The good news was that President Obama mentioned NASA in a speech. The bad news: the speech was about the impending federal government shutdown and its effects on various agencies. โNASA will shut down almost entirely,โ he said in a speech late Monday afternoon, after noting that many essential government functions will continue, โbut Mission Control will remain open to support the astronauts serving on the Space Station.โ
As noted here Friday, only a few hundred of NASAโs employees will remain on the job today, working mission control for the ISS and operating other spacecraft. Most other NASA activities will come to a halt, including the agencyโs extensive public outreach work.
NASA kicked off yesterday an โAsteroid Initiative Idea Synthesis Workshopโ workshop in Houston, selecting almost 100 participants from the more than 400 who submitted papers to the agencyโs request for information earlier this summer asking for ideas on how to carry out the agencyโs asteroid initiative. The workshop was scheduled to continue today and tomorrow, but according to one participant, the rest of the workshop has been cancelled because of the shutdown.
Due to the govโt shutdown, all public NASA activities/events are cancelled or postponed until further notice. Sorry for the inconvenience.
โ NASA (@NASA) October 1, 2013
The effects of the shutdown go beyond shuttered Twitter accounts and cancelled symposia. While NASAโs interpretation of shutdown rules allow it to continue operating existing satellites (albeit with skeleton crews and limited, if any, science operations), work on missions under development โwill generally cease.โ That means, The Planetary Society notes, that preparations for the launch of the MAVEN Mars mission will come to a halt, a month and a half before its scheduled launch. MAVENโs launch window runs only to early December, so if there is an extended shutdown, itโs possible MAVEN will miss the window and have to wait until the next launch window in early 2016.
The shutdown also has varying impacts for other non-NASA space activities in the military at NOAA, and the FAA. The FAA noted that next weekโs meetings of the Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee will be cancelled if the government is still in shutdown mode by midday on Monday, October 7 (the meetings are October 9 and 10.)
And, if youโre curious, the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, run by a private organization, remains open even with most of NASA shut down. However, bus tours of KSC are cancelled.
This post originally appeared on spacepolitics.com. Used with permission.
