Xref: utzoo sci.space:11195 sci.space.shuttle:3031 Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.space.shuttle Path: utzoo!henry From: henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) Subject: space news from March 27 AW&ST Message-ID: <1989May8.033250.18780@utzoo.uucp> Organization: U of Toronto Zoology Date: Mon, 8 May 89 03:32:50 GMT Satellite controllers fired Gstar-3's thrusters for a total of 48 hours in Jan and Feb to move it closer to Clarke orbit (it was placed in the wrong orbit last fall by a motor failure). It's now in an orbit where it may be of some use: Geostar (the commercial navsat firm) hopes to begin using its part of the satellite this fall. Soviet Union delays launch of the first Mir add-on module, due to delays in completion of the second add-on, which must follow the first fairly quickly to keep the configuration symmetrical. Quayle makes favorable noises about Brilliant Pebbles SDI concept. Discovery lands after highly successful mission. NASA had hoped to conclude the mission with a crosswind landing, but the winds didn't cooperate and NASA instead used the concrete runway at Edwards so that hard-surface braking tests could be run. [Radical, innovative thought: if they want landing and braking tests, why not dust off Enterprise and run some more 747 drop tests? Nah, too simple and effective.] NASA says the orbiter is in good shape, with tile damage much reduced from what Atlantis took on the previous mission. A small leak in the #1 engine's cooling system was found, which permitted a bit of hydrogen to leak into the exhaust; it definitely was not there before launch. The engine will be replaced before Discovery flies again in August. There was an earlier pinhole leak in a similar area of an engine flown on STS-26, although the two do not seem related. The next mission (Atlantis) is not expected to be affected. Space Services readies "Consort 1" commercial sounding rocket mission for launch at White Sands; the customer is NASA, on behalf of a microgravity research consortium including U of Alabama and several companies. The two-stage Starfire rocket uses a first stage from Morton Thiokol [boo] and a second stage from Bristol Aerospace [yay] [Canadian content here]. Pictures from the late lamented Phobos 2, including one quite striking one of Phobos against the Martian horizon. Intelsat will buy three Ariane launches and two Atlas launches for the Intelsat 7 series, starting in 1992. Italian Space Agency to buy a 1993 Atlas launch for the SAX X-ray satellite. NASA picks Atlas as the baseline launcher for the NASA/ESA solar heliospheric observatory ("Soho"), set for launch in 1995. [Sounds like a good year for General Dynamics.] Atlantis moves to pad 39B March 22. Stephanie Lee-Miller, top public affairs official at Dept of Health and Human Services, named to head Office of Commercial Space Transportation. Commercial space people were sort of hoping for someone with experience in (a) business, (b) space, or (c) high technology; no such luck. Intel 386 flies in space [gag barf puke excuse me a moment...] [...okay, I'm back and will try to be brave... :-)] as NASA evaluates an updated version of the Grid Systems laptops that it has been using on shuttle missions since 1983. Letter from Richard Anglin of Los Angeles, saying that NASA is overlooking the fundamental problem leading to its personnel crisis: the lack of leadership and vision in NASA's upper levels and in the White House. The people now being lost joined during "the Kennedy era -- a time of vision and commitment to leadership and excellence". "The Reagan era was filled with empty words about space. There was no vision and certainly no commitment to leadership or excellence. Whether President Bush chooses to overturn the legacy of his predecessor remains to be seen." -- Mars in 1980s: USSR, 2 tries, | Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology 2 failures; USA, 0 tries. | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu