Two Roads for NASA
Robert Zubrin
(Published in Space News, Oct. 6)
In the recent Columbia hearings, numerous members of congress
continually decried the fact that the US space program is "stuck in
Low Earth Orbit." This is certainly a serious problem. If it is to be
addressed adequately, however, America's political leadership needs
to reexamine NASA's fundamental mode of operation.
Over the course of its history, NASA has employed two distinct modes
of operation. The first, prevailed during the period from 1961-1973,
and may therefore be called the Apollo Mode. The second, prevailing
since 1974, may usefully be called the Shuttle Era Mode, or Shuttle
Mode, for short.
In the Apollo Mode, business is conducted as follows. First, a
destination for human spaceflight is chosen. Then a plan is developed
to achieve this objective. Following this, technologies and designs
are developed to implement that plan. These designs are then built,
after which the mission is flown.
The Shuttle Mode operates entirely differently. In this mode,
technologies and hardware elements are developed in accord with the
wishes of various technical communities. These projects are then
justified by arguments that they might prove useful at some time in
the future when grand flight projects are initiated.
Contrasting these two approaches, we see that the Apollo Mode is
destination driven, while the Shuttle Mode pretends to be technology
driven, but is actually constituency driven. In the Apollo Mode,
technology development is done for mission directed reasons. In the
Shuttle Mode, projects are undertaken on behalf of various internal
and external technical community pressure groups and then defended
using rationales. In the Apollo Mode, the space agency's efforts are
focused and directed. In the Shuttle Mode, NASA's efforts are random
and entropic.
Imagine two couples, each planning to build their own house. The
first couple decides what kind of house they want, hires an architect
to design it in detail, then acquires the appropriative materials to
build it. That is the Apollo Mode. The second couple polls their
neighbors each month for different spare house-parts they would like
to sell, and buys them all, hoping to eventually accumulate enough
stuff to build a house. When their relatives inquire as to why they
are accumulating so much junk, they hire an architect to compose a
house design that employs all the knick-knacks they have purchased.
The house is never built, but an adequate excuse is generated to
justify each purchase, thereby avoiding embarrassment. That is the
Shuttle Mode.
In today's dollars, NASA average budget from 1961-1973 was about $17
billion per year. This is only 10% more than NASA's current budget.
To assess the comparative productivity of the Apollo Mode with the
Shuttle Mode, it is therefore useful to compare NASA's
accomplishments between 1961-1973 and 1990-2003, as the space
agency's total expenditures over these two periods were equal.
Between 1961 and 1973, NASA flew the Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, Skylab,
Ranger, Surveyor, and Mariner missions, and did all the development
for the Pioneer, Viking, and Voyager missions as well. In addition,
the space agency developed hydrogen oxygen rocket engines, multi-
staged heavy-lift launch vehicles, nuclear rocket engines, space
nuclear reactors, radioisotope power generators, spacesuits, in-space
life support systems, orbital rendezvous techniques, soft landing
rocket technologies, interplanetary navigation technology, deep space
data transmission techniques, reentry technology, and more. In
addition, such valuable institutional infrastructure as the Cape
Canaveral launch complex, the Deep Space tracking network, Johnson
Space Center, and JPL were all created in more or less their current
form.
In contrast, during the period from 1990-2003, NASA flew about three
score Shuttle missions allowing it to launch and repair the Hubble
Space Telescope and partially build a space station. About half a
dozen interplanetary probes were launched (compared to over 30 lunar
and planetary probes between 1961-73). Despite
innumerable "technology development" programs, no new technologies of
any significance were actually developed, and no major space program
operational infrastructure was created.
Comparing these two records, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion
that that NASA's productivity in both missions accomplished and
technology development during its Apollo Mode was at least ten times
greater than under the current Shuttle Mode.
The Shuttle Mode is the expenditure of large sums of money without
direction by strategic purpose. That is why it is hopelessly
inefficient. But the blame for this waste cannot be placed on NASA
leaders alone, some of whom have attempted to rectify the situation.
Rather, the political class must also accept major responsibility.
Consider the following. During the same week in September that House
members were roasting Administrator O'Keefe for his unfortunate
advocacy of a destination-free NASA, a Senate committee issued a
report saying that a top priority for the space agency was to develop
a replacement Space Shuttle system. Did any of the Senators who
supported this report explain why? Why do we need another Shuttle
system? To keep doing what we are doing now? But is that what we
actually want to do?
Congress and the Executive branch need to get together and open a
discussion as to what the nation actually wants to accomplish in
space. Hearings should be held, and the options for a strategic
objective examined in public. Is our primary aim to keep sending
astronauts on joyrides in low Earth orbit? In that case, a second
generation Shuttle might be worth building. But if we want to send
humans to the Moon or Mars, we need make that decision, and then
design and build a hardware set that is appropriate to actually
accomplish those goals.
Advocates of the Shuttle Mode claim that by avoiding the selection of
a destination they are developing the technologies that will allow us
to go anywhere, anytime. That just isn't true. The Shuttle Mode will
never get us anywhere at all. The Apollo Mode got us to the Moon, and
it can get us back, or take us to Mars. But leadership is required.
In the beginning, there was the Word.