Return-path: X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 0;andrew.cmu.edu;Network-Mail Received: from andrew.cmu.edu via trymail for ota+space.digests@andrew.cmu.edu ID ; Fri, 8 Jul 88 23:18:41 -0400 (EDT) Received: by andrew.cmu.edu (5.54/3.15) id for ota+space.digests; Fri, 8 Jul 88 23:17:18 EDT Received: by angband.s1.gov id AA06350; Fri, 8 Jul 88 20:17:40 PDT id AA06350; Fri, 8 Jul 88 20:17:40 PDT Date: Fri, 8 Jul 88 20:17:40 PDT From: Ted Anderson Message-Id: <8807090317.AA06350@angband.s1.gov> To: Space@angband.s1.gov Reply-To: Space@angband.s1.gov Subject: SPACE Digest V8 #263 SPACE Digest Volume 8 : Issue 263 Today's Topics: space news from April 25 AW&ST Mobile Foot Restraint device ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 1 Jun 88 02:05:38 GMT From: mnetor!utzoo!henry@uunet.uu.net (Henry Spencer) Subject: space news from April 25 AW&ST [Aviation Week & Space Technology subscription address is PO Box 1505, Neptune NJ 07754 USA. Rates depend on whether you are an "unqualified" or "qualified" subscriber, which basically means whether you look at the ads for cruise missiles out of curiosity, or out of genuine commercial or military interest. Best write for a "qualification card" and try to get the cheap rate. US rates are $55 qualified, $70 unqualified at present. It's weekly, it's thicker than Time or Newsweek, and most of it has nothing to do with space, so consider whether the price is worth it to you. -- HS] NASA expects to pick name for space station by June, and has asked its staff and contractors for ideas. Rules are: no acronyms, no names of living persons, and nothing that is ambiguous or offensive when translated into the languages of the international partners. ESA approves astronaut training plan for Hermes and Columbus; HQ will be in Germany with facilities in several other countries. Reagan urges Congress to adopt the $11.5G NASA FY89 budget uncut. The odds are not good. Recently revealed: as part of a routine Minuteman test last fall, SDI confirmed that minor damage to a missile warhead would prove fatal on reentry. A dummy warhead, damaged in a secret way to a secret extent, self-destructed on reentry. SDI is crowing about this as a demonstration that direct hits are not necessary. [I dunno. Seems to me that the hard part is being *sure* that you have inflicted damage; direct hits at those velocities are unmistakeable.] USAF to proceed with technology work on antisatellite weapons to replace the cancelled F-15-launched system. Leftover funds from the F-15 system are being used to start a new kinetic-kill system, and lasers are also being thought about. One system that is dead is the idea of putting the F-15 homer on top of a Pershing 2, since the Pershing 2s are to be scrapped. Something similar might still be done, though. USAF is re-evaluating the problems of the US inability to do rapid- reaction launches of military satellites. Gen. Bernard Randolph (USAF Systems Command) says existing launch vehicles were not conceived with rapid response as a goal, although improvements are possible. He claims ALS will be designed from the ground up for this. [My, my, ALS sure is turning into all things to all people, isn't it?] [More to the point, this stuff about existing systems not being conceived for quick response is utter nonsense. The Atlas and Titan were ICBMs, for God's sake! There were Titans sitting in silos until a year or two ago. Delta is a Thor derivative, and there was a time when Thors were theoretically ready to go on 15 minutes' notice. Most of the launchers are not quite the same as the old missile versions, but there is no inherent reason why they should take four orders of magnitude longer to launch from the word "go". The problems are with the management, not the hardware, as witness what the Soviets can do with ex-ICBMs of similar vintage. ALS will be no better unless the management improves.] QM-6 SRB test seems to have been a success. The boot ring survived. Things seem to have gone fairly well despite deliberate seal defects. Further details when the motor is disassembled. NASA reveals that mission 51J had a boot ring fail, probably very late in the mission since the boot was intact and there was little bearing damage. There is still some puzzlement about the source of the recent insulation debonds. NASA is putting a test segment in a vertical position for a while to see if slumping of the propellant is a factor. There were some minor debonds in QM-6, but they were not in vulnerable areas. The next test, in July, may deliberately expose some debonds to a hot gas leak to see what happens. NASA is considering various possibilities for a space-station crew rescue vehicle. One possibility is simply to buy another shuttle orbiter after the Challenger replacement is built. A variant on this is the idea of launching a shuttle unmanned, to get a rescue mission up without risking further lives. The shuttle office (which is now in charge of the rescue vehicle) will report its recommendations to Fletcher in June. [The shift of responsibility to the shuttle office is logical in one sense, but in another it may, um, *limit* serious consideration of non-shuttle ideas.] In testimony to Congress, Fletcher is holding out for the full $11.5G FY89 budget, on the grounds that it is all necessary and there is no more room for cuts. Congress is not happy, especially since some recent NASA projects -- notably the Transfer Orbit Stage -- have experienced some truly massive cost overruns. Mars Observer doesn't look like it will stay within budget either. One hopeful sign is that there is some sentiment in Congress for either funding the space station 100% or killing it outright. [Nice to see Fletcher showing some backbone, but this may be the wrong time for it...] India signs for two more Ariane launches, in 1990 and 1991. ESA is considering trying to reactivate Giotto for a flyby of comet Grigg- Skjellerup in 1992. Post-Halley analysis shows some damage; in particular, the pivoting external baffle that kept stray light out of the camera is gone, probably lost to dust erosion. Study of the power output of the solar cells indicates that the baffle is no longer casting a shadow on them. The loss of data at closest approach is now thought to have been due to a combination of slowing of Giotto's spin rate by dust impacts on the camera baffle and nutation from one or more large impacts. Both affected antenna pointing until the on-board systems got things under control again. The camera is thought to be still functional. ESA must now decide whether to fund reactivation of Giotto, currently in a quiet- cruise mode, early in 1990 for instrument checkout. If this is done and things are okay, ESA would then have to decide on funding the possible Grigg-Skjellerup encounter. Japan is considering retargeting Sakigake and Suisei [its Halley probes] for future comet encounters. Orbit corrections were made last year to bring them back near Earth for gravity-boost maneuvers; they will also return useful data from the Earth's magnetotail during these maneuvers. Close encounters with Honda-Mrkos-Pajdusakova (Sakigake, 1996) and Giacobini-Zinner (Suisei, 1998) are among the possible targets. USAF is pushing NASA for action on its problems with safety boundaries for shuttle launches, which the USAF thinks are too narrow, and with the rule that allows mission control to ignore range-safety rules so long as they declare that the orbiter is under positive control. One idea is to establish a backup safety line, beyond which crew survival is thought unlikely and destruct systems would be activated. The USAF safety people say that NASA cannot have it both ways: either the safety boundaries must be widened -- awkward because various viewing sites are just outside them now -- or destruct criteria must be loosened for better control. Leeds University scientists who pioneered the analysis of signals from the Soviet Glonass navsats are developing an experimental navsat receiver that can use both Glonass and Navstar. Letter from Don Vogel of Vermont, applauding Stofan's "the shuttle should have begun flying again 18 months ago", and adding: "It's been over two years now and re-inventing the shuttle still goes on. It was a very successful space vehicle until Jan 28 1986. It did not need re-inventing." -- "For perfect safety... sit on a fence| Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology and watch the birds." --Wilbur Wright| {ihnp4,decvax,uunet!mnetor}!utzoo!henry ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 1 Jun 88 10:04 EDT From: GODDEN%gmr.com@relay.cs.net Subject: Mobile Foot Restraint device >SPACE Digest V8 #240 >Date: 20 May 88 16:08:18 GMT >From: mcvax!ukc!its63b!bob@uunet.uu.net (ERCF08 Bob Gray) >Subject: Re: Space suits > >Legs are not needed except for hooking your feet into some convenient >perch. In my office I have a poster available from Flagstaff Engineering that shows Bruce McCandless II on flight 41-B of the Challenger "trying out" a new device called the Mobile Foot Restraint. It's a disk attached to the shuttle and has two straps into which the astronaut slips his/her feet to avoid flying off into deep space and/or landing on Cleveland. In any case, written on this disk it is possible to make out the upside-down words "For Space Use Only". If you think about that for a minute, it becomes VERY amusing. -Kurt Godden godden@gmr.com ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V8 #263 *******************