Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

NASA adjusts to private partners

- By Christian Davenport

WASHINGTON — The rap on NASA is that it’s riskaverse, stuck in the old ways of doing things, stymied by a big 60-year-old bureaucrac­y that was chastened by two fatal space shuttle disasters.

That was the mindset that seemed to greet SpaceX’s controvers­ial fueling plan. Instead of filling the rocket with propellant before the astronauts board, the company proposed doing it after.

Loading a combustibl­e mix of propellant­s underneath NASA’s finest set off alarms inside some parts of the agency and among safety experts, who warned that it was contrary to decades of spacefligh­t procedure.

One watchdog group called it a “potential safety risk” — a spark during fueling could set off an explosion, many in NASA feared. That’s what happened when a SpaceX rocket blew up while being fueled in 2016.

But then NASA recently announced that it would allow SpaceX’s fueling procedure, informally known as “load and go,” under the condition that the company demonstrat­e it five times before receiving formal certificat­ion.

The decision was a significan­t one for NASA and signals an ongoing cultural shift as the agency partners

with a growing commercial space industry that thrives on pushing boundaries.

NASA’s evolution has been years in the making, officials said, as it grows more comfortabl­e giving industry more autonomy and freedom, which many hope will initiate the kind of innovation necessary to make spacefligh­t more routine.

Over the years, it has developed deep partnershi­ps with several companies, awarding them billions of dollars in contracts to carry out crucial services.

Under the George W. Bush administra­tion, NASA decided to hire contractor­s — SpaceX and Orbital ATK — to fly cargo and supplies to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Then, under President Barack Obama, it awarded contracts to SpaceX and Boeing to fly crews there, with the first flights expected next year.

In doing so, the agency allowed the companies to build, design and operate their spacecraft.

And while NASA laid out a list of requiremen­ts that the companies must meet, it did not dictate how they should meet them.

Being able to rely on private companies to provide a delivery service to the space station “was one of the major shifting factors,” said Eric Stallmer, the president of the Commercial Spacefligh­t Federation. “That played a huge role.”

NASA does lend its expertise and oversight, but at the same time, the companies are teaching the agency a thing or two about how to apply business practices to open the frontiers of space.

None was more so than Elon Musk’s SpaceX, which from the beginning of its partnershi­p with NASA ran into resistance, a clash of Silicon Valley-style ethos with government bureaucrac­y, youthful impatience with aged bureaucrac­y. Now President Donald Trump and NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e have gone out of their way to praise the efforts of private space companies and make it clear that the agency intends to rely on them.

In a statement to The Washington Post, Bridenstin­e said industry has had a transforma­tive effect on the agency: “Our commercial partners are challengin­g us to be more agile, think differentl­y, buy smarter and develop more efficientl­y.”

SpaceX isn’t the only company seeing the benefit of NASA’s shift.

The agency is being far more welcoming to private-sector input in the first component of its proposed lunar gateway program, a space station to float in the vicinity of the moon.

Instead of dictating the requiremen­ts and design of the part of the gateway that would provide power and propulsion, NASA reached out for suggestion­s, said Mike Gold, vice president of regulatory at Maxar Technologi­es, one of the companies to study the power and propulsion module.

“Load and go is just another example of an evolution that is occurring across the agency where we are seeing NASA embrace commercial practices and commercial experience in a wide variety of programs,” he said.

For years, the thinking was that you fuel the rocket, make sure it’s stable and then allow the astronauts on board. That would limit their exposure to a disaster. That’s how the space shuttle program did it. And that’s how Boeing, which also has the contract to fly astronauts for NASA, plans to fuel its rocket.

But SpaceX likes to do things differentl­y.

To get more power out of its Falcon 9 rockets, it chills its propellant­s, liquid oxygen and refined kerosene, to extremely low temperatur­es. As a result, they become denser, allowing SpaceX to pack more fuel into its rockets, giving them more performanc­e.

But because the fuel is so cold, it can warm up quickly, which is why it needs to be loaded at the last minute.

The company, which has never flown humans to space before, says that safety is its top priority and notes that the Falcon 9 also comes with an escape system that would allow the Dragon spacecraft to quickly fly away from the rocket booster in the event of an emergency on the pad or during flight.

“We would never have proposed it had we thought that it was a less safe way to go,” Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX’s president and chief operating officer, told reporters this month. “The vehicle has more margin when we load the fuel quite close to liftoff.”

She added that the astronauts are “protected by the launch escape system. They’re protected by the heat shield between Dragon and the rocket.”

Since its rocket exploded while being fueled in 2016, the company has notched 33 successful launches in a row using this fueling technique and has completed dozens more engine test fires.

In a statement, Kathy Lueders, the manager of NASA’s commercial crew program, said the agency decided to go along with SpaceX’s plan after conducting “an extensive review of the SpaceX ground operations, launch vehicle design, escape systems and operationa­l history. Safety for our personnel was the driver for this analysis, and the team’s assessment was that this plan presents the least risk.”

Still, before signing off on the procedure, she said, SpaceX would have to demonstrat­e it five times, and then “NASA will assess any remaining risk before determinin­g that the system is certified to fly with crew.”

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