And this is wrong too. Larger tanks means heavier spacecraft means different attitude control, thermal, structure ...
Quote from: alexw on 07/25/2009 10:16 pm... These are all really high energy, high weight, because the basic task is to throw a giant mass of hydrazine out there, with some instrumentation going along for the ride. The lunar orbiters are barely possible with Atlas V 551 or Ariane V ECA or even (at Flagship cost level) DIVH/AVH. But the landers may not be, and the Europa submarine is probably the single greatest mission we can hope for in our lifetime (apart from optical interferometer space telescopes, for pretty much the same reason!)And this is the problem. These missions, on their own, independent of the launcher, are only possible at the flagship level. Or above, way above (Europa submarine, MSR ...). We know how often flagships happen.
... These are all really high energy, high weight, because the basic task is to throw a giant mass of hydrazine out there, with some instrumentation going along for the ride. The lunar orbiters are barely possible with Atlas V 551 or Ariane V ECA or even (at Flagship cost level) DIVH/AVH. But the landers may not be, and the Europa submarine is probably the single greatest mission we can hope for in our lifetime (apart from optical interferometer space telescopes, for pretty much the same reason!)
And no, the missions won't get cheaper because they can have more mass. The costs come from the complexity, not the limited mass budget.
HLV may give new opportunities for science, in theory, but so did Saturn V and Shuttle. Only we don't have the money to use them. SMD surely does not have the budget. The only one who thinks he needs HLV is the beyond LEO HSF advocat.
Quote from: rklaehn on 07/26/2009 09:13 amSo a HLV could significantly reduce the cost of flagship missions. Costs for the launcher are just a fraction of a flagship mission. Even building the mission hardware is just a fraction. Most costs are incurred for development, management and planning and operations. An HLV instead of an Delta-IV H or an Atlas 551 won't decrease those costs. It's not going to be cheaper to design and build a 50mt spacecraft compared to a 7mt spacecraft, no matter what you do and which approach you take.
So a HLV could significantly reduce the cost of flagship missions.
Quote from: gospacex on 07/26/2009 05:22 pmI vote for a Sedna orbiter, with HIRISE sized telescope. Seeing the first known Oort cloud object up close?!! YES!!!You did the numbers?
I vote for a Sedna orbiter, with HIRISE sized telescope. Seeing the first known Oort cloud object up close?!! YES!!!
c) Bigger payload fairing means same Viking-technlogy EDL (biconic heatshield), giving bigger mass without developing a radical new EDL technology. Maybe. Has weight growth on MSL been a major driver of the overruns, or is it just instrumentation development? I'm asking.
Delay to 2011 was robotics related.
Quote from: Lab Lemming on 07/26/2009 10:53 pmDelay to 2011 was robotics related.Actually environment is issue
cold, necessitating a redesign
In my opinion, President Obama will adopt a manned lunar Mars program similiar to the one advocated by Buzz Aldrin shortly after he obtains the final report of the Augustine Committee.
I'm predicting a switch to:Shuttle extension/slow down into 2012.Something like Direct or NSC aimed at 2014/15 IOC.Plus Orion on an EELV heavy.Plus about $1B (over 3 or 4 years) thrown at a new version of COTS-D . Pretty much SpaceX Dragon and whatever ULA come up with. (Orion Lite, Dreamchaser?)If any US manned laucher flies in 2012, 2013 & 2014, then, officially, "there is no Gap".
Quote from: kkattula on 07/27/2009 04:29 amI'm predicting a switch to:Shuttle extension/slow down into 2012.Something like Direct or NSC aimed at 2014/15 IOC.Plus Orion on an EELV heavy.Plus about $1B (over 3 or 4 years) thrown at a new version of COTS-D . Pretty much SpaceX Dragon and whatever ULA come up with. (Orion Lite, Dreamchaser?)If any US manned laucher flies in 2012, 2013 & 2014, then, officially, "there is no Gap".That's what I think will happen...everyone gets a slice of pie. NASA gets it laucher--1 not 2. Commerical space is a happy--COTS-D. ULA is happy--EELV for LEO. The ULA people should be very happy. The govt. pays for a manned version of an EELV. ULA gets to market it back to the govt. and then they can also market it to Bigelow.
Quote from: Drapper23 on 07/27/2009 02:39 amThe recent statements by NASA Administrator Charles Bolden about his desire for a manned Mars Progarm are very important.My document to the Augustine Commission. Please, give some comments and tips...When is the last day to send a document to the Commission?
The recent statements by NASA Administrator Charles Bolden about his desire for a manned Mars Progarm are very important.