WASHINGTON โ The deputy administrator of NASA and a former chairman of the U.S. House Science Committee debated July 17 a central issue in human spaceflight policy: Should the selection of missions and destinations drive technology development or should available technologies shape what missions the space agency pursues?
โWe canโt just pick a place and go there just because we want to,โ said NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver during a panel session on exploration during the Future Space 2013 conference here. โWe need to focus a little more on the why and the how than just the where.โ
That emphasis on why and how, Garver said, shapes NASAโs plans for a mission to redirect a near-Earth asteroid into lunar orbit to be visited by astronauts. She outlined several reasons for going to asteroids, including scientific knowledge, potential commercial applications of asteroid resources, and planetary defense. Moreover, asteroids are accessible with systems already under development, including the Space Launch System (SLS) heavy-lift rocket and Orion crew vehicle.
โIn particular, this mission was chosen because, regarding how weโre going to do it, we do know we have programs, SLS and Orion, that are going to deep space,โ she said, โand we want to give them something very worthwhile to do.โ
Former Congressman Robert Walker, who chaired the House Science Committee in the mid-1990s, took the opposite view.
โFor a long time, what weโve done is that weโve decided what technology we have the capacity to build, and then we decide on what missions we should do based upon that technology,โ he said. โIt seems to me thatโs backwards. What it should be is that we decide what the mission should be and then design the technology and the infrastructure to support that mission.โ
Walker said that NASAโs asteroid mission plans fell squarely in that technology-driven approach, and were not a compelling human spaceflight mission. โIn my view, this is something that could be done robotically,โ he said. Human missions to the Moon and Mars made more sense, he added, because of the prospects of permanent settlements there. โThe goal of being on the Moon should be to go and be there permanently,โ he said. โItโs the same thing for Mars and other places inside our solar system.โ
Walker also recalled his experience as chair of the Commission on the Future of the U.S. Aerospace Industry in 2001โ2002. โWe said the mission should be the human exploration of the solar system during this century,โ he said. The reason for such a bold goal, he said, was to help drive technology development in areas like nuclear propulsion. โIf you have a mission big enough that you really want to achieve, what you get out of it is technologies, new partnerships, and a new exploration philosophy,โ Walker said.
Those bold visions, though, run afoul of funding and other political constraints today, Garver said. โWithout an outside force that gives you your purpose, you are not going to get consensusโ on what NASA should be doing, Garver said. โWe live in a different era than we did in Apollo. We have suffered, in my view, from trying to relive Apollo.โ
In this environment, Garver said, affordability plays a much bigger factor in determining missions and developing technologies. In the case of NASAโs asteroid mission, she argued that means spending only โan extra one or two billion dollarsโ beyond what is already planned for SLS and Orion development. โI canโt believe thatโs controversial,โ she said.
โWould you rather have tens of billions of dollars and do a lunar mission? Sure. Do we?โ she asked, turning to Walker. โNo, we donโt,โ he admitted.
One area the two agreed upon was that importance of involving the commercial sector in future exploration efforts. โYou need the commercial sector to backfill behind you and ensure that the technologies youโre developing will be broadly applied beyond just the missions that youโre doing,โ Walker said.
Garver said it was time to stop debating where to go and instead focus on carrying out any mission. โWeโve come to the point where we probably just need to just go do a mission,โ she said, adding she felt it should be the proposed asteroid mission. โIf thatโs not people want to do, we can argue about something else and not go anywhere again for a while.โ
