Friday, September 14, 2012

NASA on track for sending humans to Mars, but cost a concern

From Florida Today:  NASA on track for sending humans to Mars, but cost a concern

WASHINGTON — A top NASA official told lawmakers Wednesday the agency is on track with its next crewed mission into deep space: A trip to an asteroid and then to Mars.
But lawmakers and outside experts raised concerns during the congressional hearing about the program’s cost, particularly the $30 billion price tag connected to the “heavy lift” rocket, and the relatively few test flights planned before embarking on a key deep space mission.
“We wish you luck,” said Rep. Dana Rohrbacher, R-Calif. “We want you to succeed. (But) we’ve been through a number of these in the past where we have budget problems on this end and we end up losing billions of dollars.”

Dan Dumbacher, NASA’s deputy associate administrator for Exploration Systems Development, told members of a House Science, Space and Technology subcommittee that NASA and its team of private contractors are “making excellent progress” toward launching an unmanned test flight in 2017 in preparation for the real mission by 2025.
Tests measuring water impact, acoustics, vibrations and parachute landings of the Orion crew vehicle are either under way or nearly complete, and the manufacturing of its heat shield has begun, he said. Design work is under way on the $30 billion “heavy lift” rocket known as the Space Launch System that will carry Orion, Dumbacher said.
His comments Wednesday came nearly a year after NASA unveiled the design of the rocket, which is billed as the most powerful U.S. rocket since the Saturn V that took Apollo astronauts to the moon in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
If the timeline holds, a manned test flight of the Space Launch System and Orion capsule will take place in 2021. If that’s successful, an asteroid landing would be targeted by 2025, followed by a landing on Mars sometime in the 2030s.
A 20-year wait to reach Earth’s neighbor sounds agonizingly distant given the successful Mars landing earlier this year by Curiosity, a car-sized science lab currently roving the Martian surface for clues to life.
But space exploration remains delicate and expensive, and NASA has had to navigate the priorities of changing administrations. President Barack Obama called for the manned Mars mission after scrapping a moon mission sought by President George W. Bush.
Even if the engineering goes well, there’s a question of money. At a time when Congress is contemplating deep cuts in discretionary programs such as space exploration, NASA might not have the budget it needs over time to sustain the program as currently designed.
The project’s requested fiscal 2013 budget alone is nearly $2.8 billion: $969 million for Orion, $1.3 billion for the Space Launch System, and $405 million for Kennedy Space Center to prepare for the eventual launch.
“That’s a lot of money,” Rohrbacher said.
He suggested NASA explore cheaper rockets — or risk making the mission too pricey for future congressional support.

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