Return-path: <@po5.andrew.cmu.edu:ota+space.mail-errors@andrew.cmu.edu> X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 0;andrew.cmu.edu;Network-Mail Received: from po2.andrew.cmu.edu via trymail for ota+space.digests@andrew.cmu.edu ID ; Sat, 8 Jun 91 05:44:15 -0400 (EDT) Received: from vax.cs.pitt.edu by po2.andrew.cmu.edu (5.54/3.15) id for ota+space.digests; Sat, 8 Jun 91 05:44:07 EDT Received: from PO5.ANDREW.CMU.EDU by vax.cs.pitt.edu (5.65/1.14) id AA26670; Sat, 8 Jun 91 05:43:56 -0400 Received: by po5.andrew.cmu.edu (5.54/3.15) id ; Sat, 8 Jun 91 04:53:36 EDT Received: via switchmail for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr11/tm2b/space/space.dl@andrew.cmu.edu; Sat, 8 Jun 91 04:53:35 -0400 (EDT) Received: from hogtown.andrew.cmu.edu via qmail ID ; Sat, 8 Jun 91 04:52:36 -0400 (EDT) Message-Id: Precedence: junk Reply-To: space+@andrew.cmu.edu From: space-request+@andrew.cmu.edu To: space+@andrew.cmu.edu Date: Sat, 8 Jun 91 04:52:09 -0400 (EDT) Subject: SPACE Digest V13 #623 SPACE Digest Volume 13 : Issue 623 Today's Topics: Re: Privatization Re: Asteroid mining Keck (was Re: Privatization) Re: Request For Discussion: sci.space.moderated CDROM Software request Launch technology Re: Ethics of Terraforming What comes after Fred's death? ESA promises to carry on! Re: Terraforming Mars? Why not Venus? Re: Fred cut, AXAF and SIRTF funded Re: SR-71 Administrivia: Submissions to the SPACE Digest/sci.space should be mailed to space+@andrew.cmu.edu. Other mail, esp. [un]subscription requests, should be sent to space-request+@andrew.cmu.edu, or, if urgent, to tm2b+@andrew.cmu.edu ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 22 May 91 14:55:11 GMT From: agate!spool.mu.edu!news.nd.edu!mentor.cc.purdue.edu!pop.stat.purdue.edu!hrubin@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Herman Rubin) Subject: Re: Privatization In article <13588@goofy.Apple.COM>, leech@Apple.COM (Jonathan Leech) writes: > In article dlbres10@pc.usl.edu (Fraering Philip) writes: .................. > Showing the potential for private funding of projects in the $160 > million range (roughly the cost of the two scopes, I believe), but not > the 10x greater cost for a major planetary mission. Even funding > SSI's relatively cheap Lunar Polar Probe from private sources is a > pain. Further, no planetary mission will return as much science in > its brief lifetime as the Keck will over decades, and the risk factor > is very high. This shows the need for reinstituting private non-governmental funding of research of all types, instead of relying on government sources and the consequent danger of direction. Before WWII, the great bulk of research in the US, and it definitely could not be considered insignificant, was done this way. If the government gets out of the way, I see no problem in getting a non-profit organization set up which can manage the few billion a year needed for the unmanned activities. I see also no major problem in getting the more than 100 billion needed to really get going on man in space on a hopefully permanent basis. But such agencies are going to need the right to do with their funds what many politicians oppose. Millions are capable of investing in this type of a future, and should have the right to get on with it. Different groups will use different approaches, and have different goals, and that is as it should be. We are now reaping, in many branches of scientific research, the rigidification cause by government funding being dominant. Research universities used to support research out of their endowments, instead of vying for government funds, with its problems. Any change in this system will have to come gradually, but it should come, as the amounts of money are huge. -- Herman Rubin, Dept. of Statistics, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette IN47907-1399 Phone: (317)494-6054 hrubin@l.cc.purdue.edu (Internet, bitnet) {purdue,pur-ee}!l.cc!hrubin(UUCP) ------------------------------ Date: 21 May 91 15:03:42 GMT From: sun-barr!olivea!samsung!rex!wuarchive!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utgpu!watserv1!watdragon!watyew!jdnicoll@apple.com (James Davis Nicoll) Subject: Re: Asteroid mining > The resources I'm thinking of may be salable (even at VERY low > prices) in the very short-term. I.E. before real operations get > started. Take nickel. It's current price is around $1/lb. With > a typical Nickel Asteroid, you could sell it for $.05/lb, and > still make a klilling. (Do you know how much nickel would be in > an asteroid 1km wide?). Could any mining company compete? More > importantly, could we get them to invest? The Sudbury asteroid has two advantages that allow it to produce nickel at a lower cost than nickel produced by exploiting other asteroids. These advantages are: Life Support: Sudbury suppplies some life support services gratis. These services include air, some light, and radiation shielding. The temperature range is well within that range conventional technology can deal with. There is almost certainly local life on Sudbury. Access: The delta vee required to reach the Sudbury asteroid and to send the nickel produced at Sudbury is very small, and can be handled by simple chemical engines. Indeed, if all you want to do is *reach* Sudbury, stone age technology (feet) can do the job from Eurasia, given time and an Ice Age. If you want to sell your asteroid nickel, it has to be cheaper (or at least as cheap) as nickel from competing sources. If your life support costs, and transport costs are as high as *current* technology make them, you won't be able to sply ET nickel at the current price and no-one will buy your $2000.00/lb nickel (exept *maybe* in locations like LEO, where the transport costs from Sudbury are almost as high) and the amount of nickel in your source does not affect LS and transport costs/lb. If I were company, I would not invest in asteroid mining unless I had good reason to believe I could meet current market prices with my products and current technology does not seem to be able to do this wrt nickel production in space. Decrease transport and production costs in space, and maybe ths will change. What reason wqould a mining company to have to expect this in the short run? James Nicoll ------------------------------ Date: 21 May 91 23:56:06 GMT From: rochester!dietz@cu-arpa.cs.cornell.edu (Paul Dietz) Subject: Keck (was Re: Privatization) In article <13588@goofy.Apple.COM> leech@Apple.COM (Jonathan Leech) writes: >pain. Further, no planetary mission will return as much science in >its brief lifetime as the Keck will over decades, and the risk factor >is very high. One wonders, then, why we should spend multiple billions on planetary science when the scientific return on the dollar is so much greater from ground-based telescopes (and, last I heard, telescope time worldwide is oversubscribed by at least 4 to 1). Sure, there are questions that can only be answered on-site, but the questions the telescopes are trying to address (the fate and nature of the universe as a whole) seem more fundamental. The question "why spend money on planetary probes" is at least as problematic as "why spend money on manned spaceflight". Paul F. Dietz dietz@cs.rochester.edu ------------------------------ Date: 21 May 91 19:26:43 GMT From: pasteur!agate!spool.mu.edu!sdd.hp.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utzoo!henry@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Henry Spencer) Subject: Re: Request For Discussion: sci.space.moderated In article <5680@lectroid.sw.stratus.com> tarl@sw.stratus.com (Tarl Neustaedter) writes: >I'd like to support the call for a moderated sci.space.?? group... The big problem with a moderated sci.space equivalent is, who moderates it? Finding and keeping good moderators is not easy. A secondary problem is, does the unmoderated group continue to exist in parallel? Historically, moderated groups usually don't do well in that case... although it helps a lot if the moderator can convince the major and most interesting contributors to shift to the moderated group. -- And the bean-counter replied, | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology "beans are more important". | henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry ------------------------------ Date: 23 May 91 16:59:22 GMT From: amdahl!JUTS!rmm20@apple.com (Robert Mitchell) Subject: CDROM Software request I retrieved several images from the CDROMs at Ames before BITFTP pulled the plug. What I did not have a chance to get was the decompression software. Could some kind soul e-mail me the following: cdcomp.c, decomp.c, and detest.c. Thanks - looking for a new FTP link - Robert Mitchell -- UUCP: rmm20@juts.ccc.amdahl.com DDD: 408-746-8491 USPS: Amdahl Corp. M/S 205, 1250 E. Arques Av, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 BIX: bobmitchell ------------------------------ Date: 22 May 91 05:16:01 GMT From: cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!csd4.csd.uwm.edu!markh@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (Mark William Hopkins) Subject: Launch technology Hearing the recent discussion of launch technologies, you get the impression that size is the determining factor. Perhaps this may be the common view. But size is irrelevant. The REAL issue boils down to one very simple question: what is the speed of the propellant relative to the ship? Everything else follows from that. One, the "time constant" associated with the launch is v/a, where v is the speed of the propellant and a the desired acceleration to generate. Taking v to be 1000 m/s and a to be about 3 G's (30 m/s^2), the time constant would be about 30 seconds. Two, sustained thrust beyond the time constant requires initial fuel mass that increases EXPONENTIALLY with the difference between thrust time and the time constant. Therefore, size only gives you a logarithmic advantage!! Meaning: nothing to write home about. Increase the propellant velocity and then you won't even need a big booster to get off the ground in the first place. So here's my question: what are the propellant velocities of the currently used fuel sources? Is there any non-nuclear process currently existing that can achieve propellant velocities on the order of 1000 km/sec?!?! What can electromagnetic or nuclear process do in the way of propellant speed under a controlled environment? Exercise: calculate the distance you can travel in a period equal to one time constant with 1000 km/sec fuel under constant 1 G thrust. Discuss the implications. Tell NASA about them. :) ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 22 May 91 12:12:15 PDT From: fermat!r@la.tis.com (Richard Schroeppel) Subject: Re: Ethics of Terraforming Responding to Ken Sheppardson, Henry Spencer writes > I assume, then, you oppose the terraforming of Los Angeles? If the %$#&*@! tree-hugging EPA would leave us alone, we could get on with veneraforming LA. Rich Schroeppel Better to shoot out a single street lamp, rcs@la.tis.com than to curse the light pollution. ------------------------------ Date: 23 May 91 12:25:53 GMT From: mcsun!unido!mpirbn!p515dfi@uunet.uu.net (Daniel Fischer) Subject: What comes after Fred's death? ESA promises to carry on! Even with Fred likely to be abandoned, the European Space Agency will not give up any of their plans for a European permanent lab in orbit (Columbus) and a micro-shuttle serving it (Hermes). When I talked to their PR Dept. today, I was told that the "situation is serious, but don't panic": if Fred dies, Colum= bus will be redesigned to become an autonomous lab; that will lead to delays, but there's "no doubt about that" it will be done. +- p515dfi@mpifr-bonn.mpg.de --- Daniel Fischer --- p515dfi@mpifr-bonn.mpg.de -+ | Max-Planck-Institut f. Radioastronomie, Auf dem Huegel 69, W-5300 Bonn 1,FRG | +----- Enjoy the Universe - it's the only one you're likely to experience -----+ Crazy speculations follow. The Soviets have all the experience, plans for MIR-2 but no money. ESA and Japan have the money (sort of). The US has neither. Shouldn't that lead to an USSR-ESA-NASDA collaboration to put a truly interna= tional space station into orbit where they can learn whether it makes sense - and rent some space to the (very few) U.S. researchers who'd like such a thing? ------------------------------ Date: 18 May 91 23:03:33 GMT From: mintaka!olivea!samsung!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!dali.cs.montana.edu!milton!wiml@bloom-beacon.mit.edu (William Lewis) Subject: Re: Terraforming Mars? Why not Venus? In article <7470010@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM> mll@hpfcso.FC.HP.COM (Mark Luce) writes: >Question: What would happen if we were to seed the upper atmosphere of > Venus with sulfur-chomping bacteria? You say that analysis of What would they chomp it into? Unless we decide to engineer bacteria that perform nuclear fusion, there's still going to be sulfur somewhere, and you have to do SOMETHING with it. I assume that most heavy compounds that might settle to the surface would break down eventually in the heat, pressure and miscellaneous chemicals. -- wiml@milton.acs.washington.edu Seattle, Washington (William Lewis) | 47 41' 15" N 122 42' 58" W "Just remember, wherever you go ... you're stuck there." ------------------------------ Date: 18 May 91 07:00:54 GMT From: mintaka!ogicse!sequent!muncher.sequent.com!szabo@bloom-beacon.mit.edu Subject: Re: Fred cut, AXAF and SIRTF funded In article <1991May17.141126.13967@iti.org> aws@iti.org (Allen W. Sherzer) writes: >1. Freedom was killed because it was so poorly managed. Congress still > wants a permanent human presence in space. Expect to see 'son of > Freedom' sometime soon. I disagree. Congress found the price of permanent human presence in space too high. As well it should. It chose the more fruitful route of expanding our knowledge of space. Congressional common sense prevailed over the economic fantasies of NASA and the current Administration (which is much more competent in fields other than space). When somebody comes up with reasonably priced space habitats, they will be built. But at $30 billion per person we are nowhere near that now. Yes, I expect NASA to come back with more bizarre astronaut-toy proposals while the astronauts remain in charge of NASA. I hope Bush wakes and fires Richard Truly. I also expect the Congress, and hopefully the Senate, to knock them down as soon as they pop up. >2. More important, next year they will be looking at another project > to kill so money can be shipped to HUD. The cut did _not_ go to HUD. This is utter myth. Half of the $2 billion went to NSF and EPA -- at least one of those a much better investment in space technology than Fred -- and the other half went to AXAF, SIRTF, and EOS. If Fred had not been cut, AXAF and eventually CRAF would have been, thus greatly diminishing our chances of affordable human habitats within our lifetimes. With SIRTF and other exploration missions like CRAF alive, we stand a fighting chance of gaining the knowledge we need to bring habitat costs down. Speaking of HUD, it is trivially easy -- and quite correct -- to wonder why anyone in their right minds would want to build one $120 billion house instead of 2 million $60,000 houses. Proposing Fred is absolutely the worst way to keep NASA money from going to HUD. Next year, if Fred stays cut in the Senate budget, we will likely see continued full funding for SIRTF. With Fred sucking up $3+ billion we would see SIRTF, AXAF, _and_ CRAF cut to pieces -- the guts of our exploration destroyed. We just saw it happen with the Shuttle -- Halley and Solar-Polar and Lunar Observer axed, Hubble, GRO, Mars Observer and Magellan severely delayed, Galileo severely hobbled and delayed, and numerous valuable smaller programs, such as lunar and asteroid sample studies, analysis of Viking, Voyager, IRAS etc. results severely cut back or cancelled, all because of the insatiable greed of astronaut groupies to see their singular monolithic project succeed at the cost of all others. It is foolish to expect that this time would be any different. As soon as we can get a larger number of smaller, quicker programs into the NASA budget, we will get to the point where politicians can fund projects that see fruition within their term of office. When this threshold is crossed, the NASA budget will soar. SIRTF, AXAF, and most definitely EOS do not really fit that bill -- though they come much closer than Fred -- but smaller programs that have been saved, such as SMEX, SeaStar, COMET, and future proposals made possible by the Fred cut, can provide this breakthrough. Until the astronaut groupies get their greedy hands off the bulk of the NASA budget, which rightly, by NASA's charter and the spirit of the Augustine Commission, belongs to exploration, the explorers will continue to see the astronaut fans as dangerous enemies. If astronaut fans want to see a reunited program, it is time for them to admit their mistakes and let exploration have its turn to show its stuff with the bulk of NASA funding. By showing their support for exploration now, they can win those with the space knowledge they need to their side. If astronaut fans continue to support greedy programs like Fred they will sadly remain hated enemies of the space explorers for a long time to come. -- Nick Szabo szabo@sequent.com "If you understand something the first time you see it, you probably knew it already. The more bewildered you are, the more successful the mission was." -- Ed Stone, Voyager space explorer ------------------------------ Date: 19 May 91 18:14:30 GMT From: skipper!shafer@ames.arc.nasa.gov (Mary Shafer) Subject: Re: SR-71 In article <7P5622w163w@lobster.hou.tx.us!n5abi> Path: skipper!ames!think.com!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!menudo.uh.edu!nuchat!lobster!n5abi!gak The June issue of Popular Mechanics includes an article on the SR-71 and mentions that NASA is putting three back in service for research. Does anyone know where they will operate from? I would guess Edwards but the article never says. Yes, I know where they'll operate from. I know where two of them already are. I'm trying to come up with an experiment that uses them, since I work in high speed flying qualities and there are some issues that need to be addressed for the project I'm currently involved in. The answer's in my signature. -- Mary Shafer shafer@skipper.dfrf.nasa.gov ames!skipper.dfrf.nasa.gov!shafer NASA Ames Dryden Flight Research Facility, Edwards, CA Of course I don't speak for NASA "Turn to kill, not to engage." CDR Willie Driscoll ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V13 #623 *******************