The Latest Shuttle Disaster
by
John Bartel and Tom
Coughlin
The
dismal economic record of the space shuttle is well known. The safety
flaws in the shuttle's design are not as well known. When the first
shuttle disaster hit seventeen years ago, we wrote the following
letter in an effort to get a wider understanding of how dangerous
the space shuttle is, and hopefully introduce some free market thinking.
This
letter was run in its entirety in the November 1986 edition of Physics
Today, the general interest magazine of the American Physical
Society. One other technical journal ran it in highly abbreviated
form.
As
is typical in areas run by government, nothing has changed over
the past seventeen years. Hopefully the second shuttle disaster
will provide the impetus to ground the shuttle permanently and allow
free market alternatives to flourish.
Physics
Today, November 1986
To
the Editor:
The recent tragic loss of the space shuttle Challenger has reopened
many basic issues regarding our national space program. Many mildly
enthusiastic supporters of the shuttle, and even some opponents,
have been so moved by the loss as to advocate building a replacement
shuttle to continue the original shuttle program. However, if we
seek a suitable memorial to the brave individuals who perished in
the shuttle accident, then we should learn from this disaster and
not repeat previous mistakes.
The place to start is with the design of the shuttle itself. NASA
has recently released film of the shuttle launch that indicates
signs of trouble some 15 seconds before Challenger exploded. Most
discussions of this issue have focused on the decision not to monitor
more closely the performance of the solid-fuel boosters. This misses
the essential point. Even if the shuttle crew had known at the instant
of launch that the shuttle was going to explode in little more than
a minute they would still have died. The Shuttle has no safety margin
at launch. Either everything works right or the crew goes down with
the ship.
The space shuttle is the first manned US space vehicle that has
no provision for emergency escape during launch. The Mercury, Gemini,
and Apollo programs all recognized the great dangers and uncertainties
in any propulsion system capable of boosting man into space and
made explicit provision for the type of accident that blew Challenger
apart. The decision was made, early in the shuttle design, to remove
these safety precautions to meet payload, crew size and mission
length requirements. Given the nature of both solid- and liquid-fuel
rockets, the laws of probability guarantee that something would
eventually go wrong either at the launchpad or during the boost
phase. And given the rather incredible design choices made, it was
inevitable that astronauts would die in either of these cases.
It is possible to obtain a reasonable safety margin by returning
to the equipment used in the first few shuttle launches. There the
crew was limited to two astronauts to allow the installation of
ejection mechanisms. Of course, this sacrifices one of the major
goals of the shuttle, the ability to take payloads and mission specialists
into orbit.
Unfortunately, there is another safety problem that has no easy
remedy. The problems with the insulating tiles are well known, and
the potential for disaster if a tile is lost over a critical area
of the shuttle reentry is obvious. What is not so well known is
that such a disaster has almost occurred. One shuttle on the reentry
came within seconds of burning through a main wing support due to
loss of tiles. The failure of this support would have caused the
shuttle to crash, killing all on board.
Given the size of the shuttle, it is not feasible to return to the
proven heat-resistant alloys used on previous manned space vehicles.
Given the problems with keeping the tiles attached during launch
and reentry, it is inevitable that despite NASA's best efforts a
critical tile will someday fall off and another shuttle crew will
go up in flames with their shuttle.
If the shuttle were a reliable and economical way to get into space,
then it might make sense to try to live with its inherently poor
safety margins. Unfortunately the reliability and economic records
of the shuttle are dismal. Its reliability is so questionable that
even before the Challenger loss the Air Force was developing an
expendable launch vehicle to supplement the balky shuttle. Another
of the major goals of the shuttle was very rapid turnaround time.
As for economics, the shuttle will never fly again without massive
subsidies once again in stark contrast to the original NASA promise.
The nation's space program has three alternatives. It can continue
the shuttle program with whatever "quick fixes" are deemed necessary,
it can develop alternatives to the shuttle, or it can leave the
launch business altogether. Continuing with the shuttle means future
disasters like the Challenger explosion. The price in precious lives
and in replacement shuttles will be much too great. Letting NASA
develop alternatives is equally unpalatable. The shuttle's performance
compared with NASA's promises about its performance creates a very
serious credibility problem for NASA. To entrust this group with
the responsibility for finding a replacement for the shuttle is
to risk another piece of aborted technology ruined by bureaucratic
and political intrigue.
Getting NASA out of the space-launch business is not as naive a
proposal as it might seem. There are many ways of getting into space.
Expendable launch vehicles, air-breathing ramjets and sane shuttle
designs are only three possible options. It is impossible to predict
which method will prove the most reliable or economical. If we are
to cut the expense of space travel dramatically, we must free the
space-launch business from bureaucratic management and put it squarely
into the innovative, cost-competitive environment of the free market.
Launching payloads into space is a service that market forces can
provide, just as they provide automobiles, computers, and clean
laundry. There is no rational justification for US taxpayers to
subsidize the expense of rocket development and rocket launches.
Let those who directly benefit pay the bill, and let the rest of
us spend our money on items we deem important.
Market forces are no panacea. Space exploration will continue to
be the domain of brave, intelligent and courageous men and women
who are willing to risk their lives pushing technology to its limits.
There is no shortage of such people and there is also no shortage
of space entrepreneurs willing to push our people and technology
to their limits to create a reliable, cheap and safe space transportation
system. All we need do is get government out of the way and let
them do it. If we learn this lesson from the Challenger loss, then
we will have created the most suitable memorial to the individuals
who died on that flight.
John
Bartel
Tom Coughlin
Charlestown,
Massachusetts
2/86
February
4, 2003
John
Bartel [send him mail] is
a computer consultant in Dallas, TX. Tom Coughlin [send
him mail] is a storage consultant in the Bay Area.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
|