The managers of NASA’s planetary exploration are caught between that
proverbial rock and a hard place. Given
their situation, I admire them for making a tough call to cancel an advanced
technology program that could have enabled a new generation of small missions
to several exciting destinations in the solar system.
The good news is that in the end, the cancellation may make little
difference in the missions that actually will fly. That’s the bad news, too.
The cancellation was for NASA Advanced Stirling Radioisotope Generator (ASRG)
that would have provided a new generation of plutonium-238 (Pu-238) based electrical
power systems. ASRG’s could have stretched
NASA’s limited supply of plutonium to potentially enable missions to the perpetually-shadowed
polar craters on our moon, to flyby Uranus, or to float for months on a Titan
lake.
NASA has an alternative, flight-proven generator technology, the
Multi-Mission Radioisotope Thermal Generators (MMRTGs). Because MMRTGs use approximately four times
the Pu-238 as ASRGs for a similar power output, NASA now will need to hoard its
Pu-238 supply to power its largest expected missions of the 2020s. That would enable the planned 2020 Mars rover
and the hoped for Europa Clipper multi-flyby missions. Supplies for follow-on missions would not be
available until late in the 2020s for a small mission and the early 2030s for a
larger mission.
|
MMRTG
|
ASRG
|
Power
|
110 We
|
140 We
|
Mass
|
45 kg
|
~20 kg
|
Efficiency
|
6-7%
|
~30%
|
Pu-238 Fuel
|
4.8 kg
|
0.8 kg
|
Comparison of the MMRTG and ASRG power
systems.
In my post today, I want to give the background for NASA’s decision
(that rock and a hard place) and to talk about the types of missions that can
still be flown and those that would be lost.
The “rock” is NASA’s present tight budget for planetary exploration,
which has been cut in each of the last several years. NASA recently learned that bringing ASRGs to
flight ready status would cost $100M more than originally expected. By cancelling the ASRG program, NASA saves
$170M over the next three years.
NASA has not publicly identified where the savings would go. They could use the funds for other NASA
programs or Congress could lower NASA’s budget by that amount. However, if the planetary program is allowed
to keep the savings, $170M could go a long way to stretching thinned budgets
for missions or research. (Coincidentally,
$170M would be almost enough for the Cassini spacecraft, which may otherwise be
turned off in 2015, to fly until its fuel is exhausted in 2017.)
The “hard place” is NASA projected budget for planetary
exploration. While Congress appropriates
funds for each current year, the President’s Office of Budget and Management provides
estimates for future budgets. NASA’s
managers can only start a new mission when those projected budgets show room in
the budget for a new mission. Right now,
NASA’s planetary science projected budget shows no room to start a new mission
that would launch before the end of the decade and more likely in the early
2020s. At the rate of mission flights
suggested by the projections, there would be little demand for
plutonium-powered missions beyond the current Pu-238 supply.
Examples of funding peaks for NASA’s current approved smaller planetary missions along with projected funding for the next generation of missions. OSIRIS-REx is a New Frontiers program mission and the Mars MAVEN and InSight missions are Discovery program-class missions.
NASA’s missions in development follow a roller coaster funding profile
with development requiring high peak funding for a year or two. As one mission rolls off its peak funding,
funds become available to start the next mission. Projected funding (see chart above) suggests
that budgets won't support the funding of a new mission until the end of this decade, with a launch then or in the early 2020s. As a result, the new missions that might
require plutonium power supplies are projected to be – unfortunately – too few
and far between. (Part of NASA’s future
mission challenge is that late in this decade most of its new mission budget
will go to the $1.5B to 1.7B 2020 Mars rover.)
The U.S. has approximately 30 kilograms of Pu-238, or enough for five
MMRTG’s. A recently released
presentation slide from NASA shows one of those MMRTG’s reserved for the 2020
Mars rover, which will be a close copy of the MMRTG-powered Curiosity rover now
on Mars. The other four are held in
reserve for a mid-2020’s mission or missions.
While not stated in the presentation, this could be the proposed Europa
Clipper multi-flyby mission that would require the equivalent of four MMRTG’s
electrical power.
NASA’s expected supply and use of
plutonium-238 for the next two decades.
Credit NASA (see this presentation).
The U.S. has just approved plans to produce new Pu-238 for the first
time in decades. The amounts will be
small, around one kilogram a year. At that
rate, approximately two MMRTG’s could be fueled in a decade with new
Pu-238. However, the U.S. has a
stockpile of degraded Pu-238 (that presumably consists of material old enough
that a significant proportion has become useless because of radioactive decay). NASA plans to mix its new Pu-238 with
reworked older material to produce enough useable material to power several
MMRTG’s in the 2020s.
Given NASA’s new dependence on MMRTG’s, what types of missions can it
still fly and which become impossible or unlikely?
Answering that question requires understanding when a radioisotope
power supply either is absolutely necessary to fly a mission or would
substantially enhance it. The
alternative is solar power from solar photovoltaic panels. Too far from the sun, and sunlight is too
feeble to power a spacecraft. Until a
few years ago, that line of demarcation fell somewhere in the asteroid
belt. With improvements in low light and
low temperature (it’s cold far from the sun) solar cells, solar powered
missions at Jupiter are feasible. One (NASA’s
Juno) has launched, a second (Europe’s JUICE mission) will launch in 2022, and
the proposed Europa Clipper mission could use solar power.
Several studies have looked at using solar power for missions to
Saturn. The low light, low temperature
solar cells should work there. The major
problem is that at Saturn, a set of solar panels like those on the Juno
spacecraft that produce ~440W at Jupiter would provide only ~110W at
Saturn. For the Juno spacecraft, approximately
half of its 440 watts of power will go to powering the spacecraft systems and instruments
and half will go to running heaters to keep the spacecraft warm. Keeping warm is even a bigger problem at the
more distant Saturn, and after running heaters, little electrical power might
be available for anything else. More
solar panels could be added at the cost of additional weight and fuel to
maneuver with that weight. As the
appendix at the end of this post states, solar power at Saturn is technically
possible, but the trade offs are significant.
Beyond Saturn, the size and weight of solar panels would become
prohibitive. Realistic spacecraft for Uranus,
Neptune, and destinations beyond require radioisotope power supplies (or a
future generation of solar panels).
Concept design for a solar powered outer planets spacecraft from the Trojan asteroid Decadal Survey mission study. Credit NASA.
Other missions requiring Pu-238 missions are those where solar power is
intermittent or unavailable. This would
include long-term landers or rovers for the perpetually shadowed craters at the
poles of the moon or the surface of Titan.
Long-lived lunar stations would benefit from radioisotope power since
they must survive nights lasting 14 terrestrial days. Mars rovers also benefit from Pu-238 because bright sunlight is available only for part of the day, winter brings dimmed solar
light, and dust storms can make noon as dark as twilight. Another challenge for these types of missions
(and those in the outer solar system) is keeping the spacecraft warm. Pu-238 power systems have lots of excess heat
that can be used without diverting electrical power to heaters.
Comet hopper mission concept. The ASRG unit is the rectangular box with cooling fins on top of the spacecraft. Credit: NASA/GSFC/University of Maryland
Some inner solar system missions can’t be done with large solar panels. One clever idea was a comet hopper (called
CHOPPER) that would land in multiple places on the surface of a comet. Landing repeatedly on a rough surface with large solar
panels would be impractical, making a Pu-238 power system an enabling
technology.
The AVIATR airplane concept at Titan depended on the low mass of the
ASRGs to keep it light enough to fly.
With only MMRTGs available, that concept is unfeasible. However, hot air balloons for Titan couldn't stay aloft with the lower waste heat available from ASRGs to heat the air for their balloons. This type of mission
requires the heat from the additional Pu-238 in an MMRTG.
NASA has a list of missions it would like to fly in its Flagship ($1.5B
to $2B) and New Frontiers ($750M to $1B) programs. The following table summarizes whether solar
power could be used, and if MMRTG’s would be a benefit, how many would be
useful. These data are from mission
studies done for the last Decadal Survey effort to plan NASA’s planetary
science program. The studies assumed
ASRG’s, but MMRTG’s provide similar levels of power, so if a mission requires
two ASRG’s, it is likely two MMRTG’s would be required. (Many of the studies looked at multiple
configurations with different numbers of ASRG’s, and I’ve shown the minimum
number for a credible mission. In
addition, ASRG’s, unlike MMRTG’s, have moving parts. For redundancy against mechanical failure,
all studies assumed at least two ASRG’s.
It is possible that some of the missions could be done with a single
MMRTG.)
Flagship
|
Possible with solar power?
|
Number of ASRGs/ MMRTGs
|
|
Mars 2020 rover
|
Yes*
|
1
|
|
Europa Clipper
|
Yes
|
4
|
|
Uranus orbiter
|
No
|
3
|
|
New Frontiers
|
|
|
|
Comet sample return
|
Yes
|
--
|
|
Lunar sample return
|
Yes
|
--
|
|
Saturn probe
|
Probably
|
2
|
|
Trojan asteroid orbiter
|
Yes
|
2
|
|
Io observer
|
Yes
|
2
|
|
Venus lander
|
Yes
|
--
|
|
Lunar network
|
Yes
|
4
|
|
*MMRTG is likely to
minimize design changes to the Curiosity rover design it will be based on
|
|||
Radioisotope power requirements of NASA's candidate Flagship and New Frontiers planetary missions. From the Decadal Survey mission studies.
Based on this table, a reasonable question might be whether the
cancellation of the ASRG program will impact the missions that fly. From the list of candidates for Flagship and
New Frontiers missions, the answer may be no.
There’s sufficient Pu-238 for the 2020 rover and Europa Clipper (which
could switch to solar power anyway).
Under current budget forecasts, a Uranus orbiter wouldn't launch before
the new production of Pu-238 becomes available.
All the New Frontiers missions on the list could be done with solar power although this would like incur design challenges for the Saturn probe and lunar network.
Where we may see a loss is in the lowest cost class of missions, the
Discovery program ($425M to $500M). The
expectation had been that NASA would make at least one pair of ASRGs available
for a Discovery mission. Engineers and
scientists came up with clever ideas for ASRG-based missions – the comet
hopper, a Titan lake lander, an orbiter to revisit Titan and Enceladus, a Uranus
flyby, and others. With MMRTGs now the
only option, NASA needs to hoard its supply of Pu-238. It also has lost the motivation to test a new
technology – ASRGs – on a relatively low cost mission. MMRTG technology is already proven.
So NASA’s managers made the tough call, and if I were in their shoes,
I’d have done the same. I do see two glimmers
of hope to resurrect those clever Discovery missions though, or to give
engineers the flexibility to use MMRTGs for New Frontiers missions. The first is that Congress for the 2013
budget made it clear that it wanted higher funding for future missions. If this desire becomes policy (and the
President’s budget office would have to reflect this in their budget
projections), then there may be more demand for Pu-238 than NASA is currently
envisioning. The second is that if the
Europa Clipper design team decides to go with solar power instead of MMRTGs,
NASA will have more Pu-238 than missions planned to use it. In this case, they might make MMRTGs
available for New Frontiers or even Discovery missions.
You can help build the political support to increase funding for NASA's planetary science program by participating in the Planetary Society's letter writing campaign.
Appendix: Solar Power at Saturn
As part of the 2012 Decadal Survey to create a roadmap for NASA’s
planetary missions, studies of a number of potential missions were
conducted. Two looked at smaller
spacecraft to carry and atmospheric probe to Saturn and relay its data back to
Earth and to conduct multiple flybys of Enceladus. Both studies concluded that solar cells were
possible, but radioisotope power systems were preferable. The following excerpt from the Saturn probe mission study report discusses the challenges of solar power at Saturn.
“Regarding power systems,
although it might be possible to use solar arrays for the carrier-relay
spacecraft’s primary electric power system, operating at 10 AU would push the
very limit of current solar cell technology, requiring large margins and an
expensive parts selection program for the solar cells. For the mission time
period studied, a radioisotope power source (RPS) is less expensive and lower
risk for this mission than a solar array system, and would perform well in all
mission phases.
This is very good news that NASA has an alternative, flight-proven generator technology, the Multi-Mission Radioisotope Thermal Generators (MMRTGs). Dependency is not good for anyone.
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ReplyDeleteIt's sad that it's always about money, instead of environment. If you use ASRG's, you need 4 times less plutionium. So, less risk (if encapsulated the same way as with MMRTG's) - for example, when the rocket explodes; and more plutonium left in the earth for future missions.
ReplyDeleteA lack of vision might be the case here.
This really is a shame that a new technology 4x more effecient then the current in usage of a man-made radioisotope that is barely even BEING made any more and that NASA has a critical shortage of and reliance on is being cancelled for such a relatively small amount of money saved.
ReplyDeleteThis tech would have saved far more money in the long run with both reduced costs and weight (thus launch costs) of upcoming probes or landers, not to mention external sales of this tech: I can think of dozens of applications that the ASRG could have been used for outside of space missions and could have used more commonly available radioisotopes such as Am-241 which is all but a waste product anyhow, except in smoke detector manufacture.
Very short sighted decision.