Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!linus!philabs!cmcl2!floyd!harpo!seismo!hao!hplabs!sri-unix!ARG@SU-AI From: ARG%SU-AI@sri-unix.UUCP Newsgroups: net.space Subject: Space Art & Tourists in Space Message-ID: <14765@sri-arpa.UUCP> Date: Mon, 19-Dec-83 14:13:00 EST Article-I.D.: sri-arpa.14765 Posted: Mon Dec 19 14:13:00 1983 Date-Received: Fri, 23-Dec-83 00:30:49 EST Lines: 111 From: Ron Goldman a015 2238 15 Dec 83 PM-Space Art, Bjt,430 Artist Plans High-Altitude 'Light Show' CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Taking the sky for his canvas and colored gases for his brush, an artist plans to paint the heavens next spring in a three-minute high-altitude light show - with a little help from the space shuttle. The work is the product of six years of effort by Joseph Davis, a fellow at the Center for Advanced Visual Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Davis' plan involves creating artificial versions of the Northern Lights with the use of a number of components including an electron gun, gas and a radio frequency shield. ''I became aware of some experiments on auroral phenomenon over the past 30 years. So with the help of a large amount of data and people here, I figured what specific power and light relationship we would need to do it from the space shuttle,'' Davis said Thursday. Davis, 33, has paid the National Aeronautics and Space Administration $10,000 to carry a 200-pound, five-cubic-foot capsule that will open at the right moment and begin discharging into the ionosphere. He's dubbed the project ''New Wave Ruby Falls'' after bumper stickers he saw as a child urging people to ''See Ruby Falls,'' a cave at Lookout Mountain in Chattanooga, Tenn. ''I began in about 1977 to negotiate with the NASA Space Transportation Systems headquarters in Washington,'' Davis said. ''They didn't really know what to think at first.'' What colors will be visible in the sky will depend on the kind of gases and the amount of energy, Davis said. ''We expect to do a sequence of 60 discharges per minute, one per second, to create an aurora,'' Davis said. ''They will stretch over several horizons. The shuttle's trajectory will affect how we see it on earth.'' Davis said he expects the aurora to last about 190 seconds. ''But if we're really lucky, and if there are enough particles in the ionosphere, it will last a lot longer. It all depends on the hour of the day.'' Davis said when he first began talking with NASA about his project, it was mainly talks over the telephone. But he said things became serious once some money was put on the table. ''Then it was a matter of submitting plans. So I sent them so many proposals that they couldn't just get rid of me,'' Davis said. ''They found some problems, but they never totally rejected anything.'' In fact, Davis was so involved in negotiations that he helped NASA develop its policy for dealing with parties interested in sending up payloads aboard the shuttle. ''We could go up as early as January, that date was given to us a while ago,'' he said. ''But we have a lot of work to do, and a spring date is more realistic.'' ap-ny-12-16 0139EST *************** a026 0009 16 Dec 83 PM-Space Passengers,460 Tourists in Space a Possiblity by 1985, NASA Says By WARREN E. LEARY AP Science Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - In a couple of years, a space shuttle could be orbiting Earth with an odd passenger who won't be flying the craft or conducting an experiment. Essentially, that passenger will be a tourist. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said Thursday it is finishing plans to send into space the first person who is neither an astronaut nor a scientist. The first flight of a shuttle with a space tourist aboard could come as soon as 1985, said NASA Administrator James M. Beggs. NASA expects to publish regulations in the Federal Register next week on carrying non-astronaut passengers aboard the shuttle. Before the proposed rules become official, there will be a 60-day comment period followed by another two months to incorporate any changes resulting from the public comments, the agency said. ''I hope that by the spring of next year, we will begin the selection process for the first passenger,'' Beggs said after a Washington Press Club speech. Beggs said the first non-scientist, non-astronaut aboard the shuttle probably would be an author, artist, or journalist. In the jargon of NASA, such passengers would be called Citizen Observers-Participants. ''Astronauts who've been in space say the pictures they've brought back don't do justice to what they've seen,'' Beggs said. ''Perhaps we need someone who can better describe the experience.'' Beggs said he expected the first such flight within three years, but added that it may come ''as early as 1985.'' The citizen observers selected will go through a three-month training period before the flight, he said. The regulations provide for putting these persons on the NASA payroll during training so that candidates would not be restricted because of their personal financial condition. This is to make sure that access to space is not restricted to the wealthy, he added. Beggs said passengers would be more than sightseers. Although not expected to do major experiments, the travelers would have some duties aboard the shuttle. ''We will try to make practical use of them in assisting the astronauts,'' he said, ''even if that means being assigned from time to time to clean the galley.'' The move to eventually get some ordinary people into space follows the recommendation of a task force of NASA's Advisory Council. In its report to the agency, the task force said ''NASA should take the next step in opening space flight to all people by flying observers...'' The proposed regulations would establish an evaluation committee within NASA to manage the selection process and set up basic guidelines for applicants, including health and training criteria. Applicants would be evaluated by a NASA-designated outside review panel, but the agency would retain authority to make the final selection. ap-ny-12-16 0308EST ***************