There are a few topics that we could talk about here but one that comes to my mind is stuff like KENNEN. I came across the attached lists of docs and on the MDR list it has "The KENNEN Story". I have never seen it but it was mentioned in earlier threads. For this example the case number is EOM-2020-00027 from 09/15/2020 and status "NRL". While I assume that "GIP" means "Granted in Part" and "GIF" "Granted in Full" I am not sure what NRL means. "Not released ??" on still in process I guess.
The point is, NRO and others keep releasing documents and given the size of these lists there might be interesting info out there that we missed so far.
There's a ton of EOI material released several years ago and people have barely scratched the surface going through that.
Quote from: leovinus on 12/01/2025 12:04 pmThere are a few topics that we could talk about here but one that comes to my mind is stuff like KENNEN. I came across the attached lists of docs and on the MDR list it has "The KENNEN Story". I have never seen it but it was mentioned in earlier threads. For this example the case number is EOM-2020-00027 from 09/15/2020 and status "NRL". While I assume that "GIP" means "Granted in Part" and "GIF" "Granted in Full" I am not sure what NRL means. "Not released ??" on still in process I guess. The one I think of as "The KENNEN story" is the doc described by hoku here https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=29545.msg2293574#msg2293574
Yeah. much is supposed to be at https://www.nro.gov/FOIA/Major-NRO-Programs-and-Projects/EOI-Documents/but that gives me an error. However, the whole list is athttps://web.archive.org/web/20221205042824/http://www.nro.gov/FOIA/Major-NRO-Programs-and-Projects/EOI-Documents/<snip>
I think it is worth distinguishing the types of topics: military, civilian, commercial, non-US, etc.Asif and I had a discussion about this in general over four years ago:https://www.thespacereview.com/article/4153/1I'll add some more comments later.
Quote from: Blackstar on 12/01/2025 05:11 pmI think it is worth distinguishing the types of topics: military, civilian, commercial, non-US, etc.Asif and I had a discussion about this in general over four years ago:https://www.thespacereview.com/article/4153/1I'll add some more comments later.Somehow I missed this back in 2021 but it is a fascinating list and chat. If you want my nerdy input then I’d love to study in Seattle for a month in the Boeing/Douglas archives. They have many of the early 60s technical reports and documents but access is difficult to organize. Next week, related to a recent article, I’ll study for a week in an European archive and I am curious what that will turn up.
Ruminating some more:Civil Space HistoryThe biggest one really is a history of Dan Goldin as NASA administrator. He had a major impact upon the agency, with effects still being felt today.A history of Project Surveyor. I know I've harped on this before, and it may no longer be possible to write anything detailed. But we have Ranger and Lunar Orbiter histories, but not Surveyor. And as I exposed a year or so ago with my Surveyor sample return and rovers article, there's more that has not been explored.US Military Space HistoryThe procurement mess of the 2000s-2010s. What the heck happened that resulted in so many programs going so badly? SBIRS and NPOESS are the biggest examples.Commercial Space HistoryA deep dive into the history of US commercial spaceflight history. Stop before SpaceX. Go into things like the contractors for NASA and DoD programs, the decision to shut down ELV production and put all payloads on shuttle, the reversal of that decision after Challenger, unusual arrangements like Leasat, etc.[...]I'm sure I can think of more.
Non-US Military Space HistoryThe French reconnaissance satellite program.
Ruminating some more:Civil Space HistoryThe biggest one really is a history of Dan Goldin as NASA administrator. He had a major impact upon the agency, with effects still being felt today.A history of Project Surveyor. I know I've harped on this before, and it may no longer be possible to write anything detailed. But we have Ranger and Lunar Orbiter histories, but not Surveyor. And as I exposed a year or so ago with my Surveyor sample return and rovers article, there's more that has not been explored.US Military Space HistoryThe procurement mess of the 2000s-2010s. What the heck happened that resulted in so many programs going so badly? SBIRS and NPOESS are the biggest examples.Commercial Space HistoryA deep dive into the history of US commercial spaceflight history. Stop before SpaceX. Go into things like the contractors for NASA and DoD programs, the decision to shut down ELV production and put all payloads on shuttle, the reversal of that decision after Challenger, unusual arrangements like Leasat, etc.Non-US Military Space HistoryThe French reconnaissance satellite program. I'm sure I can think of more.
VelaI only found some videosWe have more data on early NRO programs than AF
There is probably a load of early US nuclear space projects that have not been examined well. Anything nuclear received a high classification at the time. I am thinking roughly 1955 to 1965 and related to General Atomics, Los Alamos, NERVA, DUMBO, Project Orion, pulse fission for space application, etc.
Quote from: leovinus on 12/05/2025 02:20 pmThere is probably a load of early US nuclear space projects that have not been examined well. Anything nuclear received a high classification at the time. I am thinking roughly 1955 to 1965 and related to General Atomics, Los Alamos, NERVA, DUMBO, Project Orion, pulse fission for space application, etc. I think that is probably true. There have been books about NERVA and Orion, but I would guess that much of the actual documents about those programs remain classified.I also don't think anybody has really done a comprehensive history of space nuclear power. The different SNAP RTG and reactor programs, for example. Back around 2012 I got to visit the NASA Plum Brook facility as part of a study I was running and as they were driving us around our guide pointed to a low concrete dome and said that it was one of the old SNAP-8 reactor facilities that was being dismantled. Huh? What the heck is SNAP-8?! I thought. Later I tried doing some research and found very little about SNAP-8. And yet there were at least two reactor facilities at Plum Brook that had done SNAP-8 tests in the 1960s. You will find almost nothing in space history books, and documents were hard to find, but they were smashing neutrons back in the 1960s.
Listing of reports categorized as restricted/limited distribution/classified dated 1980 or older from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Technical Report database, 2017
For example, I was interested in "Aspen: An Aerospace Plane with Nuclear Engines.", contract W-7405-ENG-36NTIS Issue Number 197610 , at https://ntrl.ntis.gov/NTRL/dashboard/searchResults/titleDetail/LA2590.xhtmland it said "For abstract, see NSA 33 04, number 08742." which I cannot find. To clear, I found the PDF and report but the whole number mapping between LA2590 to LA-2590 to a file 0038486.pdf and NSA 33 04, number 08742 is a bit mysterious (in case anyone knows how that works for followup research )
Guide to Air Force Historical Literature 1943-1983 , Jacob Neufeld Kenneth Schaffel Anne E. ShermerThe Guide to Air Force Historical Literature, 1943-1983, is a compre- hensive listing of histories, monographs, chronologies, and special studies issued by the Office of Air Force History and historical offices throughout the Air Force. It excludes the periodic (monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, annual) com- mand and unit histories. The primary purpose of the Guide is to bring together all of the writings of the Air Force History Program in one convenient bibliog- raphy.