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- MARS PROBE LOSS COULD CHANGE NASA's COURSE
-
- Los Angeles Times
- August 26, 1993
-
- One by one, at their stations in space, the sentries of NASA's
- hard-won planetary empire signaled their positions this week from
- Magellan at hothouse Venus, from Galieo passing the frigid asteroid Ida,
- from Ulysses riding the solar wind, and from twin Voyagers at the fringe
- of interstellar space.
- But from the one spacecraft that listeners at the Jet Propulsion
- Laboratory in Pasadena strained to hear Wednesday-the Mars Observer-there
- was dead silence.
- The Mars Observer did not phone home. Only the most diehard NASA
- scientists still nurtured the hope that it had survived its 450-million-
- mile journey to the Red Planet. Space agency engineers had hoped an
- automatic computer program would make the lost probe, which has been out
- of contact since Saturday, signal them automatically. "Unfortunately
- we still have no one-way communication or two-way communications or any
- data" said project manager Glenn E. Cunningham at JPL, which is in charge
- of the mission. "Everyday without communication clearly lessens our
- probability of success".
- The distant drama of the missing Observer this week began as a
- suspensful radio serial. Clusters of anxious NASA engineers gathered
- around deep space recievers, waiting for the climax of an episode that
- unexpectedly-and perhaps permantly-has gone off the air.
- The impact of that silence can be measured in the hundreds of
- millions of tax dollars poured into the ill-fated expedition and in the
- human cost of the decades NASA engineers and scientist invested in
- re-establishing a U.S. presence on Mars.
- But Observer is also the latest reminder of the growing problems
- of the once-proud U.S. space program. The nearly $1-Billion Observer
- mission adds to a string of expensive space failures-the loss earlier
- this month of a $500-million spy satellite, then of a $67-million weather
- satellite, and a series of mishaps with NASA's orbiting observatories and
- other planetary probes.
- The $1.5-billion Galieo probe, which Saturday will pass Ida on
- its way to Jupiter, has a damaged antenna that will sharply curtail the
- scientific data that it can transmit to Earth. The orbiting Hubble Space
- Telescope looks at the universe through flawed optics and is scheduled
- for repair later this year from the space shuttle, which continues to
- have trouble meeting a launch schedule. And the agency's proposed space
- station has been plagued with engineering problems that have delayed its
- contstruction and forced several expensive redesign efforts.
- In Washington, congressional strategists and private analysts
- suggested that NASA's latest failure was likely to make the agency all
- the more vulnerable to budget cuts as Congress takes up the
- appropriations bill covering the space program.
- Although the House passed a $14.8-billion NASA authorization
- bill on July 29, a proposal to keep funding for the controversial space
- station intact squeaked throught by only one vote, 216 to 215. The
- measure faces uncertainties in the Senate as well.
- As a consequence, congressional experts and space analysts
- questioned Wednesday whether NASA's ambition has overreached its
- engineering competence, while the agency's political allies tried to
- recalculate the high cost of spaceflight.
- "I don't believe we are getting beyond our technological
- capability," said William Piotrowski, NASA's acting director of space
- exploration. "We have established some very tough goals. If they were
- easy to meet, anyone could meet them."
- However, there is a growing conviction within NASA that
- once-a-decade projects like the Mars Observer are simply too expensive
- and too complicated to risk in the aftermath of the Cold War, when
- agency officials can no longer rally support for big-ticket space
- projects by waving the Soviet red flag in an appeal to national pride.
- The space agency instead should finally abandon its
- post-Apollo dreams of grandeur and develop a new generation of
- inexpensive and more easily expendable planetary probes with more limited
- objectives, some agency officials and civilian analysts said.
- "We put ourselves captive to one thing going right or else we
- lose everything," said John Logsdon, director of the Space Policy
- Institute at George Washington University.
- He said that the loss of the Mars Observer project almost
- certainly would bolster recent moves by NASA Administrator Daniel
- S. Goldin to concentrate on smaller, less-costly projects. The
- space agency has proposed a "Discovery" program of small,
- low-cost planetary missions, and one of the first is a small Mars probe
- expected to be launched in 1996.
- The problem, said John Pike, director of the space policy project
- at the American Federation of Scientists, is that "when NASA says small,
- they mean a billion dollars."
- The Mars Observer-one of the most expensive and sophisticated
- space vehicles ever build-was to survey the fourth planet for almost two
- years, to pick landing sites, gather weather data and fill Earth's
- scientific covers with a wealth of data. It was to pave the way for a
- manned expedition some time in the next century.
- The lost information would be invaluable, project scientists said
- week, and the exploration of one of the most enticing mysteries in the sky
- has been dealt a setback from which it may take decades to recover.
- "I'm not happy," said Michael Malin, who quit his tenured post at
- the University of Arizona to start a company in San Diego to design and
- operate the spacecraft's high tech camera for NASA. Malin worked on the
- project for six years. "All that's over. Now I don't get to use it.
- I am angry."
- Carl Sagan, a Cornell University planetary scientist who has
- actively lobbied for Mars exploration, was sanguine about the Observer's
- fate.
- "Something like this is inevitable if you are at the edge of new
- technology. We have to bear in mind that there will be failures if we aim
- high," he said.
- More than any other object in the solar system, Mars is a reef on
- which the machines men and women send to the stars have foundered. Two
- previous U.S. Mars probes nand as many as a dozen Soviet Mars missions
- have failed to reach the Red Planet.
-
- (See Soviet PHOBOS II MISSION/UFO ENCOUNTER)
-
- JPL flight controllers said Wednesday that they would continue to
- try to locate and contact the missing Observer spacecraft, even as they
- had to turn control of the agency's Deep Space Network over to other
- planetary projects.
- They continued to discount speculation that a fuel tank
- explosion might have caused the spacecraft to lose touch with Earth.
- NASA engineers said that the probe's tanks had been
- pressurized three times to perform maneuvers during the flight to Mars,
- but that they had been put under high pressure only once, just about the
- time the craft prepared to orbit Mars itself and went into a radio blackout
- Saturday. "Something Violent occurred during the blackout" said James Oberg
- a Mars mission expert.
-