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posted by CoolHand on Thursday May 14 2015, @04:01AM   Printer-friendly
from the space-cowboy-neal dept.

On May 11, the critical design review of the NASA Space Launch System (SLS) kicked off in Huntsville, Alabama.

This new rocket will be the most powerful launch vehicle ever built. It is designed to be sustainable and evolve to carry crew and cargo on deep space missions, including an asteroid and ultimately to Mars.

Milestone reviews like the critical design review are just that -- critical. The critical design review demonstrates that the SLS design meets all system requirements with acceptable risk, and accomplishes that within cost and schedule constraints. It also proves that the rocket should continue with full-scale production, assembly, integration, and testing and that the program is ready to begin the next major review covering design certification.

In the critical design review, there are literally thousands of pages of documentation that are reviewed and every part of the system is put under the design microscope by the best minds and engineers at NASA and their contractors. According to the article, all the subsystems have already been gone over in their own critical design reviews, but this one is for the complete project.

This review follows the somewhat more exciting successful booster tests from early March and the first Orion flight test from last December.

 
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  • (Score: 2) by Covalent on Thursday May 14 2015, @01:23PM

    by Covalent (43) on Thursday May 14 2015, @01:23PM (#182885) Journal

    You raise excellent points. The problem of radiation shielding is one of the weakest points in a manned mission to Mars. Even the Apollo astronauts could SEE the radiation when they closed their eyes (http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2004/22oct_cataracts/). Further, the astronauts developed eye problems at a greater rate than the general public.

    They were outside of the protection of Earth's magnetic field and atmosphere for under 2 weeks. The minimum duration of a manned trip to Mars is mostly likely several years. Even an orbital mission (which might be a precursor to landing) would take 6 months or more.

    Both of these lengths of time are likely to significantly shorten the lifespan of your astronauts. I'm no expert, but "dead heroes bad, live heroes good" seems like a no brainer.

    That's where the asteroid redirect mission comes into play. http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/asteroids/initiative/index.html [nasa.gov]

    One of the obvious uses of such an asteroid is AS a spaceship. Why lift all of that mass into orbit if you can use a giant hunk of iron/nickel that just happens to be handy. If you partially hollow out a tiny asteroid, you've essentially got a Faraday Cage that also absorbs neutrons pretty well. Yes it's massive, but it's better than radiation poisoning...

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  • (Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Thursday May 14 2015, @02:53PM

    by MichaelDavidCrawford (2339) Subscriber Badge <mdcrawford@gmail.com> on Thursday May 14 2015, @02:53PM (#182916) Homepage Journal

    ... that she carried a gram of it around in her pocket, so she could demonstrate to others, that you can see the radiation with your eyes shut.

    She and Pierre both died of Leukemia twenty years later after they isolated it. I visited her crypt at the Paris Pantheon in November, 1997.

    Sometimes, thinking about Marie Curie, makes me scream.

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    • (Score: 2) by Yog-Yogguth on Sunday May 17 2015, @01:08PM

      by Yog-Yogguth (1862) Subscriber Badge on Sunday May 17 2015, @01:08PM (#184031) Journal

      I thought so too before looking it up at Wikipedia some years ago; it seems Pierre died from the wheel of a horse-drawn carriage crushing his skull etc. after he slipped (wet cobblestones, leaves, or horse manure?) while crossing a street (filled with traffic I suppose).

      But he wasn't in great health so maybe if he hadn't died in an accident.

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