Category: International

Events of Interest: Week of June 25-29, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of June 25-29, 2012

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

Monday, June 25

Monday-Wednesday, June 25-27

Monday-Thursday, June 25-28

Tuesday, June 26

Tuesday-Thursday, June 26-28

Wednesday, June 27

Thursday, June 28

Friday, June 29

 

Chinese Astronauts Prepare for Manual Docking Attempt

Chinese Astronauts Prepare for Manual Docking Attempt

Chinese astronauts Jing Haipeng, Liu Wang and Liu Yang are preparing to undock the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft from the Tiangong-1 space station and then redock using manual controls instead of the automated controls used when they first docked on Monday.

Xinhua (in English) says the manual docking will take place “about noon” on Sunday Beijing time.   That would be about midnight tonight (Saturday) Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

Liu Wang will be at the controls of Shenzhou-9 during the manual docking.   On Friday, he and mission commander Jing did a systems test while remaining docked to Tiangong-1, using Shenzhou’s thrusters to maneuver the complex.   Liu Yang, China’s first woman astronaut, monitored the test from inside Tiangong-1.

The Chinese media repeatedly state that this a 13-day mission, but have not specifically announced the landing date or time.   Thirteen days would make it Friday, June 29, so presumably if the manual docking goes well, the crew will return to Tiangong-1 for several more days.  They have been conducting a series of medical and other biological studies.  Liu Yang is in charge of the scientific program for the mission.

 

Holdren: U.S. is Number One in Space and Intends to Stay That Way

Holdren: U.S. is Number One in Space and Intends to Stay That Way

Presidential Science Advisor John Holdren told the House Science, Space and Technology Committee yesterday that despite what some people say, the United States is the world leader in space activities. 

The space program was only one of many topics debated at the hearing, which focused on the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and President Obama’s science policies and priorities.  Holdren also serves as Director of OSTP.

“We continue … to lead the world in space, although sometimes the contrary is asserted,” he told Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D- CA).   “Our planetary exploration programs have absolutely no peer.  …. some people say China is overtaking [us].  China just put its first woman in space a few days ago.  We put our first woman in space, Sally Ride, in 1983.  One can go through the list.  China is talking about maybe being able to land someone on the moon in 2020.  We did it in 1969.”

Later, Rep. Randy Hultgren (R-IL) cited a recent article in Space News as saying that in the past four years the country has gone from first to third place in space exploration and “I think that’s a shame.” 

The June 18, 2012 issue of Space News published a lengthy op-ed piece by Frank van Rensselaer that harshly criticizes the Obama Administration and NASA’s leaders for “having taken the U.S. from world leadership in space to third-place status in less than four years.”  Van Rensselaer is a former NASA and aerospace industry executive who worked at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy during the Reagan Administration according to a brief biography available on the Internet.

Holdren strongly disagreed. “By any respectable set of metrics I know of, the United States is still number one in space and intends to stay that way.”

On more specific NASA issues, Holdren told committee chairman Ralph Hall (R-TX) that he and President Obama are confident NASA can specify and oversee safety requirements for commercial crew systems even though NASA currently is using Space Act Agreements instead of Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)-based contracting.  Rep. Steve Palazzo (R-MS), chair of the space and aeronautics subcommittee, asked what would happen if the companies did not perform or went out of business — what would NASA own for the money it is expending.   Holdren replied that NASA’s funding is an investment in the private sector that will yield more efficient and less expensive space missions and the idea is not for NASA to “own” anything.

Hall and Palazzo both wanted to know when the White House would announce its plans for obtaining a congressional waiver from the Iran-North Korea-Syria Nonproliferation Act (INKSNA) so NASA can continue to pay Russia for hardware and services for the International Space Station (ISS).  The current waiver lasts only through 2016. Holdren punted, saying only that the Administration is assessing the options even though “it’s clear that it’s going to be needed [and] sooner is better than later.”  He declined to provide a timeline on when the administration would send a request to Congress. 

Holdren defended NASA’s planetary science budget, which was cut 20% in the President’s FY2013 budget request.  Repeating what others in the administration have been saying, Holdren told Rep. Donna Edwards (D-MD) the Mars program is “robust” despite the budget constraints and “we have not, by any means, given up our leadership in planetary exploration.”  Edwards responded by emphasizing the need for predictable budgets not only for planetary science but science in general.  She said it is “unacceptable” to do research by “jumping in and out,” and just ends up costing more in the long run.  Holdren agreed.  

Commercial Crew Critical for ISS, but SLS/Orion Needed for Future, Senators Stress

Commercial Crew Critical for ISS, but SLS/Orion Needed for Future, Senators Stress

At a Senate Commerce subcommittee hearing today, three Senators directed mostly friendly questions at a panel of government and private sector witnesses regarding the risks and opportunities of commercial spaceflight.  Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) emphasized that while commercial crew is needed for the near term, NASA should not “shortchange the future.”  NASA needs to adequately fund the Space Launch System (SLS) and its Orion capsule, she insisted.  As for that future, subcommittee chairman Bill Nelson (D-FL) and Michael Gold of Bigelow Aerospace were bullish on the future of microgravity research for the pharmaceutical industry in particular.

Hutchison sternly chastised NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden at an earlier hearing for, in her view, baldly taking $300 million from the SLS/Orion effort to put into commercial crew in the FY2013 budget request.  Today, she wanted an assurance from NASA’s Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations Bill Gerstenmaier that NASA would not do that again.  He said his job was to deliver commercial crew as well as SLS/Orion in a timely manner “and we’re working hard to do that” within existing budget constraints. He agreed that NASA is committed to move both forward and to “find the balance to keep human spaceflight in this nation strong.”   While that was not an explicit “yes,” Hutchison appeared to accept the answer as the assurance she requested.  Her focus was on ensuring that “in 2020, when ISS will go away, most likely,” the United States does not face another gap in human spaceflight like today.

Hutchison is retiring this year.  She was a key figure in designating the International Space Station (ISS) as a national laboratory, and in passing the 2010 NASA Authorization Act.  The Act struck a compromise between allowing the Obama Administration to proceed with its plan to turn crew transportation to low Earth orbit (LEO) over to the private sector and Congress’s desire to keep NASA in the human spaceflight business by building “beyond LEO” systems — SLS and Orion — to take astronauts further into space.   

Nelson also talked about what would happen when “we get to 2020 and ISS is deactivated,” but in the sense of lamenting that no one is paying attention to the important research being done there already, especially in vaccines.

How long ISS will operate is important for the business plans of companies developing commercial cargo and crew systems since many anticipate NASA will be the major customer for those services.  Gerstenmaier said that NASA needs two crew flights a year, four people each time, to support ISS.   If a spacecraft can carry more than four, NASA will decide how best to use the remaining capacity for cargo or additional people.  He said NASA hopes to increase the ISS crew size to seven, the number for which it was originally designed.  It is currently limited to six because of the capacity of the Russian Soyuz spacecraft that ferry crews back and forth.   Nelson pressed Gerstenmaier on when commercial crew services will be available if Congress provides only $525 million instead of $830 million as the Administration requested for FY2013.   Gerstenmaier said that NASA is planning on 2017 if it receives that level for FY2013, but a higher level in future years.

If commercial crew became available in 2017 and the ISS ends operations in 2020, that is a very limited NASA market.   However, Michael Gold of Bigelow Aerospace stressed that his company is building inflatable space modules also as research facilities in orbit and hopes to attract countries like Japan and Singapore to use them.  He said their business model is not all that different from the ISS and sought to “get rid of some misperceptions” that Bigelow is building a space hotel or a space casino.  It is not building either, he emphasized.

Instead Bigelow’s business model is signing up foreign governments to do microgravity research and development.   He joined with Nelson in extolling the promise of microgravity research.   “We are grossly underestimating the impact on our economy” initially in “pharma and biotech,” he exclaimed (using pharma as shorthand for the pharmaceutical industry).  He cautioned that the “microgravity revolution will happen in pharma and other sectors.  The question is will it happen in America or in China.”   First, however, routine, affordable access to space is needed, at dramatically lower prices than the approximately $60 million per seat Russia charges NASA.  “We are extraordinarily dependent on the success of the commercial crew program,” Gold said. 

Gold also stressed that regulatory issues are just as important as price.  He ranted against the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), saying that Bigelow had to spend about $1 million to comply with ITAR when it launched two test inflatable modules on Russian launch vehicles.  What really irritated him, he said, was that he doubted any sensitive technology was protected.   Nelson reminded him that China acquired sensitive technology when U.S. companies exported satellites to China for launch and “balance” is needed.

Despite the publicity on Monday about the FAA-NASA agreement on each agency’s roles and responsibilities for ensuring the safety of commercial human spaceflight, the topic got little attention at the hearing.  Instead, FAA’s Pamela Melroy focused on the need for an extension to the government’s authority to indemnify commercial launch companies against third party liability claims resulting from launch or reentry accidents.  The authority has been extended several times over the years and currently expires on December 31, 2012.  The House Science, Space and Technology Committee devoted an entire hearing to that topic two weeks ago.  The Government Accountability Office’s (GAO’s) Gerald Dillingham said today that GAO supports a short term extension while a complete review of the issue is conducted.  The Obama Administration wants a 5-year extension.  At the House hearing, industry witnesses wanted the authority  made permanent.  GAO also wants to look at whether the indemnification should be broadened to include on-orbit activities in addition to launch and reentry.  Nelson said “we’ve simply got to contiune” that regime and subcommittee ranking member John Boozman (R-AR) seemed to agree.  (The House committee also appeard supportive of an extension.)

As for the safety of commercial crew flights, Michael Lopez-Alegria of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation (CSF) said CSF agrees that “the principle that NASA should have the final say so in safety is key.”  He is a former astronaut.  Melroy, another former astronaut, said the FAA is restricted in what discussions it can have with industry about pasenger safety until it has a formal rulemaking underway.   The FAA is currently prohibited by law from imposing new passenger safety regulations for commercial spacecraft until 2015.   Gerstenmaier said NASA has publicly released its safety requirements so companies know what they must do to comply with them.

Boozman asked about the need for NASA to get another waiver from the Iran-North Korea-Syria Nonproliferation Act (INKSNA).  Gerstenmaier repeated what he has said in other hearings that whether or not NASA purchases crew flights from Russia after 2016 when the current waiver expires, ISS operations are interdependent and another waiver is needed.  The law prohibits NASA from paying or making in-kind agreements with Russia for anything related to the ISS.  The law is intended to restrain Russia from providing certain technologies to those three countries.   Nelson said “we don’t have any choice” about passing another waiver.

Prepared statements and the webcast are available on the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation committee’s website.

China's Shenzhou-9 Docks with Tiangong-1

China's Shenzhou-9 Docks with Tiangong-1

China’s Shenzhou-9 spacecraft with its three-person crew successfully docked with the Tiangong-1 space station this morning (Eastern Daylight Time).

Docking took place at 2:09 pm Beijing time (2:09 am EDT) and the crew soon moved into the 8.6 metric ton Tiangong-1 module. Video of crew entering the Tiangong-1 module was shown on China’s English-language CCTV.

Shenzhou-9 was launched on Saturday, June 16, with the main goal of conducting the first crewed docking with a space station.  The Tiangong-1 module was launched last September and docking operations were conducted in November with an automated Shenzhou-8 in November, but this is the first time people have docked with the space station.

This was an automated docking, but on June 24 the crew will undock and then perform a manual redocking as a test.   The total mission is scheduled to last 13 days, with 5 of those days docked with Tiangong-1.  In addition to demonstrating rendezvous and docking techniques, the crew will conduct a series of biological experiments.

The crew is commanded by Jing Haipeng.   Liu Wang will perform the manual docking.   Liu Yang, China’s first female astronaut, is in charge of the scientific experiments.

 

June Good Month for "First" Women Astronauts

June Good Month for "First" Women Astronauts

Purely by coincidence, the first women to fly into space representing their countries — the Soviet Union, United States and China — were all launched in June.

Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova became the first woman in space on June 16, 1963.  Her solo flight on Vostok 6 lasted 70 hours and 50 minutes. 

U.S. astronaut Sally Ride became the first American woman in space on June 18, 1983.  She was part of the five-person STS-7 space shuttle Challenger crew.  The mission lasted 146 hours and 24 minutes.

Chinese astronaut Liu Yang became the first Chinese women in space on June 16, 2012.  Liu’s mission, still in progress, is expected to last 13 days.  She is one of the three-person Shenzhou-9 crew that today performed the first crewed docking with China’s first space station, Tiangong-1. 

Women of other nationalities have also flown in space, but Tereshkova, Ride and Liu are notable because they flew on spacecraft built and launched by their own countries.  The other “first” women astronauts flew on Soviet/Russian or U.S. spacecraft — and not in June!   For the record, they were:

  • Helen Sharman, first British woman in space and first woman “space tourist” (Soviet Soyuz TM12/TM22, launched May 19, 1991)
  • Roberta Bondar, first Canadian woman in space (U.S. space shuttle STS-42, launched Jan. 22, 1992)
  • Chiaki Mukai, first Japanese woman in space (U.S. space shuttle STS-65, launched July 8, 1994)
  • Claudie Haignere, first French woman in space (Russian Soyuz TM-24/TM-23, launched August 17, 1996)
  • Yi So-Yeon, first South Korean woman in space (Russian Soyuz TMA-12 mission, launched April 8, 2008)

Some might also include Kalpana Chawla, an Indian-American NASA astronaut as the first Indian woman in space (1997), or Anousheh Ansari, an Iranian-American space tourist as the first Iranian woman in space (2006), but since they both were American citizens when they made their spaceflights, we do not include them here.  Some lists identify Ansari as the first woman space tourist, but Sharman earned that distinction 15 years earlier.

Other notable women space firsts:

  • Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya, first woman to walk in space (1984)
  • U.S. astronaut Kathryn Sullivan, first American woman to walk in space (1984)
  • U.S. astronaut Eileen Collins, first woman to command a space shuttle mission (1999)
  • U.S. astronaut Peggy Whitson, first woman to command the International Space Station (2008)

On a sad note, the first women to die as a result of a spaceflight were NASA astronaut Judy Resnik and “teacher-in-space” Christa McAuliffe, both of whom died in the January 28, 1986 space shuttle Challenger tragedy.  Two more women astronauts died in the February 1, 2003 space shuttle Columbia tragedy, Kalpana Chawla, mentioned above, and Laurel Clark. 

 

 

China's Shenzhou-9 Prepares for Docking with Tiangong-1 on Monday

China's Shenzhou-9 Prepares for Docking with Tiangong-1 on Monday

China’s Shenzhou-9 spacecraft is conducting a series of three orbit changes as it prepares to dock with the Tiangong-1 space station on Monday.   The three-person Chinese crew includes China’s first woman astronaut, Liu Yang.

Chinese astronauts are often referred to in the west as taikonauts, but China’s own English-language coverage uses the word astronaut.

Shenzhou-9 was successfully launched at 6:37 am Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) yesterday.  The spacecraft is in the process of catching up with the orbit of Tiangong-1, China’s first space station that was launched last September.   The automated Shenzhou-8 spacecraft rendezvoused and docked with Tiangong-1 in November, but this will be the first docking with a crew. 

The Chinese media have not been precise about when the docking will occur on Monday.  A CCTV report yesterday mentioned it would take place about 15:00 Beijing time, which would be 07:00 GMT or 3:00 am EDT.   Bob Christy at zarya.info estimates that it will take place at 06:10 GMT (2:10 am EDT).  However, Dragon-in-space, an unaffiliated website devoted to the Chinese space program, states the docking will take place “about 57 hours after launch.”   Since launch was at 06:37 EDT, that would make the docking much later in the day — about 3:37 pm EDT.

The three crew are Jing Haipeng, commander; Liu Wang, who will conduct the manual docking; and Liu Yang, the woman astronaut who is in charge of a range of biological experiments.   

Chinese news accounts focus on the manual docking that Liu Wang will conduct, but a CCTV report yesterday revealed that the first docking will be automated.   After the crew has a few days to acclimate to weightlessness. Shenzhou-9 will undock and at that time Liu Wang will perform a manual re-docking.

CCTV is Chinese television that broadcasts in English. It’s website has several text stories as well as videos narrated in English about the Shenzhou spacecraft and this mission.

The Shenzhou-9 mission is scheduled to last 13 days.

Events of Interest: Week of June 18-22, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of June 18-22, 2012

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

During the Week

On the international front, China’s Shenzhou-9 space station mission undoubtedly will be one focus of attention in the space community.  The three-person crew, including China’s first woman astronaut, was launched on Saturday morning (Eastern Daylight Time) and will dock with China’s Tiangong-1 space station module on Monday.   This will be the first Chinese crew to dock with a space station.  That first docking will be automated, a task demonstrated last year by Shenzhou-8, which did not have a crew.   Later in the mission, the Shenzhou-9 crew will undock and then one of the crew members, Liu Wang, will perform a manual re-docking to show it can be done.   Liu Wang should not be confused with his crew-mate, Liu Yang, who is China’s first woman in space.   The mission’s commander is Jing Haipeng. The mission is expected to last a total of 13 days.  We’ve put together a handy list of all the Chinese missions that have carried crews — this is the fourth.

Here in the Washington, commercial space activities have center stage.   The head of NASA, Charlie Bolden, and the acting head of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Michael Huerta, will hold a media teleconference on Monday to talk about commercial space.  It is rather unusual for the head of the FAA to have such a public role in space issues.  The FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST) facilitates and regulates commercial launches and reentries and is a significant player on the space policy scene, but it is a comparatively small part of the FAA’s portfolio.  On Tuesday, the House Appropriations Committee will markup the bill that funds the FAA (Transportation-HUD).  On Wednesday, the Senate Commerce Committee will hold a hearing on commercial space where NASA and FAA representatives will testify, but not Bolden or Huerta.  Or, for that matter, George Nield, the head of AST.  Instead, Pam Melroy, a former NASA astronaut who serves as a “senior technical advisor” to Nield, is the FAA’s witness.  (Another former astronaut, Michael Lopez-Alegria, also will testify.  He’s now head of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation.)  Huerta is probably saving himself for his confirmation hearing to become the official FAA administrator instead of acting.  That hearing will be held Thursday by the same committee.  Huerta has been acting FAA administrator since Randy Babbitt had to resign in December after being pulled over by police for driving under the influence.  A judge dismissed those charges last month, but Babbitt told the Associated Press he had no regrets about resigning.

Monday, June 18

Tuesday, June 19

Wednesday, June 20

Thursday, June 21

 

 

China Space Station Crew Successful Launch at 6:37 am ET Today – UPDATE

China Space Station Crew Successful Launch at 6:37 am ET Today – UPDATE

UPDATE:  The launch went off without a hitch at 6:37 am EDT. Shenzhou-9 is now in orbit.  The crew is scheduled to dock with Tiangong-1 on Monday.

ORIGINAL STORY: Countdown continues for launch of Shenzhou-9 at 6:37 am Eastern Daylight time (10:37 GMT, 18:37 Beijing time) this morning, June 16, 2012.   This is the first Chinese crew to go to a space station and the first to include a woman astronaut, Liu Yang. Live launch coverage is on China’s English-language website CCTV.    Or follow us on Twitter: @SpcPlcyOnline.

The crew’s mission is to rendezvous and dock with the Tiangong-1 space station, which was launched in September 2011.  The mission is scheduled to last 10-12 days.

This is China’s fourth crewed spaceflight.  Five other Shenzhou missions (Shenzhou 1-4, Shenzhou-8) were automated tests.

Background Information on China's Human Spaceflight Program

Background Information on China's Human Spaceflight Program

China’s human spaceflight program, Project 921, officially began in 1992.   The scheduled launch tomorrow of Shenzhou-9 is the ninth flight in the series, but only the fourth to carry a crew.

Shenzhou 1-4 were automated tests of the spacecraft; Shenzhou-8 was an automated test of rendezvous and docking procedures with the Tiangong-1 space station, which also was unoccupied.  The following table provides information on the three crewed missions flown to date and tomorrow’s mission.

 

 Mission  Launch Date  Crew Comments
 Shenzhou-5  Oct. 15, 2003 Yang Liwei First Chinese human spaceflight mission;
21 hours, 23 min
 Shenzhou-6  Oct. 12, 2005 Fei Junlong
Nie Haisheng
First Chinese 2-person crew;
5 day mission
 Shenzhou-7  Sept. 25, 2008 Zhai Zhigang
Liu Boming
Jing Haipeng

First Chinese 3-person crew;
First Chinese spacewalk (by Zhai for 22 min, Liu
also did stand-up EVA in airlock for about 2 min)
3 day mission;
small (40 kg) subsatellite ejected

 Shenzhou-9

 July 16, 2012
(scheduled)

Jing Haipeng
Liu Wang
Liu Yang

Scheduled: 10 day mission;
manual docking with Tiangong-1 space station;
Liu Yang first Chinese woman astronaut

 

The Tiangong-1 space station was launched in September 2011.