Monday, June 30, 2014

The Commercial Space Approach to Beyond Low Earth Orbit Spaceflight.

Copyright 2014 Robert Clark

 The National Research Council has released a report on NASA's plans for human spaceflight beyond low Earth orbit (BEO). It confirmed what many observers of the space program had already realized that NASA's current approach is unfocused and uninspiring, and most importantly unlikely to succeed:

NASA could not deliver humans to Mars, says new strategy report.
Published time: June 05, 2014 02:39
Landing humans on Mars is unattainable for NASA if the space agency’s current strategy and level of funding are not modified in the near future, according to a new congressionally-mandated report.

Of the three pathways to Mars that NRC suggested, two were associated with a return to the moon. A lunar landing and habitat would hone technologies that could later be employed on a Mars mission, the report said.
The Obama administration has publicly expressed distaste for continued, expensive moon landings. In outlining US space policy in 2010, President Barack Obama said, “I just have to say pretty bluntly here: We’ve been there before.”
The third option outlined by the report includes the Asteroid Redirect Mission, a plan still in the study phase but currently endorsed by the Obama administration.
Such a mission would send robotic spacecraft to essentially grab and re-orbit an asteroid passing near Earth, allowing astronauts to take samples of the rock.
That mission, though, is not preferred by authors of the report. Safety issues and development of “dead end” technologies render the asteroid mission inferior if NASA wants to reach Mars, it said.
The asteroid option “cannot provide the flight frequency required to maintain competence and safety,” the report posits.
http://rt.com/usa/163736-mars-nasa-funding-strategy/


 A major problem is that NASA is taking the Apollo approach to such missions, which required huge expenditures:

It’s time for NASA to abandon the Apollo mission model.
by John K. Strickland
Monday, June 23, 2014
What, then, is the opposite of the Apollo Mission model? It is the concept of a set of continuing missions designed to operate with a set of reusable space vehicles (both for crew and cargo), allowing the creation (and construction) of enduring infrastructure in specific locations in space and at surface destinations beyond low Earth orbit, using local materials, and making each subsequent mission easier, safer, and cheaper. One very critical aspect of this concept is the use of fully reusable spacecraft in an integrated cislunar transport system. Despite its name, such a cislunar system is not focused exclusively on access to the Moon, but to multiple cislunar and other inner solar system destinations. While at least one booster is about one year away from being operationally reusable, almost all spacecraft and other boosters are not, and according to some are in fact prohibited from being reused by NASA.
http://thespacereview.com/article/2537/1


  The Apollo program absorbed 5% of the federal budget at the time. This is compared to the 0.5% NASA currently gets. If NASA were funded to the same extent as during the Apollo era, it would be getting in the range of $180 billion per year(!) That's not happening.

 However, there is a way to get similar results without the huge payouts, and that is to follow the commercial space approach. Both SpaceX and Orbital Sciences were able to develop both launchers and capsules at 1/10th the cost of the usual fully-funded government projects. That's four separate systems able to cut 90% off the development costs. That is not just a coincidence.

 Detractors of commercial space have complained the name is a misnomer for they still get federal funding. However, the name you apply to it is irrelevant. What is important is the results you get for an order of magnitude lower cost. For the commercial space approach to work though the companies involved have to be convinced they can make a profit on the projects, for it involves a public and private partnership where the companies share part of the development cost, rather than it being fully government funded.

 But what BEO projects can be expected to make a profit? Well, SpaceX believes they can make a profit on making passenger flights to Mars, and the Golden Spike Company and Bigelow Aerospace believe they can make a profit by making crewed flights to the Moon. Also, Planetary Resources Inc. and Deep Space Industries believe they can make a profit on asteroid mining.

 This will be dependent though on these companies being willing and able to provide the needed funding for their part of the costs. For companies like SpaceX and Bigelow with wealthy, visionary leaders such as Elon Musk and Robert Bigelow this will likely be possible. But for the other start-up companies clearly this will depend on the size of the investment they need to make. Then a quite key fact to keep in mind is actually such missions can be accomplished at orders of magnitude lower costs than the amounts NASA estimates.

 The example of a lunar lander illuminates this quite clearly. NASA has said that we can't afford to return to the Moon because a manned lunar lander would cost $10 billion to develop. But the examples of the Masten XEUS lunar lander and the NASA Morpheus lunar lander show a manned lander actually can be developed for only a few ten's of millions of dollars in development cost. And the costs that need to be borne by the companies will be even less with the cost-sharing with government space agencies.

  I used the term "government space agencies" instead of NASA intentionally. The costs that needed to be borne by the companies would be reduced even further when more than one space agency contributed to the costs. For instance both NASA and ESA are contributing to the development of the Sierra Nevada Dream Chaser spacecraft. You could conceivably have all of NASA, ESA, JAXA, and Roscosmos contributing to the development cost of the BEO projects. Then the costs financed by the companies might only be 1/5th that of the already low commercial-space-approach development cost.


  Bob Clark

6 comments:

Gary Johnson said...

Bravo, Bob! Tell 'em like it is! And it is!

GW

Anonymous said...

Most of the detractors of commercial space or NewSpace are either adamant and knowing supporters of the existing order – the Space Industrial Complex (SIC), or they think mistakenly of commercial space as somehow supplanting or replacing NASA’s exploration and scientific work. The mistaken belief of the latter group could not be more wrong. How would a private company be able to ask its stockholders to fund exploration and scientific research if there was no short-term profit involved. Most of NASA’s rockets are already built by industry, but many under strict and encumbering NASA oversight and with some cost-plus type contracts with no open bids. The SLS program is a good example of this, for which Congress is more to blame than NASA.

The great differences in costs are illustrated in this article, yet the resulting more expensive NASA designed vehicles might be more risky for people to fly in than privately developed vehicles, free of the entangling nets of NASA regulations and bureaucracy. Most NASA designed vehicles show no crew survival systems for spacecraft operating in space. Private companies realize how critical it is to reduce risk to crews, and would probably design self-rescue systems into their vehicles.

Embracing the use of privately designed and built spacecraft would not only reduce NASA’s existing costs, but would enable them to invest in the development of actual BLEO hardware and vehicles. This would actually allow more NASA workers to be hired, to manage actual in-space operations. It will take very good judgment to decide what tasks can best be done by private companies and what should be done by NASA itself.

John Strickland

Unknown said...

In recent comments Musk mentioned doing a Moon landing as a "proof of capability" before going to Mars. I took that as a near-Earth test of the MCT systems. Interesting given his previous non-interest in the Moon.

There they could test robotics, habitats and logistics in a shorter time scale before longer flight time test missions to Mars woyld allow.

Now let's examine their development history. In moving from Falcon 9 v1.0 to v1.1, the time from the revelation of Merlin 1D (2011) to F9 v1.1 flying (late 2013) was less than 3 years. Fast.

Given the complexity of Raptor, but knowing it's components being in active tests at Stennis, would it being qualified in 4-5 years be a surprise? If they play their cards right, and have a little luck (think industrial side 3D printers to print its chamber, combustors and pumps) SpaceX cpuld be test flying a massive BFR near the end of the decade.

DougSpace said...

Jeff Greason presented along this topic at NewSpace 2015 as can be seen here:

http://youtu.be/FXXhvIphxIs

Robert Clark said...

Thanks for the link. He argues commercial space can do lunar return missions and Mars missions two orders of magnitudes more cheaply than the NASA estimates.
I especially like his low cost estimates for Mars missions.

Bob Clark

David Whitfield said...

I've felt for some time that NASA is not underfunded, in a way its over funded for the level of results it has returned vs what it could potentially return.

The myth of the underfunded NASA starts at the NASA budget as a percentage of the federal budget, in the time since the 1960's the country has both gotten richer and certain parts of the federal budget have drastically increased(particularly defense spending). In terms of real purchasing power, meaning having been adjusted for inflation, NASA budgets have been at or near Apollo levels for more than 25 years. So then this leads us to consider that NASA's costs may be over inflated, exasperated by its own methods and processes. Indeed we find that the commercial providers when largely relieved of the pressures of the NASA bureaucracy can achieve essentially the same results for an order of magnitude less cost. The natural conclusion would be a greater shift to the sort of open-bid, pay for success, pay for results approach that has worked in the CRS and COTS programs.

A route to aircraft-like reusability for rocket engines.

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