Interviews: Ask Former Director of JPL Edward Stone About Space Exploration 58
Edward Stone is a professor of physics at the California Institute of Technology who has served as project scientist for the Voyager program from 1972 to the present. Since the launch of the two Voyager spacecraft in 1977, Stone has coordinated the efforts of 11 teams of scientists in their investigations of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. He served as director of Jet Propulsion Laboratory from 1991 to 2001. Highlights of his career include: Galileo's five-year orbital mission to Jupiter, the launch of Cassini to Saturn, the launch of Mars Global Surveyor and a new generation of Earth science satellites such as TOPEX/Poseidon and SeaWinds, and the successful Mars Pathfinder landing in 1997. Dr. Stone has agreed to sit down with us and answer any questions you may have about his time at JPL and space exploration. As usual, ask as many as you'd like, but please, one question per post.
Light reading (Score:5, Interesting)
Do you read XKCD, and if so, what do you think about the accuracy Randall Munroe's typical analysis?
interstellar exploration (Score:2)
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Related: Would you structure the space program now to eventually support an interstellar program?
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Re: Uranus/Neptune orbiter (Score:2)
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ceres (Score:1)
Interstellar exploration (Score:1)
Role of human spaceflight (Score:1)
Can you explain the JPL/NASA/CalTech relationship? (Score:5, Interesting)
You often see JPL listed as being a 'NASA Center', but if you look at the JPL website [nasa.gov], it says 'Jet Propulsion Laboratory' followed by 'California Instutite of Technology' (but next to the NASA meatball logo, and in the nasa.gov domain).
I've heard some people joke that if an orbital insertion is successful, then it's "CalTech's JPL" and when something goes wrong, it's "NASA's JPL". Can you explain exactly what the relationship is between the three entities?
Next mission? (Score:5, Interesting)
Mars (Score:1)
During each era of space exploration, going back to the mid-1970's, a manned mission to Mars has been "just 20 years away". At many points over the past 40 years, a variety of factors have converged ensure that a manned Mars mission remained just over the horizon. Even this past month, in NASA Chief Bolden's recent statements, Mars continues to be "just 20 years away", citing a need to stop at an Asteroid on the path to Mars", and budget constraints as reasons that a manned Mars mission remains an unreali
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Yeah, but with any luck, we're just 20 years away from finally being just "Nineteen years away from putting a man on Mars."
Radiation Shielding (Score:2)
Many groups are talking about manned trip to Mars. Once obstacle is exposure to radiation of all types outside earth's magnetic field.
Setting aside the political/activists issues, how practical would it be to put a reactor on a ship that could generate a magnetic field strong enough to protect the occupants from the forms of radiation expected to be encountered?
If that reactor could be placed on the surface of Mars, would it then be able to offer the same protection to the habitats?
water is a decent shield (Score:2)
Oblig.. (Score:4, Funny)
Did you ever wonder why scientists are always so fascinated with Uranus?
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If that's what aliens came light years to probe, there's gotta be something if immense scientific interest there.
hardest problem in interplanetary exploration (Score:3, Funny)
First man on Mars (Score:2)
What nationality will the first man on Mars be? Should the US try to be first?
I question you committment to Satanism (Score:1)
What is the most promising technology? (Score:1)
What is the most promising technology for lowering the cost / increasing the capabilities of spaceflight?
Elon Musk's reusable rockets? Escape Dynamics' ground-based microwave beam system? The Skylon "single stage to orbit"? The "fusion driven rocket" from NASA/University of Washington? The Alcubierre/"warp" drive concept? Something not listed here?
Cooperating with the Chinese (Score:2)
Did you ever want to cooperate more with the Chinese, and if so what stopped you? It's well known that the US blocked Chinese involvement with the ISS, but were there other areas you could have worked with them on?
No more flagship missions? (Score:2)
Space Toilet more important than Europa? (Score:3)
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one example of each good/bad (Score:2)
Three-body chaotic gravity assist (Score:3)
Do you think NASA could consider/design a Voyager-like mission with a much higher speed, using three-body chaotic gravity assist method, like this article (pdf) [prescientmodels.com] suggests?
Basically, it involves capturing an asteroid in a mutual rotation with the probe, then entering solar gravity assist trajectory with this binary object, then making small adjustments at the right times, so that the probe gets an even bigger kinetic energy boost at the cost of the asteroid losing its energy and falling into the Sun. Maybe there are asteroids or comets with close-to-required orbit where we could take a ride.
To a layman like me, this, while hard, sounds like the most realistic method for reaching speeds relevant for interstellar travel with our current technology. Rosetta spacecraft did perform a successful rendezvous with a comet recently, which looks like a solid stepping stone for a mission like this.
Early Education (Score:2)
In the early days of the space and aerospace programs it seems a lot of team leaders were engineers who had no college or stopped at a bachelors. Kelly Johnson at the Skunk Works is an example of the later.
When you started out, did you work for any men who didn't have a lot of formal education but were very competent?
Man on Mars (Score:3)
We've been thirty years away from putting a man on Mars now for the last forty years. Do you think that by 2035, we'll have finally moved to being just 30 years away from finally putting a man on Mars?
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Habits and Professionalism (Score:5, Interesting)
What professional habits did you develop that helped you be successful enough to hold a high position in one of the world's important scientific institutions?
gravity simulation question (Score:1)
If gravity is such a necessary force on our physiology, why haven't we (or maybe, what's the problem with the feasability of) simulated it with centrifugal force? You know, like having structures rotating at a sufficient velocity in space to test out if the illusion of the gravity is sufficient?
Since generating artificial gravity is science fiction, simulated gravity with centrifugal force seems testable. Wouldn't knowing this help solve a big part of the problem with long-term space habitation and construc
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Because centrifugal force isn't trivial. You need a big radius to revolve in to avoid tide-like problems, it's stress on components, and it can be hard to observe things from a rotating platform. There may be other problems, but these are the ones that come to mind.
Manned Trip to Mars (Score:4, Interesting)
Edit: Manned Trip to Mars (Score:2)
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To expand on this for general conversation. Looking at orbital physics, it seems that a Mars mission will take about two years. 7-9 months to get to Mars, a stay of several months then another 7-9 months back at the optimal times in the Earth-Mars orbits. Leaving at other times or attempting quicker transit speeds greatly increases the distances or fuel needed as to be prohibitive. Therefore, we'll need a long term space habitat for the astronauts. How many we'll need is a questions but I would guess that t
Re: Manned Trip to Mars (Score:1)
Check out Dr. Robert Zubrin's Mars Direct reference mission for a low cost, sustainable manned Mars program that doesn't require any technological breakthroughs.
Warp/Supraluminal starship detection (Score:1)
Programming languages (Score:2)
One more Voyager experiment... (Score:3)
The most stressful experience (Score:2)
New generation (Score:2)
the dearest (Score:2)
Next Planetary Grand Tour, a visionary perspective (Score:2)
The Planetary Grand Tour [wikipedia.org] was reduced from 4 to 2 probes but those Voyagers are great space exploration success.
Such planetary configuration will occur again in quite a long time, about 130 years, however we must be able by then to launch a new set of probes to take advantage of the gravitational slingshots [wikipedia.org]. I'm afraid humanity might not be able to achieve this in case of new economic crisis at that time or because of some world conflicts, society collapse, whatever may distract us (or impede us) from workin
What was you biggest game-changer moment? (Score:1)
Being involved in these amazing projects must have provided many moments of exitement when discoveries are made.
What was your biggest "this changes everything" moment and how did it make you feel?