Category: Civil

Nelson Introduces Senate Version of NASA Authorization Bill

Nelson Introduces Senate Version of NASA Authorization Bill

Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL) introduced his version of the 2013 NASA authorization bill today.  Meanwhile, the time for the House Science, Space and Technology (SS&T) Committee’s markup of its version of the bill tomorrow has changed.

The House SS&T committee’s markup will be at 11:15 am ET tomorrow (Thursday) rather than 9:15 am, the committee announced this afternoon.

Meanwhile, Nelson said at a function this evening that he introduced his version of the bill today.  Word has it that it is a 3-year bill that authorizes $18 billion for FY2014 with inflationary increases for the next two years.  Details are forthcoming.

 

Senate Appropriations Subcommittee Approves $18 Billion for NASA in FY2014

Senate Appropriations Subcommittee Approves $18 Billion for NASA in FY2014

The Senate appropriations subcommittee with jurisdiction over NASA approved $18 billion for the agency for FY2014 this morning, a significant increase over the level recommended by its House counterpart last week and more than the Obama Administration requested.

The Senate Appropriations Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) subcommittee, chaired by Senator Barbara Mikulski (D-MD), who also chairs the full committee, approved the bill with little discussion in a short markup session.  Full committee markup is scheduled for Thursday at 10:00 am ET.

Little mention was made of NASA during the markup and the press release provides few details.   The subcommittee approved $18 billion for FY2014, an increase above the $17.7 billion requested by the Obama Administration and significantly more than the amount approved by its House counterpart — $16.6 billion (the full House Appropriations Committee will consider its subcommittee’s recommendations tomorrow, but major changes are not expected).

What can be gleaned so far from the Senate subcommittee’s action this morning is that NASA would receive $18 billion.  The press release adds that the funds:

  • will “preserve a NASA portfolio balanced among science, aeronautics, technology and human space flight investments”;
  • includes $373 million more for Science than the House CJS subcommittee’s recommendation; and
  • provides $597 million more [presumably more than the House subcommittee] “to let humans explore beyond low Earth orbit while safely sending our astronauts to the space station on U.S. made vehicles.”

Senator Richard Shelby (R-AL), ranking member of the subcommittee and of the full committee, said during the markup that the bill also includes language to increase transparency in the commercial crew program.  Shelby added that although the bill was developed in a bipartisan manner and he agrees with its priorities, because the total funding level that was allowed under the Senate Budget Resolution is too high in his opinion, he plans to vote against it.  The total amount of funding provided by the bill is $52.3 billion.

House Appropriators Detail FY2014 Funding Plans for NASA While FY2013 Remains a Mystery

House Appropriators Detail FY2014 Funding Plans for NASA While FY2013 Remains a Mystery

The House Appropriations Committee released its draft report on the FY2014 funding bill that includes NASA today even while disagreement remains on what the agency can spend in the current fiscal year (FY2013).

The full committee will markup the FY2014 Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) bill tomorrow at 10:00 am ET.  The draft report states that NASA would receive $16,598,300,000 for FY2014 “which is $928,430,000 million below fiscal year 2013 and $1,117,095,000 below the request.”

The comparison to FY2013 is misleading, however. The report states that the FY2013 level is defined as the amount appropriated in P.L. 113-6 (the final FY2013 appropriations bill) “excluding emergency funding, the sequester … and any other adjustments imposed” by another provision of that law.   The House and Senate appropriations committees agreed on $17.862 billion for NASA in P.L. 113-6.  When adjusted for the sequester and other across-the-board cuts required by that law (and leaving aside a small amount of money provided to NASA as emergency funding in the wake of Hurricane Sandy), NASA’s total is reduced by about 7 percent.  That leaves about $16.6 billion.   In fact, exactly how much NASA can spend in FY2013 — which ends on September 30 — remains a mystery.  NASA submitted an operating plan to the House and Senate appropriations committees in May, but they have not approved it.  NASA officials speaking at meetings of two NASA Advisory Council (NAC) subgroups yesterday and today said that no agreement has been reached between Congress and the Obama Administration on NASA’s final FY2013 funding.  Until agreement is reached, NASA is not allowed to spend 5-10 percent of its expected FY2013 budget and some projects are running out of money, according to one of those officials.

As for FY2014, the House Appropriations Committee’s total for NASA is indeed $1.1 billion less than the Obama Administration’s request.   Among the most significant changes are the following:

  • no funds for the proposed Asteroid Retrieval Mission
  • no funds for Earth science programs that the Administration is proposing be transferred to NASA from NOAA and USGS (Landsat follow-on, climate sensors or DSCOVR)
  • increase to planetary science ($1.315 billion instead of $1.218 billion requested), of which $80 million is specified for work on a Europa mission, but none for NASA to support the production of Pu-238 in partnership with the Department of Energy
  • significant cut to technology development (from $742 million requested to $576 million)
  • increase to Space Launch System (SLS) development (from $1.385 billion requested to $1.476 billion), but slight decrease to the associated exploration ground systems (from $318 million requested to $299 million)
  • slight increase for the Orion spacecraft  (from $1.027 billion requested to 1.053 billion)
  • significant cut to commercial crew (from $820 million requested to $500 million)
  • cut to Exploration R&D (from $364 million requested to $287 million)
  • cut to ISS operations (from $3.05 billion requested to $2.86 billion)
  • cut to Cross Agency Support (from $2.85 billion to $2.71 billion)
ISS Spacewalk Terminated Due to Spacesuit Problem – UPDATE 3

ISS Spacewalk Terminated Due to Spacesuit Problem – UPDATE 3

A spacewalk from the International Space Station (ISS) this morning was terminated early when European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Luca Parmitano’s spacesuit apparently developed a leak.

The astronauts have safely returned to the inside of the ISS.  ESA (@ESAoperations) tweeted that Parmitano and fellow spacewalker NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy have “doffed their suits.  Specialists will work to find cause of leak in @astro_luca’s suit.”   Other tweets indicate that there was water in his helmet, possibly from a leak in the water-cooled garment.

ESA released this photo of Parmitano after he returned to the space station.  He is being helped out of his spacesuit by NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg.

Photo Credit:  ESA/NASA

NASA released a video with excerpts of ground-space communications as the problem developed.  (Editor’s Note:  I watched this video not 10 minutes ago following link from ESA tweet, but now I get a “this video is private” message from YouTube.  Can’t imagine why.  Just looked like NASA TV footage.)

NASA reports on its ISS website that the spacewalk began at 7:57 am Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) and ended at 9:39 am, a duration of 1 hour 42 minutes. 

Check back here for more information as it becomes available.

 

NASA Mystified by Source Of Water in Astronaut Luca's Spacesuit

NASA Mystified by Source Of Water in Astronaut Luca's Spacesuit

European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut Luca Parmitano’s spacesuit filled up with 1-1.5 liters of water during an hour-and-a-half spacewalk outside the International Space Station (ISS) this morning.   NASA terminated the spacewalk early and still does not know where the water came from.

Parmitano, often referred to simply as Luca, was in the early stages of a planned 6.5 hour spacewalk with NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy when he noticed an unusual amount of water collecting at the back of his head.    The spacesuit has a drink bag with 32 ounces (just less than 1 liter) of water to drink during the lengthy excursion outside.  After ruling out perspiration, the drink bag was the next most likely culprit, but as time went on the amount of water increased, covering his ears and reaching his eyes.  NASA ground controllers terminated the spacewalk and ordered both astronauts back inside, Luca first.  By the time he was being helped out of his suit by the other four ISS crew members, the amount of water had increased to an estimated 1-1.5 liters (33-51 ounces) and was impeding his ability to see, hear or communicate.

At a NASA press conference this afternoon, lead spacewalk officer Karina Eversley confirmed that  “choking or drowning was definitely a possibility” in the fishbowl environment of the spacesuit’s helmet.  In microgravity, water collects in “globs,” she explained, and he would not have been able to simply cough out any water that entered his mouth as one can do on Earth.

NASA flight director David Korth said the ISS crew and engineers on the ground are troubleshooting the incident but “nothing is jumping out” as the cause.  The “easy answer” was the drink bag and “we’ve almost ruled that out,” he said.  Another potential source of the water is the suit’s cooling and ventilation system, which has about 1 gallon (3.8 liters) of water, Eversely said.   Korth added that a carbon dioxide sensor in Luca’s suit had failed several minutes before Luca noticed the water buildup and moisture has caused CO2 sensor failures in some prior spacewalks.   Another possibility is an anti-fogging agent that keeps the visor clear of condensation.

Korth and Eversley said there are at least two functional spacesuits still aboard the ISS.  If an emergency necessitated another spacewalk before the root cause of this anomaly is determined and resolved, the ISS crew could still do one, but for now NASA is in no rush to complete the tasks scheduled for today.  They and Kenny Todd, chairman of the Mission Management Team for this mission, painted a positive picture of the contingency that focused on how well Luca, his fellow crew members, and the ground team reacted to the emergency.   Todd stressed that the number one objective is to get the crew back into the ISS safely, and that was achieved.  The crew was reported to be in good spirits.

The spacewalk lasted just 1 hour and 32 minutes, the second shortest spacewalk from the ISS.  In addition to Parmitano (who is Italian) and Cassidy, the other four ISS crew members are NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg and Russian cosmonauts Alexander Misurkin, Pavel Vinogradov, and Fyodor Yurchikhin.

NASA Press Conference This Afternoon on Spacewalk Problem

NASA Press Conference This Afternoon on Spacewalk Problem

NASA will hold a press conference this afternoon to discuss the problem that developed this morning with Luca Parmitano’s spacesuit that forced an early termination to a spacewalk.

The press conference will be at 4:30 pm ET and broadcast on NASA TV.

The planned 6.5 hour spacewalk had to be terminated after about 1.5 hours when Parmitano’s spacesuit helmet began filling with water.  The spacesuits are liquid cooled, so one possibility is that a coolant loop sprang a leak.  Parmitano, a European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut, and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, both safely returned to the interior of the International Space Station.

House Committee to Markup NASA Authorization Bill This Week

House Committee to Markup NASA Authorization Bill This Week

Adding to an already busy schedule of action on legislation affecting NASA this week, the full House Science, Space and Technology (SS&T) Committee announced today that it will mark up the 2013 NASA Authorization bill on Thursday morning.

The Space Subcommittee marked up the bill and forwarded it to full committee last week.  

On Thursday, July 18, at 9:15 am ET, the full committee will consider the bill (H.R. 2687).  It would authorize $16.9 billion ($16.865 billion to be more precise) to NASA for FY2014 and FY2015.  That is a significant reduction from the $17.7 billion requested, but higher than what the House Appropriations Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) subcommittee approved last week — $16.6 billion. 

How the proposed authorization and appropriation levels for FY2014 compare with NASA’s FY2013 funding is still a mystery officially since neither NASA nor the congressional appropriations committees that received NASA’s FY2013 operating plan have released the final figures.   A quick look at the final FY2013 appropriations law (P.L. 113-6) would show that NASA received $17.86 billion, but that is before adjustments for the sequester and other across-the-board cuts contained in sections at the end of that law totalling about 7 percent.

During markup of the 2013 NASA authorization bill at subcommittee level last week, Democrats introduced an alternative (H.R. 2616) that would have provided $18.1 billion for NASA and had somewhat different priorities than the Republican version, but it was defeated on a party-line vote.

Authorization bills set policy and recommend funding levels; appropriations bills actually determine how much money an agency like NASA receives.   The full House Appropriations Committee will consider the CJS bill on Wednesday; the Senate Appropriations Committee will markup its version of the CJS bill at subcommittee level on Tuesday and at full committee on Thursday.

 

Space Policy Events for the Week of July 15-19, 2013 – UPDATE

Space Policy Events for the Week of July 15-19, 2013 – UPDATE

UPDATE:   The Senate Appropriations Committee’s full committee markup of the CJS bill on Thursday has been added.

The following space policy events may be of interest in the week ahead.  The House and Senate are in session this week.

During the Week

The FY2014 Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) appropriations bill that funds NASA and NOAA will take another step forward in the House this week and begin its trek in the Senate.  On Wednesday, the full House Appropriations Committee will take up the recommendations made by its CJS subcommittee last week, which include a substantial cut to NASA ($16.6 billion instead of the $17.7 billion requested) and a more modest cut to NOAA ($4.9 billion instead of the $5.5 billion requested).   That’s the day in-between when the Senate Appropriations CJS subcommittee (Tuesday) and full committee (Thursday) will markup its version of the bill.  The Senate is expected to be more generous because the Senate Budget Resolution approved higher figures for what the appropriators are allowed to spend versus their House counterparts.   Eventually, of course, the two sides will have to agree.

Meanwhile, 2,000 miles away from Washington, in Denver, the American Astronautical Society will be holding the second International Space Station (ISS) Research and Development conference Tuesday through Thursday.   The conference will highlight the research being conducted aboard the ISS.   Now that the ISS is built and operating, its utility as a space-based laboratory must be demonstrated, especially if the case is to be made to extend operations beyond 2020.  The international partnership has agreed to that many years of operations, but NASA in particular is hoping to extend that to 2028, which will be the 30-year mark for when the first module was launched.  The first morning of the AAS conference — which includes keynotes by ISS Program Manager Mike Suffredini and NASA Associate Administrator for Science John Grunsfeld — will be webcast this year beginning at 10:00 am ET (8:00 am local time in Denver).  See the AAS website for information on how to tune in.

Monday, July 15

Monday-Tuesday, July 15-16

Monday-Wednesday, July 15-17

Monday-Friday, July 15-19

Tuesday, July 16

Tuesday-Wednesday, July 16-17

Tuesday-Thursday, July 16-18

Wednesday, July 17

Thursday, July 18

Friday, July 19

Technical Experts Weigh In On NASA's Asteroid Retrieval Mission

Technical Experts Weigh In On NASA's Asteroid Retrieval Mission

On Tuesday,  Ball Aerospace held the second “Target NEO” workshop on the technical challenges and opportunities of exploring Near Earth Objects (NEOs), especially asteroids and NASA’s new Asteroid Retrieval Mission (ARM).

The workshop was a follow-up to the February 2011 Target NEO workshop sponsored by the George Washington University Space Policy Institute and Ball Aerospace.  That workshop was in response to President Obama’s 2010 call to send humans to an asteroid by 2025. The agenda for that workshop centered around gathering information to achieve that goal.

Tuesday’s “Target NEO 2” workshop focused on the Obama Administration’s latest iteration of that goal—deploying a robotic probe to capture an asteroid, redirecting it into lunar orbit, and sending astronauts there to study and possibly extract a sample of it. This is variously referred to as the Asteroid Retrieval Mission, Asteroid Return Mission, or Asteroid Redirect Mission, and is part of what NASA calls an asteroid strategy that in turn is part of an asteroid initiative.

The six sessions featured a variety of policy, science, and management experts.

The workshop started off optimistically with a presentation by William Gerstenmaier, the NASA Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations, on the current thoughts and capabilities for ARM. The proposed timeframe is to launch a robotic probe by 2017 to travel to the asteroid and capture it, with the possibility of redirecting it into lunar orbit and launching a crew to visit it in 2021, which is the first time the Space Launch System is scheduled to send an Orion spacecraft with a crew into space.

Gerstenmaier stressed that ARM is a valuable mission because it would build upon technologies that NASA has already marked as priorities and that are currently in development, such as solar electric propulsion. He made it clear that the main thrust behind this effort is not science, but rather demonstrating that the United States can send people to Mars by the 2030s.  He asserted that this mission would build off already-existing infrastructure and personnel, while at the same time expanding the country’s operational and technical capabilities in ways that activities on the International Space Station cannot.

Later sessions delved into questions about the technical and scientific feasibility of an asteroid retrieval mission. Determining how many NEOs are suitable for this mission requires a combination of modeling and observation. The criteria for a satisfactory target asteroid are tough: the orbit must be close to the Earth (less than about .05 astronomical units, or about 20 times the distance between the Earth and the Moon), have a low velocity relative to that of the Earth (less than about 2.5 kilometers per second) as well as a fairly circular orbit, and should not be tumbling or spinning very quickly. Not surprisingly, models suggest that an asteroid with these characteristics will be hard to find, even though William Bottke of Southwest Research Institute said that observations discover about eight times more ARM candidates than models predict. Still, out of the 1,000 near-Earth asteroids observed each year, only about 2.5 of those meet the criteria to be a potential target, Paul Chodas from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), said.

A large mission design driver comes from the physical properties of the target asteroid, but even after a target is identified, which may be as late as 6 months before launch, various panelists showed that the size, mass, orbital path, and tumbling motion will still be very uncertain.  Andrew Rivkin of the Applied Physics Lab (APL) said that scientists have rarely been able to directly measure the size of an asteroid. Instead, the absolute magnitude, or brightness as seen from the earth, is used as a proxy for the size. Furthermore, if scientists cannot determine the composition of the target, the mass will be uncertain. Rivkin said this uncertainty might be by a factor of up to 25-30. Carlos Roithmayr from NASA’s Langley Research Center and Stephen Broschart from JPL reminded the audience that this greatly affects the propellant required for the mission; an asteroid that is too massive to retrieve with the planned fuel budget may render the mission impossible. The composition of the asteroid also affects the technology used on the spacecraft: a “sand bar” must be treated very differently than a rock.

Towards the end of the day-long workshop, panelists expressed mixed feelings about ARM.  Gentry Lee, Chief Engineer for the Planetary Sciences Directorate of JPL, reminded the audience that the uncertainties in the mission, such as mass and composition of the asteroid, would translate into the need for a time consuming and expensive test program prior to launch.  At the same time, Lee was hopeful that a mission like this could restore the type of collaboration among NASA’s field centers to what it was during the Apollo era in the 1960s and early 1970s.

Former astronaut Tom Jones pointed out that this mission could demonstrate U.S. leadership in space while at the same time providing an opportunity to forge international collaboration. He also believes it will generate excitement for space exploration from the public and Congress. Conversely, other panelists worried that the proposed schedule was too aggressive and the funding situation is questionable.   But Gentry Lee offered that perhaps some progress in the field of human spaceflight is better than being stalled; since this mission now has visibility and support from the administration, it may be worthwhile to pursue.

A written report from the workshop will be released in about a month. In the meantime, the public can comment on the draft, which will be uploaded onto the workshop website: http://targetneo.jhuapl.edu/index.php.

Editor’s Note:  SpacePolicyOnline.com welcomes Gabriele Betancourt-Martinez as a correspondent for the website.   She is a third year PhD student studying astrophysics at the University of Maryland, College Park, and does her research at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. Before starting graduate school, she was a Lloyd V. Berkner Space Policy Intern with the Space Studies Board of the National Academies, and a consultant for the European Science Foundation, European Space Sciences Committee in Strasbourg, France.  She has a B.S. in Astronomy and Physics from Yale University.

First Antares-Cygnus Trip to ISS Scheduled for September 2013

First Antares-Cygnus Trip to ISS Scheduled for September 2013

NASA and Orbital Sciences Corporation are currently planning the first test launch of Orbital’s Antares rocket and Cygnus spacecraft to the International Space Station (ISS) in September 2013.

The Antares rocket successfully completed its first test in April carrying a mockup of the Cygnus spacecraft.  The September launch will be the first of an actual Cygnus spacecraft, which is designed to take cargo to the ISS.   The rocket and spacecraft are being built as part of NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation System (COTS) program.  Unlike Orbital’s COTS competitor, SpaceX, the Cygnus spacecraft is not capable of returning anything to Earth.  SpaceX’s Dragon is the only ISS cargo spacecraft that can return to Earth.  The others — Russia’s Progress, Europe’s ATV, Japan’s HTV and Cygnus– burn up during reentry through Earth’s atmosphere.

The target launch date is September 14 with Cygnus being berthed to the ISS on September 22.  Orbital stresses that the rocket and spacecraft will be ready to go in August, however.   Orbital uses the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS) at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility for Antares launches.  Wallops is committed to launching another NASA mission (the Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Experiment Explorer – LADEE) in the September 6-10 time frame, however, so the range is not available in August.  Should the LADEE launch date slip, the Antares-Cygnus mission might occur sooner.

Cygnus will be loaded with 1,550 pounds of cargo for the ISS.  The launch window is open September 14-19.