the big question here is what happens if Webb turns out to be a Hubble...ie there is some flaw in it that makes it less "generational" then what?
https://asd.gsfc.nasa.gov/luvoir/resources/docs/LUVOIR_Interim_Report_Final.pdf
Quote from: Blackstar on 08/02/2018 10:44 pmhttps://asd.gsfc.nasa.gov/luvoir/resources/docs/LUVOIR_Interim_Report_Final.pdfReading this; LUVOIR had my greatest interest out of the various post-Webb telescopes.
Quote from: TripleSeven on 08/02/2018 08:16 pmthe big question here is what happens if Webb turns out to be a Hubble...ie there is some flaw in it that makes it less "generational" then what?Much loud noises, fingerpointing, and little else.It is if not impossible to service JWST - practically so, without getting it back to earth which would be expensive and damaging.If it is impacted seriously enough, there would be a modest saving due to no operations budget.
a total failure will be catastrophic for the agency in my view
Quote from: redliox on 08/02/2018 11:23 pmReading this; LUVOIR had my greatest interest out of the various post-Webb telescopes.Wait until you see the cost estimate...
Reading this; LUVOIR had my greatest interest out of the various post-Webb telescopes.
Quote from: Blackstar on 08/03/2018 02:42 amQuote from: redliox on 08/02/2018 11:23 pmReading this; LUVOIR had my greatest interest out of the various post-Webb telescopes.Wait until you see the cost estimate...From telescope proposals in the last Discovery round, non cryogenic proposals seem to cost $250 million per square meter of mirror.JWST is also about $250 million per square meter of mirror, although that is cryogenic. At that rate LUVOIR-A will cost $44 billion. LUVOIR-B will cost $13 billion. NASA needs to junk this study and look at flying $600 million to $1billion astrophysics missions. The Europeans had some good proposals in that price range. That would help to restore diversity to the program after JWST.
Quote from: TripleSeven on 08/03/2018 04:36 ama total failure will be catastrophic for the agency in my viewThat's why the ground tests are important. If the Hubble mirror problem had been found before flight then it could have been fixed, although it would have caused a major delay.Why is JWST so expensive? A big reason is the cryogenic operating temperature. That requires beryllium rather than silicon carbide construction. Several telescopes were proposed for the last Discovery round, and proposals for 1.5 m room temperature telescopes cost about the same as 0.5 m cryogenic ones. The cryo requirement seems to boost the cost per unit mirror area by about tenfold. However, JWST's ability to go far into the infra-red will be useful for looking at strongly red-shifted objects such as the first galaxies to from in the universe. JWST will do fantastic science if it works as intended.
It certainly had a role in making the design of the heatshiled more complex.
I will bet money that the "parts" of the telescope are not even 1/3 maybe less of the price of the thing
Quote from: TripleSeven on 08/02/2018 08:16 pmthe big question here is what happens if Webb turns out to be a Hubble...ie there is some flaw in it that makes it less "generational" then what?Why should this be any different than risks for Cassini, PSP, MSL, Mars 2020, Messenger, Magellan, etc?
My suggestion is that 1) far more money has been invested, 2) the thing has had endless delays and management issues which each time are "solved" only the next year not to be and 3) none of those program/projects reflect the management issues that have dogged NASA in the past
Quote from: speedevil on 08/02/2018 08:13 pmIt certainly had a role in making the design of the heatshiled more complex. No, it didn't. Any large IR telescope is going to large sunshield.
Quote from: Jim on 08/03/2018 03:27 pmQuote from: speedevil on 08/02/2018 08:13 pmIt certainly had a role in making the design of the heatshiled more complex. No, it didn't. Any large IR telescope is going to large sunshield.More complex, due to tighter folding in a smaller package, and a more constrained mass budget for that shield.If you have to fit a five layer 21*14m shield in a fairing that can't cope with an unfolded mirror, you're pretty much going to have to spend lots of effort making the shield actually fit.Of course a shield is needed, but the design is simplified greatly as you relax mass budgets and volume limits, or fairing constraints.
Quote from: speedevil on 08/03/2018 06:32 pmOf course a shield is needed, but the design is simplified greatly as you relax mass budgets and volume limits, or fairing constraints. Doesn't change most of the technologies needed for the mission:1. near and2. mid-infrared detectors,3. sunshield materials,4. microshutters5. wavefront sensing and control.6. lightweight cryogenic mirrors,7. cryogenic detector readout application-specific integrated circuit,8. cryogenic heat switches,9. a cryocooler for the mid-infrared instrument,10. a large precision cryogenic structure.Source:https://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/starsgalaxies/webb_technologies.html
Of course a shield is needed, but the design is simplified greatly as you relax mass budgets and volume limits, or fairing constraints.
Quote from: Don2 on 08/03/2018 08:11 amQuote from: Blackstar on 08/03/2018 02:42 amQuote from: redliox on 08/02/2018 11:23 pmReading this; LUVOIR had my greatest interest out of the various post-Webb telescopes.Wait until you see the cost estimate...From telescope proposals in the last Discovery round, non cryogenic proposals seem to cost $250 million per square meter of mirror.JWST is also about $250 million per square meter of mirror, although that is cryogenic. At that rate LUVOIR-A will cost $44 billion. LUVOIR-B will cost $13 billion. NASA needs to junk this study and look at flying $600 million to $1billion astrophysics missions. The Europeans had some good proposals in that price range. That would help to restore diversity to the program after JWST.Who do we need to smack around for a while until they come up with a price tag per square meter that's even remotely acceptable? More seriously, I can't see anything in the LUVOIR-A class getting off the ground without halving that cost, at bare minimum.
Quote from: TakeOff on 08/05/2018 09:43 pmQuote from: TripleSeven on 08/05/2018 04:47 pmwhat got Webb was "too much" new technology (this is a theme song today...the Dreamliner, Ford CVN, F35 etc have all been snake bit by this) ....but no new technology to me is just as badWas it really "too much technology" that made JWST capsize like a clown in a circus?I haven't followed it for long at all, but in these days it is the simple standard low tech stuff that fails. Northrup-Grumman fails to deliver what they have delivered to hundreds of working satellites in orbit. The space craft bus. Their thrusters leak after having been treated by abrasive chemicals. Their washers fall off in the standard vibration test and disappears into somewhere the rest of the spacecraft. They cannot even unfold their umbrella during the very last test without tearing it up and getting it stuck. What has N-G been doing with all their billions all of these years??? I cannot imagine any alternative to blatant corruption and an attempt to charge the tax payers for incompetence.Quotethe failure on Galileo with the antenna was not a technology failure (as the TDRSS and "other" satellites have used that antenna) but with managing the technology, particularly in the endless "road" trips.Didn't Galileo's antenna fail to unfold because it was delayed for several years (after a Shuttle disaster)? A stay in the storage that caused the lubrication of the unfolding mechanism to evaporate or change its properties. I remember reading something to that effect in the analysis following the failure. So every delay of the JWST sounds to me like a JWST even more prone to failures.well NG management coupled with NASA is well near incompetent on the Webb...a failure from the startthe folks who built the LM and a great stretch of Naval fighters including my old ride...are long goneGalileo's antenna failed for two maybe three reasons. First it was transported several times across the country where the lubricant on it suffered our bumpy roads and I dont think that they ever inspected the lubricant again. 2) storage might have made that worse...and then there was a sunshield...but I would bet all the engineering and amateur radio creds I have that the first one did itthe antennas have worked flawlessly on a lot of TDRSS and well some other satellites as well.there is nothing wrong with the design... and it only "weighs" 50 pounds...if it had been on Cassini it would have changed the data time enormously
Quote from: TripleSeven on 08/05/2018 04:47 pmwhat got Webb was "too much" new technology (this is a theme song today...the Dreamliner, Ford CVN, F35 etc have all been snake bit by this) ....but no new technology to me is just as badWas it really "too much technology" that made JWST capsize like a clown in a circus?I haven't followed it for long at all, but in these days it is the simple standard low tech stuff that fails. Northrup-Grumman fails to deliver what they have delivered to hundreds of working satellites in orbit. The space craft bus. Their thrusters leak after having been treated by abrasive chemicals. Their washers fall off in the standard vibration test and disappears into somewhere the rest of the spacecraft. They cannot even unfold their umbrella during the very last test without tearing it up and getting it stuck. What has N-G been doing with all their billions all of these years??? I cannot imagine any alternative to blatant corruption and an attempt to charge the tax payers for incompetence.Quotethe failure on Galileo with the antenna was not a technology failure (as the TDRSS and "other" satellites have used that antenna) but with managing the technology, particularly in the endless "road" trips.Didn't Galileo's antenna fail to unfold because it was delayed for several years (after a Shuttle disaster)? A stay in the storage that caused the lubrication of the unfolding mechanism to evaporate or change its properties. I remember reading something to that effect in the analysis following the failure. So every delay of the JWST sounds to me like a JWST even more prone to failures.
what got Webb was "too much" new technology (this is a theme song today...the Dreamliner, Ford CVN, F35 etc have all been snake bit by this) ....but no new technology to me is just as bad
the failure on Galileo with the antenna was not a technology failure (as the TDRSS and "other" satellites have used that antenna) but with managing the technology, particularly in the endless "road" trips.