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TIME: Almanac 1995
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1994-03-25
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<text id=93TT2172>
<title>
Sep. 06, 1993: Lost in Space
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SCIENCE, Page 51
Lost in Space
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A $1 billion satellite is gone, and so is another chunk of NASA's
reputation
</p>
<p>By MICHAEL D. LEMONICK--With reporting by Ellen Germain/Washington, Jerry Hannifin/Cape
Canaveral and Tara Weingarten/Pasadena
</p>
<p> If Mars observer were ever going to speak again, it should
have spoken to Michael Dean at 2:56 Pacific time last Wednesday
afternoon. The 24-year-old flight controller is part of a team
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), in Pasadena, California,
that had been working day and night for nearly a week to rouse
the mysteriously silent spacecraft. Now the only hope left was
in the hands of Observer: its onboard computers had been programmed
to phone home if the probe hadn't heard from Earth for five
days, triggering an electronic blip that would appear on Dean's
screen. Scientists could then lock on to the signal and restore
communications. But the time came--and went. And the screen
remained empty.
</p>
<p> The reason Mars Observer had gone abruptly off the air the previous
Saturday evening may never be known, although engineers suspect
faulty transistors in the clocks that govern all the probe's
electronics. And the ship's whereabouts are anybody's guess.
It could be in orbit around the Red Planet or shooting off into
interplanetary space. It could have blown up. A fringe group
even swears that NASA destroyed Observer to hide the existence
of a Martian civilization.
</p>
<p> Whatever the reason, the first U.S. mission to Mars in nearly
two decades, a $980 million attempt to study the Martian surface
and atmosphere in detail and pave the way for later missions
and human exploration, is lost in space. Gone with it is another
chunk of NASA's eroding reputation for technological brilliance.
This year alone, the agency has slipped its deadlines on 13
space-shuttle launches, forcing it to cut flights from the schedule.
It failed, after multiple attempts, to free the stuck main antenna
on the Galileo probe to Jupiter. And on the same day controllers
lost touch with Mars Observer, the space agency also lost contact
with a newly launched, $67 million weather satellite.
</p>
<p> The latest fiasco couldn't have come at a worse time for NASA.
The agency's annual request for money to build Space Station
Freedom barely cleared the House earlier this year, and while
the Senate had been expected to approve the $22 billion project,
support may dwindle.
</p>
<p> More snafus may lie ahead. In December astronauts are scheduled
to ride the shuttle into orbit to repair the star-crossed Hubble
Space Telescope. Should the unprecedentedly complex mission
go exactly as planned, NASA could regain some credibility. But
if history is any guide, it probably won't. Space is a harsh
and unforgiving place, where Murphy's Law is paramount. In fact,
many of NASA's best public relations successes have come at
the brink of failure. Engineers restored 70% of the Galileo
probe's function after its main antenna failed to deploy; astronauts
grabbed the Intelsat-6 satellite by hand when a less dramatic
rescue technique proved useless; astronauts survived an explosion
on Apollo 13 that could easily have been fatal.
</p>
<p> Until the last minute, JPL flight controllers hoped to pull
off a similar coup with Observer. But none of the probe's backup
systems responded to their electronic pleas, and after Wednesday
there was little hope that a response would ever come. The problem,
according to space experts, is that despite elaborate backup
systems, space missions have become too complex to be made foolproof.
Says John Logsdon, director of the Space Policy Institute at
George Washington University: "NASA should be doing smaller
missions, more rapidly and with more limited objectives. Then
if you lose one, you haven't lost everything." In fact, such
a plan may already be in the works: NASA has reportedly sounded
out the Pentagon about using their Clementine satellites, developed
for the Star Wars program, to explore Mars. Scientists familiar
with the satellites think that as many as four of the 500-lb.,
$75 million Clementines could be ready for launching toward
Mars by November 1994.
</p>
<p> But Logsdon also faults NASA as an organization. "The agency
seems to have lost some of its technical sharpness," he says.
"It hasn't been adequately replenished with young people over
the years"--the result of budget cuts made in the 1970s. The
current head of NASA, Daniel Goldin, aims to change this, says
Logsdon, "but reconstructing a middle-aged, bureaucratic organization
from within is difficult."
</p>
<p> Yet even with the best possible staff, NASA has a problem it
never faced in the free-spending 1960s. Nowadays, every new
mission has to be sold to a skeptical and tight fisted Congress.
The agency has found that legisla tors--and the aerospace
contractors who lobby them--prefer big, complex projects that
promise spectacular scientific returns. These also carry the
greatest risk, but NASA has understandably played down the chance
of failure. Perhaps it's time for a more sophisticated approach:
the men and women who run the nation's space program could take
a lesson from the politicians and learn the fine art of lowering
expectations.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>