This is why beneficent Providence has created lawyers and diplomats.
Quote from: Eric Hedman on 04/11/2013 02:41 amI'm curious if the capture mechanism could also be used to remove spent upper stages from earth orbit to help mitigate orbital debris. Any comments on if that would be a good dual use of the technology developed if this goes forward?Good idea and commercial companies are probable already working on that. Also on how to reuse that material in space ( repurpose )The capture part might come in in different concepts for different items.The SEP could be refueled.
I'm curious if the capture mechanism could also be used to remove spent upper stages from earth orbit to help mitigate orbital debris. Any comments on if that would be a good dual use of the technology developed if this goes forward?
What's the TRL on that Anthropomorphic Kinetic Impactor Tool?
Eric: Except for a few cases (Like Rep. Rohrabacher who actually supports leveraging the private sector more in spaceflight, which you'd think ALL the pro-space Republicans would support, but don't) the Republican Senators support the Moon (if they support ANY space-related stuff), and the Democrats support whatever the administration says (or, if they're in NASA HSF areas, like Florida or Texas, then they are pro-SLS and pro-Orion). Or, again, they don't care....But I think this hits on one of the drawbacks of ANYTHING new that sounds cool and interesting coming from NASA these days: Even if it means no new money, it will /look/ expensive. That looks bad if you're in a budget-cutting environment where seniors (etc) are being asked to make cuts.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 04/14/2013 04:43 amEric: Except for a few cases (Like Rep. Rohrabacher who actually supports leveraging the private sector more in spaceflight, which you'd think ALL the pro-space Republicans would support, but don't) the Republican Senators support the Moon (if they support ANY space-related stuff), and the Democrats support whatever the administration says (or, if they're in NASA HSF areas, like Florida or Texas, then they are pro-SLS and pro-Orion). Or, again, they don't care....But I think this hits on one of the drawbacks of ANYTHING new that sounds cool and interesting coming from NASA these days: Even if it means no new money, it will /look/ expensive. That looks bad if you're in a budget-cutting environment where seniors (etc) are being asked to make cuts.Chris:I think you're right. I was at my representative's town hall meeting today. He go lots of questions on Social Security, Medicare, Obamacare, Sequester, Gun rights/control, etc. Which begs the question, how hard will the administration fight for this plan if at all? Will it get funded? I don't know.
Quote from: LangwichThe TRL levels of the hardware mentioned in the paper are said to be at TRL 6 or better. Which specific parts are you concerned about? Uhhhh.... These?Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/09/2013 05:42 pmIt will probably come as a surprise to some that the asteroid capture mechanism itself is "assumed" to be at TRL6. As is DSH, ECLSS, 40 kW class SEP, and more. More? "reliable robotic anchoring capability"; "Structural characterization, especially of the surface layers"; "dust levitation and settling behavior [mitigation thereof]"; "gravity tractor (GT) concept"; "Proximity operations"; "extraction and purification of water"; "autoreduction of the major mineral magnetite"; "using the released CO as a reagent for the extraction, separation, purification, and fabrication of iron and nickel products". All of these assumed to be at TRL6. No exceptions given.
The TRL levels of the hardware mentioned in the paper are said to be at TRL 6 or better. Which specific parts are you concerned about?
It will probably come as a surprise to some that the asteroid capture mechanism itself is "assumed" to be at TRL6. As is DSH, ECLSS, 40 kW class SEP, and more. More? "reliable robotic anchoring capability"; "Structural characterization, especially of the surface layers"; "dust levitation and settling behavior [mitigation thereof]"; "gravity tractor (GT) concept"; "Proximity operations"; "extraction and purification of water"; "autoreduction of the major mineral magnetite"; "using the released CO as a reagent for the extraction, separation, purification, and fabrication of iron and nickel products". All of these assumed to be at TRL6. No exceptions given.
Nice handwave about how a "capture" isn't a "capture".
Quote from: LangwichWe are talking the 2021-2025 time frame...how many events in 2021 have you planned out in detail?Nice ad hominem. Somehow my personal schedule pertains to the accomplishment of this mission?
We are talking the 2021-2025 time frame...how many events in 2021 have you planned out in detail?
This mission, properly costed, is probably closer to $46B than to $2.6B. Above, I've included some of the line items that have not yet been discussed, but which have been deliberately handwaved away, while deceiving policymakers about the accurate costing and feasibility of the asteroid retrieval mission.
Did they mention that the asteroid is "unique"? Yeah. Here: "There are roughly a hundred million NEAs approximately 7-m diameter".
After re-reading the paper, I misunderstood what it was saying about TRL 6. As you said, it's not a claim, it's an assumption they used for the cost estimates.
SEP and the capture mechanism are included in this assumption. I don't see the SEP being a problem, it seems a modest enhancement of current production hardware, clustered together. There's no doubt the actual capture operation is risky, but I don't see any problems building the hardware. You are talking about billions of dollars to design this? The design presented can be executed in a straightforward manner. If you want to test it, capturing can be tested in LEO or GEO using a dead satellite, for much less than a billion.
The only mentions of manned missions in the Keck report are described as strictly notional possible applications once the asteroid is available: it's like a car salesman saying once you possess one, a minivan could be used to get groceries, go on vacations, take kids to school, etc. You don't then fault the salesman for not including the price of groceries, vacations, and schooling in the price of the vehicle. Criticizing a report detailing an unmanned asteroid capture program for not including the entire budget of the manned program is just not getting it.
I suppose I didn't word it clearly: the question is who is doing the capturing, the ~15 tonne object, or the ~500 tonne object?
Their intent is to pull a JWST, and the Keck Kids are well on the way to pulling it off. This mission will be the next unmanned mission to drain financial resouces from the other unmanned missions, including, for example, MSR.
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/14/2013 03:37 pmTheir intent is to pull a JWST, and the Keck Kids are well on the way to pulling it off. This mission will be the next unmanned mission to drain financial resouces from the other unmanned missions, including, for example, MSR.Not going to happen: the Science Directorate isn't going to touch this thing with a 10 foot pole. It would have to come out of the HSF exploration budget.
The technique that they are using is to get the mission camel toe into the funding tent with the seduction of lowballing the cost estimate as a necessary first step.
They have already achieved this in part, with $105M being included in Mr. O's budget proposal. There is a full court press to get this mission approved, as is being demonstrated in the press.
It is certainly a fair debate point to argue about how readily a 40kW SEP tug can go thru DDT&E. Yes, I'm suggesting a "few" billion dollars to achieve this.
Clearly, the reality of a "bag" on the non-tumbling asteroid depicted in the PR video exists only in the imagination of the video producers. The video clearly depicts that the "Basic principles [have been] observed and reported". Five more to go.
If it is true that "the point of such a project at this asteroid would be to DEVELOP those technologies, not to depend on their maturity", then, in an honest estimate, these development costs would be included.
They are not. Their intent is to pull a JWST, and the Keck Kids are well on the way to pulling it off. This mission will be the next unmanned mission to drain financial resouces from the other unmanned missions, including, for example, MSR.
This asteroid project proposes to use five 10kW thrusters at 3000s ISP.
The Keck report makes very clear what its scope is, and that scope is asteroid capture and retrieval.
But somewhere along the process, that idea seemed to go off the rails. Instead of NEOs being a quick "target of opportunity" that could be visited cheaply along the way to the Moon and eventually Phobos, Deimos, and Mars, you started seeing concept architectures coming out of NASA for these massive NEO mission stacks complete with four or five new pieces of expensive in-space hardware that needed to be developed (a Hab module, an MMSEV, a CPS, a big solar electric tug or two, etc, etc) just to visit a NEO.
Really? You really think people are out there wanting and scheming to go way over budget?
I also mentioned that the reality of a "bag" on the non-tumbling asteroid depicted in the PR video exists only in the imagination of the video producers. Maybe the engineers could work up a model, and eventually attempt to grab a tumbling sat in LEO, if they should get funding.
the NASA video, which is the only "source" out there today, shows the bag approaching a non-tumbling asteroid. No other devices are shown in the video; the de-tumbling maneuver is merely "assumed" by the producers of the video. The Keck Kids assert that they will capture and detumble the asteroid, in that order, on page 28. The video clearly shows that they will detumble and then capture the asteroid. Somebody's going to have to decide how they want to proceed.
Look at the star field for cues on the video from 1:25 onwards. The video does not depict bagging non-tumbling asteroid, but situation where the bagger-craft has positioned itself on asteroid's spin axis (sensed using laser ranging, the preceding green beams) and then spins itself up to match asteroid's spin (logically using RCS). The bagger sees stationary asteroid, and rest of the universe rotating around it. When asteroid is secured in the bag RCS is used to spin down the combo (from 2:00 onwards in the video).
only a primary spin axis; the solar panels are not retracted as mentioned in the Keck paper; other tumbling axes are not at all considered.
The mission profile per the Keck paper is a one shot deal. There's plenty of time to characterize the spin of one asteroid, but no means to find another if the "cooperative" aspects of the chosen asteroid do not, well, cooperate.
Of the hundred million candidates, they must find the "lazy" asteroid first; yet another cost, hand waved away by the political insiders who push this mission.
Also note that they plan to shut down comm with the bagger droid until its rate of rotation settles down to allow resumption of a comm channel with Earth.
Is there even a way to measure spin rates of objects that small millions miles/kms away?