Understanding the Pieces
"Barriers to Opening the Space
Frontier...and Solutions"
________________________________
Affordability
Shuttle Shortfalls and
Lessons Learned for the Sustainment of Human
Space Exploration, Presented at the 45th
AIAA/ASME/SAE/ASEE Joint Propulsion Conference,
AIAA 2009-5346, 2-5 August 2009, Denver, Colorado
by - Edgar Zapata,
NASA, Kennedy Space Center, Florida & Daniel
J. H. Levack, Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne,
Canoga Park, California & Russel E. Rhodes,
NASA, Kennedy Space Center, Florida & John W.
Robinson, The Boeing Company, Huntington Beach,
California
Affordability,
Cost Estimating
July
13, 2009
May
26, 2009
"The Joint Confidence Level
Paradox, A History of Denial", by Glenn
Butts, NASA Kennedy Space Center, and Kent
Litton, SAIC/Craig Technologies (download, 3MB .pdf)
"The
authors provide Historical Evaluation of Cost
and Schedule Estimating Performance During
NASA's Tenure as an Agency - Following which
they introduce an optimum Hybrid model for
more accurately calculating Cost and Schedule
estimates in NASA's Complex systems
engineering environment."
Affordability,
Collaboration
2008
"Sustainable
space exploration is a challenge that no one
nation can do on its own. This is why fourteen
space agencies have developed The Global
Exploration Strategy: The Framework for
Coordination, which presents a vision for robotic
and human space exploration, focussing on
destinations within the solar system where
we may one day live and work. It
elaborates an action plan to share the strategies
and efforts of individual nations so that all can
achieve their exploration goals more effectively
and safely."
In
alphabetical order: ASI (Italy), BNSC (United
Kingdom), CNES (France), CNSA (China), CSA
(Canada), CSIRO (Australia), DLR (Germany), ESA
(European Space Agency), ISRO (India), JAXA
(Japan), KARI (Republic of Korea), NASA (United
States of America), NSAU (Ukraine), Roscosmos
(Russia). "Space Agencies" refers to
government organizations responsible for space
activities.

Affordability,
DATA
Facts
on the Ground, NASA Workforce, Demographics
As any
improvement in the safety, reliability or affordability
of access to space and beyond is a generational
endeavour...

Affordability, DATA
2005
Reliability, Failure Rates, DATA
The
following data relates especially well to Space
Transportation Systems Affordability, Responsiveness,
Reliability and Safety. The quality of hardware and
software systems, as manifest in launch vehicle failure
rates, beckons for improvement. The visible failure
rates, during flight, and the less visible failures
during ground processing, causing unplanned work, are
inter-connected quality and technology issues for the
aero-industry.
2004
Design
for Operations - "D4Ops"
It is envisioned that
dramatically safer, lower cost, and higher flight rate
access to space is possible by applying the wealth of
experience gained from human space flight launch
operations. Shuttle launch operations, particularly the
worlds only reusable space plane elements, the
orbiters, have accumulated a vast set of ideas, lessons
learned, insight and design for ops
experience. Current work such as the Shuttle
Root Cause Analysis will add further insight to quantifiably
understand why previous reusable launch systems are as
costly as they are and why they take as long as they do
to prepare for launch.

"Designers
of space launch systems should be cognizant of
the impact of their design assumptions on
operational characteristics. Operational metrics
such as turnaround time, recurring cost, and
headcount are critical factors for the future
viability of such systems. The results presented
here are from a study that seeks to determine in
what manner design approaches can improve the
operability of future space launch systems. This
is accomplished by applying such operational
approaches at the start of the concept design
process. These design for operations (D4Ops)
choices or approaches are determined from
data-mining NASA Space Shuttle orbiter processing
information. These approaches are then applied to
three different launch vehicle contexts created
for this study and based on existing NASA
reference designs. These contexts include near
(2010), mid (2015), and far (2025+) term
examples. Specific lessons about the D4Ops
approaches, as learned from the first two
examples, are then applied to the far term
context. Weighted rankings of the impact of these
approaches on various metrics of interest are
provided."
Competitiveness, Economics,
Monopolies, Acquisition Strategy
- White Paper:
"Independent Space Transportation Operator
Concept, A Breakthrough Acquisition Strategy
Using Independent Space Transportation Operators,
Making Affordable and Sustainable Space
Transportation Possible", C. McCleskey,
Systems Engineering Office, Spaceport Engineering
& Technology Directorate, NASA John F.
Kennedy Space Center, Florida, May 18, 2004. Download .doc or download .pdf file.
"Air
Mail Act of 1934 - Aerospace history can provide
us some inspiration on this subject. The air
transportation world in the early 1930s ran into
the ethical problems that can often occur in
completely vertical business arrangements with a
narrow set of players. The issue was finally
resolved through anti-trust legislation in the
Airmail Act of 1934."

Operations,
Space Shuttle Thermal Protection Systems (TPS)
The
following file on Shuttle Orbiter Thermal Protection
Systems (TPS) maintenance contains data that is extremely
valuable to operations analysis such as relates to
maintainability for one of the many complex systems on a
reusable space transportation systems element. It is one
piece of a much larger set of issues, including safety
and reliability, relating to TPS systems, current and
future. The CAIB report, coupled with the data herein,
demonstrates how systems such as RCC can appear
robust, but still be both un-safe and
difficult to maintain, having an ill understood set of
failure modes that can contribute to a low overall
reliability/safety/operability.
- "The
Cost of Maintaining Thermal Protection
Systems", Frank E. Jones, NASA Kennedy Space
Center. Download (.ppt) or download (5MB .pdf)
From the CAIB report, page 83:
"The
wing leading edge Reinforced Carbon-Carbon
composite material and associated support
hardware are remarkably tough and have impact
capabilities that far exceed the minimal impact
resistance specified in their original design
requirements. Nevertheless, these tests
demonstrate that this inherent toughness can be
exceeded by impacts representative of those that
occurred during Columbia's ascent."

2003
Safety,
Reliability, Space Shuttle Thermal Protection System
(TPS), CAIB Report
2002
- The Rand Study -"Report of the
Space Shuttle Competitive Sourcing Task
Force" was released December 2002. Updated
cost DATA on the Shuttle program
is detailed in the reports.
2001
- "Dr. Kurt H.
Debus: Launching a Vision", C. McCleskey,
NASA John F. Kennedy Space Center and D.
Christensen, Lockheed Martin Space Systems
Company, International Astronautical Federation
(IAF-01), Toulouse, France, October 2001. Download (3MB .pdf).
- DATA > A Review of Space Shuttle Data, Shuttle Orbiter Line
Replaceable Units (LRUs) Replaced per Flight
During Orbiter Processing Facility (OPF)
Turnaround Operations
1999
1998
Reliability,
Operability, Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME)

For future
systems to improve on the Space Shuttle it is extremely
valuable to analyze and understand the Shuttle operations
experience qualitatively and quantitatively. One such
report follows specific to the Space Shuttle Main Engines
(SSMEs).
- NASA/TP1998208530,
"Reusable Rocket Engine Operability Modeling
and Analysis", R.L. Christenson and D.R.
Komar Marshall Space Flight Center, Marshall
Space Flight Center, Alabama. Download (1MB .pdf)
1997
1996
Reliability,
Maintainability, Ground Operations, Rocket Engines
1996 Report on
"Rocket Engine Life Analysis", 59
pages, Download (15MB .pdf).
This report describes methods to extend a rocket
engines life, and to reduce failures, thereby
reducing operational costs and increasing flight
safety. Additionally, the DATA supports a means to
avoid having to remove engines from flight to
flight for future reusable systems, as done
currently on Shuttle orbiters.

1995
- "Space Shuttle to Reusable
Launch Vehicle - A White Paper", Huether, J.E., Spears,
J.M., McCleskey, C.M., & Rhodes, R.E., 32nd
Space Congress, Canaveral Council of Technical
Societies, Cocoa Beach, Florida, April 1995.
Operations,
Space Shuttle Thermal Protection Systems (TPS)
For future systems to
improve on the Space Shuttle it is extremely valuable to
analyze and understand the Shuttle operations experience
both qualitatively and quantitatively. The Shuttle
Thermal Protection System (TPS) experience is one such
example.
- "Space
Shuttle Orbiter Thermal Protection System
Processing Assessment Final Report", May
1995, Prepared by: Michael P. Gordon, TPS Orbiter
Engineering, Materials & Processes, Rockwell
Florida Operations D/830. No
longer available on the web. For copies of this
report, available for governmental purposes only,
contact Edgar
Zapata,
at NASA KSC.
Reliability,
Safety, Loss of Vehicle, Space Shuttle
- "1995 Probabalistic Risk
Assessment of the Space Shuttle, A Study of the
Potential of Losing the Vehicle During Nominal
Operation". Download (6MB .pdf).
1993 - 1994
Reusable
Launch Vehicle (RLV) Operations Synergy Team
These files date back to
1994 and the activity of the Operations Synergy Team.
This predates the selection of Lockheed-Martin to build
the X-33. The files are still very relevant to future
technology pursuits and space transportation systems
affordability.
1992
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Website
Contact: Edgar Zapata, NASA Kennedy Space Center
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