The commercial space flight business suffered a
one-two punch last week. On
Tuesday, an unmanned rocket carrying supplies for the International Space
Station and launched by Orbital Sciences Inc. failed a few seconds after
launch, falling back to the launch pad and exploding to make a spectacular
nighttime video that must have been shown on every TV outlet in the U. S. It was the company's third commercial
launch of a contract to supply the Space Station, whose residents will now have
to wait a while longer for the next garbage pickup. (A side benefit of the long-distance unmanned deliveries is
that the Space Station folks can cram the vehicle with their trash and let it
burn up in the atmosphere.)
And then Friday, Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo,
manned by two experienced test pilots, broke up high above the Mojave Desert in
California, killing pilot Michael Alsbury, 39, and injuring the other, Peter
Siebold. The crash scattered
debris over a five-mile-long area and initiated an investigation by both Virgin
Galactic and the U. S. National Transportation Safety Board which could take as
long as a year.
Any time anyone is injured or killed in a
space-related accident, engineers are obliged to get to the bottom of the
technical whys and hows of the mishap.
But beyond the specific technical causes of these particular accidents,
tragic as they were, is the question of how reliable commercial manned space
flight is going to be. And a
little history can throw some light on that question.
A man named Ed Kyle maintains an extensive
statistical study of space-flight launches at a website called www.spacelaunchreport.com. He compiles both unmanned and manned
flights, although in the nature of the business, the vast majority of launches
are unmanned. Bearing that in
mind, we can look at a convenient summary table he provides of success rates of
launches by decade, going all the way back from the infancy of space flight in
the 1950s to the 2010s.
America's first attempt to launch a satellite into
orbit, the Vanguard launch on Dec. 8, 1957, was a highly publicized failure,
exploding after reaching the breathtaking altitude of four feet (1.2
meters). And overall, only about
half the launch attempts by all parties in the 1950s were successful. But aerospace engineers began climbing
that long haul called the learning curve, and by the 1970s the average success
rate was around 95%, where it has hovered ever since. In the last two complete years, for example (2012 and 2013),
Kyle logged 159 launch attempts and 9 failures among them, for a failure rate
(for the pessimists among us) of 5.6%.
So even today, forty years after the space-rocket business reached
maturity, there is about one chance in twenty that your satellite will not end
up in space, but in a watery or earthy grave.
Despite all the fuss about NASA turning space
flight over to commercial interests, satellite launches have been commercial
transactions for decades. And it
appears that a failure rate of 5% is an acceptable level to support a generally
prospering space industry. The
companies and their insurers can handle that level of failure and still
accomplish what they want to do, most of the time.
But launching cans of beans for a space station,
and launching people who have paid a quarter of a million dollars for the ride
(as prospective passengers in the Virgin Galactic rocket have coughed up in
advance), are two different propositions.
Commercial airlines would not have many customers if it were well known
that one out of every twenty flights was going to crash. It took the business of aviation twenty
years or so to be safe enough to offer commercial passenger service, but by
1930 or so the risks of commercial scheduled flights to the individual
passenger were largely imaginary, and today you take more of a risk of dying on
your drive to the airport than you take in the air.
It may be harder for the space-flight engineers to
drive their failure rates down to the level at which people could buy
space-flight life insurance for a few dollars, like you used to be able to do
for commercial aviation flights at airports. Rocket hardware operates at the outer limits of materials
science. The engines run so hot
that liquid-fueled nozzles have to be cooled continuously to keep them from
melting, and the fluid dynamics of the combustion of rocket fuel is still so
complex that an exhaustive, essentially complete mathematical model of a rocket
in flight, including vibration modes and so on, is quite possibly still beyond
our abilities. So rocket designs
are a combination of science-based modeling and engineering intuition, added to
a large measure of experience of what has worked in the past.
I think it is significant that the Virgin Galactic
flight was using a different type of fuel than they had used in previous
flights. Such a major change, even
if tried out on the ground with similar hardware, can lead to unpredictable
results, and may turn out to have contributed to the disastrous crash of
SpaceShipTwo. Rocket engineers, at
least the successful ones, tend to be highly conservative in their designs. Anyone who has seen both an old V-2
rocket engine in a museum and the massive Apollo engines used to launch men to
the moon can see that Wernher von Braun found something that worked at
Peenemunde, Germany in the 1930s, and stuck with it all the way through the
1960s.
Such conservatism is increasingly rare among
engineers in general today, influenced by innovations in hardware and software
which happen so fast that you can squeeze an entire product life cycle, from
introduction to obsolescence, into six months. But the adage "if it ain't broke, don't fix it"
applies in spades to space travel.
And as we find out in the coming months what caused SpaceShipTwo's
failure, we may find that experimenting with a different fuel was a bad
idea.
Unless we colonize the Moon or Mars to a great
extent, space travel will always be an exotic, low-volume business, like tours
to the Antarctic are today. And it
is by no means clear to me that even the super-rich will be willing to take the
kind of risks that simple statistics tell us space travel entails—at least, not
for quite a while yet.
Sources: Ed Kyle maintains his Space Launch
Report at http://www.spacelaunchreport.com. I referred to an article carried by the BBC on the Virgin Galactic
disaster at http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-29869070
and by www.space.com on the Orbital Sciences
launch failure at http://www.space.com/27615-antares-rocket-explosion-timeline.html. I also referred to the Wikipedia
article on the Vanguard (rocket).
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