The Mercury

Keeping those space missions on track

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AMERICA’S space scientists are entitled to a period of mourning after the Cassini spacecraft burns up in Saturn’s atmosphere tomorrow. After all, 20 years after its launch, the most expensive spacecraft sent to the outer planets has produced 3 948 science papers (and counting), 453 048 photograph­s (and counting), and a cohort of young scientists who earned their Ph.Ds and other training thanks to the mission.

Accomplish­ments like that don’t come cheap, and in today’s climate of tight budgets and more immediate needs, a proposal with a $3.26 billion (R42.4bn) price tag like Cassini’s almost certainly wouldn’t fly. But the US can’t afford to lose the long-term economic, diplomatic and prestige benefits that large-scale missions bring. For Nasa, that presents a complicate­d challenge: How does the agency ensure that we have more Cassinis – for less money?

For decades, Nasa’s reputation has been defined by human exploratio­n and what the agency calls its “large strategic missions” like Cassini, the Mars Curiosity rover and the Hubble space telescope. Such missions generally require more than a decade to plan, and support and sustain large teams of space scientists and students for years. As a rule, they cost more than $1bn – sometimes far more.

These missions have become known for huge cost overruns. The most notable example is the James Webb space telescope, the yet-tolaunch successor to Hubble. Since it was proposed in the 1990s, the cost has grown from under $1bn to $8.8bn, while the launch date has stretched out a decade, to next year. A 2012 Nasa report identified several factors for the agency’s cost overruns, including a belief that “projects that fail to meet cost and schedule goals will receive additional funding”.

Nasa is trying to change its reputation so Congress won’t tighten the purse strings. Because of the James Webb debacle, for example, the agency has taken steps, like increasing budget reserves, to meet unexpected funding needs.

But as helpful as those changes have been, they probably aren’t enough to guarantee a planned mission to Europa, the moon of Jupiter which many scientists believe harbours the ingredient­s for life, or an even more ambitious decade-plus trek out to Uranus or Neptune. Indeed, like other federal agencies that are pressed to justify their size and cost, Nasa may face fiscal challenges in coming years. The US should ensure that ambitious missions continue to have a chance.

First, there needs to be a change in how Nasa is led. In 2015, Representa­tive John Culberson of Texas noted that Nasa had spent more than $20bn on cancelled programmes over the previous 20 years – enough for almost six Cassini missions. To fix the problem, he proposed giving the Nasa administra­tor a politicall­y insulated 10-year term and the authority to contract space missions over years, rather than through the annual contracts that Congress currently allows.

Nasa’s planning process must also become more sensitive to budget concerns. In a report last month, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine recommende­d that Nasa’s longterm mission planning identify what specific scientific objectives are most desirable and feasible at specific levels of funding. If and when budgets shrink, such options can provide mission planners flexibilit­y to “de-scope” a mission.

This would not only prepare Nasa to scale back when needed, but also would keep the agency ready to scale up when possible. In recent years new technologi­es like low-cost satellites the size of a Rubik’s cube – known as CubeSats– have opened up new modes of budget-conscious exploratio­n. For example, last month Nasa approved funding to study a CubeSat mission to Venus’s atmosphere. Such a mission would be cheaper than a large-scale mission to the outer solar system, but it would help resolve scientific questions and possibly point the way to doing expensive large-scale missions more cheaply.

Indeed, scientists recently proposed using a CubeSat as a low-cost probe to sense dust and radiation during Nasa’s planned, likely multibilli­on-dollar, Europa mission.

Such a probe could cut costs or – by virtue of its low cost – expand the mission’s scope. Either way, the flexibilit­y improves the odds that Nasa can get to where it wants to go. – Bloomberg

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