, with Administrator
Truly eventually quitting because of that debacle. There is no chance
anything that huge will ever come close to Congressional approval.
Zubrin, on the other hand, was promising manned Mars missions for
$30-50 billion in his 1990s Case For Mars heyday.
NASA is forecasting the new lunar program to cost around $105 billion,
and that includes something like a 15% cushion for busted budgets.
(And when you see $100 billion or $200 billion thrown around, remember
that Congress just handed Wall Street $700 billion free and clear.)
The Mars missions will eventually be able to use much of the lunar
infrastrure (Ares V and the Orion ferry, or under alternative
architectures, improved EELVs and orbital propellant depots) so some
of it will already be paid for.
Good luck selling that to a nation
nearing a depression.
We're not nearing a depression. Scare tactics again?
Brian
That's true, as we're actually in the toilet, with only a few sheets
of TP left to go.
~ BG
.
- References:
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Brian Thorn
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Totorkon
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Bresco
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Totorkon
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Brian Thorn
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Totorkon
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Brian Thorn
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Totorkon
- Re: Why NASA should focus on the Moon, not Mars - Henry Spencer
- From: Brian Thorn
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