Category: Civil

Gingrich to Hold Two Space Meetings in Florida Tomorrow

Gingrich to Hold Two Space Meetings in Florida Tomorrow

On Sunday, Newt Gingrich announced that he would make a major speech about the space program this week as part of his campaign to win the Republican nomination for President.   His website lists two events tomorrow in Cocoa, FL that are focused on the space program.

From 3:30 – 4:15 PM EST, he will hold a “Space Coast-Space Industry Roundtable” at Brevard Community College and from 4:30 – 5:30 pm EST a “Space Coast Town Hall Meeting,” according to his campaign website.

Gingrich gave a preview of his views on the space program during the primary debate last night.    He wants to expand the use of prizes to incentivize private investors around the world to find “very romantic and exciting futures” in space.

Romney, Gingrich Talk Space

Romney, Gingrich Talk Space

At last night’s Republican presidential primary debate, Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich shared their views on the future of the space program.  Not surprisingly, both criticized the Obama Administration’s program, but perhaps unknowingly supported one of its key elements — greater reliance on the private sector.

Gingrich went further than Romney, focusing on the use of prizes to stimulate private sector investment in visionary space activities while calling for “a leaner NASA.”   Prizes are part of the Obama strategy, too, but Gingrich seems intent on making them the cornerstone of the future space exploration program he would design.

Romney complained that President Obama “does not have a vision or a mission for NASA” and as a result Florida and especially its Space Coast are suffering.  He believes space is important for science, commercial development and the military and that a vision should be established by bringing together representatives of all of those sectors.  He added that NASA should be funded not only by the government “but also by commercial enterprises. Have some of the research done in our universities.”   Exciting young people and leading the world were other goals he espoused.

A substantial amount of NASA’s research is already done by universities, of course, but the concept of commercial enterprises funding NASA instead of the reverse — as is true now — would certainly be a change.   U.S. leadership and inspiring youth are long-standing goals of politicians of both parties.

Gingrich, who plans a major speech about the space program this week, perhaps tomorrow, extolled the use of prizes to encourage “the private sector into very aggressive experimentation” — with less spent at NASA.  “I don’t think building a bigger bureaucracy and having a greater number of people sit in rooms and talk gets you there,” he said.   Instead he believes a “lot of folks in this country and around the world … would put up an amazing amount of money and would make the space coast literally hum with activity” in order to win the prizes.  Going back to the Moon and on to Mars, building more space stations and developing commercial space, he said, could be done by “leapfrogging into a world where you’re incentivizing people who are visionaries and people in the private sector to invest very large amounts of money in finding very romantic and exciting futures.”

The two were responding to questions from Beth Reinhard of the National Journal, one of the moderators of the debate.  The other two candidates, Ron Paul and Rick Santorum, were not asked questions about the space program.

A video of the portion of the debate devoted to the space program is on YouTube and the Washington Post has a transcript.

Gingrich to Make "Visionary" Space Speech This Week

Gingrich to Make "Visionary" Space Speech This Week

Republican presidential candidate Newt Gingrich told C-SPAN’s Washington Journal yesterday that he plans to make a major speech about his plans for the space program this week when he visits Florida’s Space Coast.  The Florida Republican primary will be held January 31.

Gingrich said that he plans to make a series of speeches this week on “big solutions for a big country.”   In addition to space, he said he will speak on health, housing, economic growth, and Cuba and Latin Amercia.

In the interview, he referenced his 1984 book Window of Opportunity in which he devoted a chapter to the space program, adding that his speech this week would be “visionary” and “in the John F. Kennedy tradition rather than the current bureaucracy.”

The other Republican presidential candidates have not announced plans to make speeches specifically about the space program as part of their campaigns in Florida, although Florida Today reports that Rick Santorum is scheduled to appear in Brevard County on Saturday. Gingrich will be there on Wednesday.  Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral Air Force Station are in that county.

The anniversaries of the three U.S. human spaceflight tragedies are close at hand — the January 27, 1967 Apollo fire that killed the three members of the first Apollo crew, and the two space shuttle tragedies (Challenger on January 28,1986 and Columbia on February 1, 2003) each of which claimed seven lives.  It is a time of reflection in the human spaceflight community, which any politican could see as an opportunity to honor those lost and the cause for which they gave their lives, so other candidates may also mention their plans for NASA.

Florida is a critical state in the presidential contest.    Then-candidate Barack Obama made a rousing pro-space speech in Florida on August 2, 2008 criticizing the George W. Bush Administration for setting visionary goals, but not providing the money to achieve them.   He said “we cannot cede our leadership in space…. We need a real vision.”    He asserted that he would reestablish a National Air and Space Council in the White House to develop that vision and  “Under my watch NASA will inspire the world once again.” 

Four years later, the President still has not reestablished the National Air and Space Council (or National Space Council, without the aeronautics component, as it was constituted most recently under the first Bush Administration from 1989-1993).  He did, however, propose a major paradigm shift for the human spaceflight program in February 2010 as part of his FY2011 budget request.    That plan — to cancel the Constellation program, turn the transportation of people to and from the International Space Station over to the private sector instead of NASA, and have NASA focus on technology development for eventual human trips to unspecified destinations beyond low Earth orbit — was not received enthusiastically and set off an intense debate in Congress.  Part of the criticism was that this major change was announced as part of a budget request and not in a dedicated speech.   The President returned to Florida on April 15, 2010 to explain his plan, but the speech was widely viewed as adding more confusion.  After a divisive two years, Congress and the White House seem to be in agreement on the future direction of the human spaceflight program today — essentially a combination of what each wanted — but whether it is sustainable within expected budgets remains to be seen.

Florida certainly will be a key state in the presidential race and the Republican National Convention will be held in Tampa Bay in August.  That could put the space program front and center in the debate, especially if Gingrich — a long-time supporter of the space program — wins the nomination.  

Rep. Gabby Giffords to Resign from Congress

Rep. Gabby Giffords to Resign from Congress

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ) will resign from Congress this week after attending tomorrow’s State of the Union address.

Rep. Giffords was shot in the head in an assassination attempt a year ago on January 8, 2011.   Her survival and recovery to date are considered close to miraculous, and hope was high that she would resume serving her Tucson, AZ district.    However, in a video posted on her website and an accompanying press release, she explains that she is doing what is best for Arizona as she continues her recovery.  At the same time, she said that she will return.

“I have more work to do on my recovery, so to do what is best for Arizona, I will step down this week. … I will return and we will work together for Arizona and this country,” she said.

Giffords is married to former astronaut Mark Kelly and is a strong supporter of NASA and particularly the human spaceflight program.  She chaired the House Science and Technology Committee’s Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee in the 111th Congress and officially is the ranking member of that subcommittee now, athough other Members have served in an acting capacity in her absence.

Kelly made his final spaceflight last spring, commanding the last mission of space shuttle Endeavour while his wife was beginning rehabilitation in a Houston hospital.  He retired from NASA and the Navy last fall.   There is some speculation that he may succeed her.  The governor of Arizona will set a date for a primary and general election to choose someone to complete her term.

 

 

The Hill: Obama Delays FY2013 Budget Release To Feb. 13

The Hill: Obama Delays FY2013 Budget Release To Feb. 13

Just as he did last year, President Obama reportedly has decided to wait an extra week to release his new budget request to Congress.   The date has slipped to February 13 from February 6 according to The Hill newspaper.

By law, the budget request is supposed to be submitted to Congress on the first Monday in February.  This year that is February 6.  The Hill cites an unnamed Obama administration official as saying that the FY2013 budget request will be released on February 13 instead and quotes two high-ranking congressional Republicans castigating the President for missing the deadline.

Events of Interest: Week of January 22-27, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of January 22-27, 2012

The following events may be of interest in the week ahead.

During the Week

The House and Senate both will be in session this week and President Obama will deliver his annual State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on Tuesday night.   The American Meteorological Society (AMS) holds its annual meeting beginning today in New Orleans, LA, with “town hall” sessions on topics related to earth observing satellites on Tuesday and Wednesday.  The four-week World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC) 2012, convened by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) where the nations of the world meet to allocate spectrum for terrestrial and space uses, begins in Geneva, Switzerland.

Sunday-Thursday, January 22-26

Monday, January 23 – Friday, February 17

Tuesday, January 24

Wednesday, January 25

 Friday, January 27

NRC Debates NASA's Plan to Participate in ESA's Euclid

NRC Debates NASA's Plan to Participate in ESA's Euclid

The National Research Council (NRC) is debating the merits of NASA’s current plan for U.S. participation in the European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Euclid dark energy mission and there is not much time to deliberate.

The NRC Committee on Assessment of a Plan for US Participation in Euclid has been asked by NASA to work at breakneck speed for an NRC study, with its report due on April 30.   That deadline is dictated by when ESA needs to know whether NASA wants a piece of the action on Euclid or not.  If it does, ESA wants a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to be signed by April 2012, right when the report is due. 

At a public meeting of the NRC committee on Wednesday, it seemed that many of the committee members were not enthusiastic about NASA’s current plan even though their peers on NASA’s internal astrophysics advisory subcommittee approved of it in November. 

The main concern at the NRC committee was the potential impact of spending any money – even the comparatively small amount NASA is proposing – on Euclid instead of on the Wide-Field InfraRed Survey Telescope (WFIRST) mission.  WFIRST was the top large space mission recommended by the NRC’s 2010 decadal survey on astronomy and astrophysics, New Worlds New Horizons.  That report called for WFIRST to be launched in 2020. 

NRC decadal surveys delineate the key science questions for the next 10 years (a decade) in a particular discipline and recommend projects to answer them.   The astronomy and astrophysics decadal surveys were the first of this type and date back to the 1960s.  Often called “bibles” because their recommendations usually are faithfully followed by NASA (primarily responsible for space-based astronomy) and the National Science Foundation (NSF, which is primarily responsible for ground-based astronomy), they represent a hard-won consensus of that community. 

WFIRST has three scientific goals:  studying dark energy, performing an all-sky infrared survey, and searching for exoplanets.   WFIRST is being delayed, however, because of cost overruns on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).   NASA has made clear that JWST is its top science priority and with JWST’s launch date slipping to 2018, significant work on design and development of WFIRST will have to wait until then. 

The U.S. space-based astrophysics community hopes WFIRST will lead to answers about dark energy — called “dark” because scientists do not know what it is.   What they know is that some force is causing the universe to expand faster than earlier theorized and the term was coined to refer to this mysterious force. 

Ground-based facilities also can be used to investigate dark energy and the NRC decadal survey’s top priority for a ground-based instrument, the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST), will be used for dark energy research, too.  LSST would be funded by NSF and the Department of Energy (DOE), which is working on solving the dark energy puzzle as well, especially at its Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL).   LBL’s Saul Perlmutter was one of three scientists to win the 2011 Nobel Prize for Physics for dark energy research, along with Brian Schmidt of Australian National University and Adam Reiss of Johns Hopkins University and the Space Telescope Science Institute.

Many astrophysicists, however, believe that space-based observations will be critical to determining the nature of dark energy.  For the U.S. astrophysics community, WFIRST is their top choice. 

At the NRC meeting on Wednesday,  NASA officials emphasized that the earliest a funding wedge will open up for the design and development of WFIRST will be 2018 with launch expected seven years later – or 2025.    Preliminary studies will be carried out before then, but there are not enough funds to make a concerted start on the project until JWST is nearing launch.   Euclid, however, is scheduled for launch in 2019, opening an avenue for U.S. scientists to obtain space-based data about dark energy sooner than if they wait for WFIRST.   Previous estimates were that WFIRST’s launch would slip to 2022 and the 2025 date seemed to come as a surprise to some of the committee members. 

NASA has been discussing the possibility of U.S. participation in Euclid with ESA for a long time, but the U.S. astrophysics community has not been supportive of significant participation because of the potential impact on WFIRST.   The plan NASA asked this NRC committee to review involves NASA providing a hardware contribution valued at about $20 million in exchange for ESA giving NASA one of the 12 coveted seats on the Euclid science team.   That scientist, called a principal investigator, would be able to bring along 20 co-investigators and an even larger number of “collaborators,” all of whom would have early access to Euclid data.   Otherwise, scientists would have to wait 14 months for “quick look” data and longer for more detailed data. 

ESA’s primary interest in cooperating with NASA is that it dearly wants U.S. near-infrared detectors for Euclid, although NASA officials said that ESA would accept other hardware contributions (filter wheels or reaction wheels were mentioned). 

NASA officials refer to the current plan as the United States having a “10 percent role in Euclid.”   At the NRC meeting, they explained that means NASA would provide the equivalent of 10 percent of the total cost for Euclid’s instruments, not 10 percent of the cost of the Euclid project overall.  There would be no exchange of funds between the agencies.   As noted, NASA ran this 10 percent proposal by its internal astrophysics advisory subcommittee in November and they agreed, but NASA also is seeking input from its external advisers at the NRC to ensure it is acceptable to those responsible for the decadal survey. 

The $20 million NASA estimates for its costs would be needed in the next two fiscal years.  NRC committee members worried, however, about where the $20 million would come from and whether it might be better invested in early work on WFIRST.    When asked what the impact would be on WFIRST’s schedule, Paul Hertz, acting director of NASA’s astrophysics division in the Science Mission Directorate (SMD), said “zero” because the Euclid money is needed in the near term while WFIRST’s development will not begin until about 2018. 

Hertz explained that the plan is to take the $20 million in FY2013 and FY2014 from SMD investments planned for technology development, research and analysis, the Explorer program, and research using balloon-borne instruments. Those four areas also were priorities of the NRC decadal survey and Hertz said NASA will increase funding for each of them.   However, taking out $20 million for Euclid would mean the rate of increase would be slowed. 

Apart from JWST, NASA’s astrophysics budget is about $700 million a year, Hertz said.   The $20 million in question ($10 million a year for two years) may seem a small portion of that, but the NRC committee members clearly were worried about which accounts would be cut to pay for Euclid and whether the U.S. astrophysics community would be getting a fair return on the investment. 

NASA’s message was that it is fact that Euclid will launch before WFIRST and the primary determinants for WFIRST are when funding is available to build it and how the field of dark energy research evolves in the meantime. 

NASA is required by law to ask the NRC to perform a “mid-term review” for each decadal survey half way through the decade that it covers.  The mid-term review for the New Worlds, New Horizons Decadal Survey will be due around 2015.  Hertz said NASA will ask the NRC to relook at WFIRST at that time to see if changes should be made based on what has been discovered using ground-based instruments and what is expected to be accomplished with Euclid.    An NRC committee member said he was worried that WFIRST was in a “holding pattern” until the mid-term review.  Hertz agreed that it is, but added that it is true whether or not NASA participates in Euclid.  He assured the committee that NASA would not do anything that would slip WFIRST in favor of participating in Euclid.

AP: SpaceX Flight Off Until Late March

AP: SpaceX Flight Off Until Late March

The Associated Press (AP) is reporting this afternoon that the test flight of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft to the International Space Station (ISS) will not take place until the end of March.  It had been scheduled for February 7.

SpaceX sent an email to reporters on Monday stating that the flight test would be postponed, but did not announce a new date.   In that email, SpaceX spokeswoman Kirstin Brost Grantham said that the company believed there were “a few areas that will benefit from additional work and will optimize the safety and success of this mission,” and the company was working with NASA to set a new date.

Marcia Dunn of the AP reports (as published via the Washington Times website) that today “officials confirmed the launch would not occur until late March.”  No further details were provided as to whether the officials are from NASA or SpaceX.

This flight test is intended to demonstrate that SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft can be launched to and berth with the ISS.   It is the combination of the last two of three test flights the company is to conduct as part of its effort to build a space transportation system to deliver cargo, and someday crews, to the ISS.   NASA is anxious to have SpaceX and Orbital Sciences Corp., the other company participating in the Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program, begin sending cargo to the ISS this year.   The termination of the space shuttle program last year ended NASA’s ability to send people or cargo to the ISS. 

NRC Worried About Gaps in Global Change Satellite Data-UPDATE

NRC Worried About Gaps in Global Change Satellite Data-UPDATE

UPDATE:  The American Meteorological Society will hold a Town Hall meeting about the USGCRP draft strategic plan at its 2012 annual meeting in New Orleans, LA.   That Town Hall meeting is Tuesday, January 24, at 12:15 pm local time.

ORIGINAL STORY:  A new National Research Council (NRC) report reviewing the draft strategic plan for the U.S. Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) expresses concern about potential gaps in satellite observations needed for weather forecasting and climate records.

According to the NRC study, A Review of the U.S. Global Change Research Program’s Draft Strategic Plan, Goal 2 of that plan addresses the observations, modeling and data management needed for the next 10 years of the program.  The USGCRP coordinates observational and research efforts related to global change, especially climate change, across the federal government.

While the plan “acknowledges” the need for satellite observations that are “sustained in the coming decades,” the NRC committee concluded that it did not provide strategies for fulfilling that requirement.  The NRC’s 2007 Decadal Survey on Earth Science and Applications from Space made recommendations for NASA and NOAA missions, but achieving those goals has been delayed because “the costs of some have missions have grown, in some cases dramatically” and two satellites — the Orbiting Carbon Observatory and GLORY — were lost in launch failures, and by budget constraints, says the report.  Delays in NOAA’s Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) are a further problem, it said.

Consequently, “the Nation is at risk of having serious gaps in observational capability, both for operational forecasting missions and for key climate records.”  The NRC called for “an appropriate governance structure and clear mechanisms for assuring that long-term satellite-based observing systems are developed and sustained in a manner suitable for meeting the [USGCRP’s] key science objectives.”

Fostering international relationships also is critical, it added — “as important as [USGCRP’s] efforts to foster the growth of U.S.-led observations.”

NASA IG Taps NRC For Study on NASA Direction and Management

NASA IG Taps NRC For Study on NASA Direction and Management

NASA’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) is contracting with the National Research Council (NRC) for a congressionally-requested study of NASA’s strategic direction and management.

In the FY2012 appropriations bill that funds NASA (P.L. 112-55), Congress directed that $1 million be allocated to the OIG to “commission an independent assessment of NASA’s strategic direction and agency management.”   The report language accompanying the law (H. Rept. 112-284, pp. 260-261) provided details on what the study should cover and asked that it be submitted to Congress and the President within 120 days of enactment, a very short period of time.

The statement of task (SOT) for the study was posted on the NASA OIG website today.  It calls for the study to be completed by July 31, 2012, still a very short deadline considering the scope of the report as detailed in the SOT:

1. Consider the strategic direction of the agency as set forth most recently in 2011 NASA Strategic Plan and other relevant statements of space policy issued by the President of the United States.

2. Consider the goals for the agency set forth in the National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 (as amended) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Authorization Acts of 2005, 2008 and 2010.

3. Consider previous studies and reports relevant to this task.

4. Assess the relevance of NASA’s strategic direction and goals to achieving national priorities.

5. Assess the viability of NASA’s strategic direction and goals in the context of current budget expectations and stated programmatic priorities for the agency.

6. Discuss the appropriateness of the budgetary balance between NASA’s various programs.

7. Examine NASA’s organizational structure and identify changes that could improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the Agency’s mission activities; and

8. Recommend how NASA could establish and effectively communicate a common, unifying vision for NASA’s strategic direction that encompasses NASA’s varied missions.

In keeping with specific direction in the appropriations law, any recommendations made by the NRC committee will be predicated on the assumption that NASA’s out-year budget profile will be constrained due to continuing deficit reduction.

The NRC Current Projects website does not yet list this study.