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In fact, a vehicle less dependable than the shuttle's boosters could be made safer with one modification: an Apollo-style abort system, which bundled powerful rockets in a small tower atop the stack to lift the capsule away from a failing booster. A similar unit on the Soyuz has twice saved cosmonauts, once on the launch pad and once in flight. NASA plans to equip Orion with such a system.
The rocket trajectory, though, must be designed so that astronauts would survive an abort. Unmanned rockets such as the Delta IV and Atlas V, which have relatively underpowered second stages, fly a "lofted trajectory," where the first stage shoots them very high and they actually start falling before the second stage lifts them again. If astronauts abort near the high point, their capsule could plummet straight down and belly flop on the atmosphere at extreme G force. "Structural safety margins will be blown to hell, and you'll almost certainly kill people," Musk says flatly. "This was one of the main reasons given by NASA for not using those vehicles for manned spaceflight."
So SpaceX designed Falcon 9 with a second stage about four times as powerful as that of an Atlas or a Delta, allowing for a more slanted, softer trajectory into space. The fuel's weight adds cost, but if astronauts abort, their flight path will catapult Dragon horizontally, slicing more gradually into the atmosphere.
Falcon 9 will be the first rocket since Saturn that can lose an engine without compromising the mission. The vehicle's main structure will be built to withstand flight loads 40 percent higher than what engineers expect it to encounter. The safety margin for unmanned rockets is 25 percent above expected loads.
Riding a rocket is sort of like sitting atop a controlled, sustained explosion. Falcon 9's engines exert nearly a million pounds of force, consuming 3,200 pounds of propellant each second. The rocket must control the explosion all the way to space, while also doing battle with sound. The most intense stresses occur at liftoff, when sound energy from the engines bounces off the ground and slams back into the rocket. Sound levels reach 140 decibels, louder than an up-close ambulance siren and enough to immediately injure human eardrums and damage components mounted near a rocket's outer skin. The most intense pressure after launch accumulates as the rocket goes supersonic, when shock waves and buffeting come close to what the rocket faces at liftoff.
Russian spacecraft, says NASA spokesman John Yembrick, rely heavily on beefier mechanical structures for safety rather than complex backup systems. In the mid-1990s, NASA compared the design and standards for the Russian Soyuz spacecraft to its own and concluded that both NASA and Roscosmos, Russia's space agency, have equivalent safety requirements, though the Russians follow a different path to meet those parameters. NASA's decision to put American astronauts on Soyuz for a ride to the space station was based on the rocket's history of safety and reliability. NASA felt it would have been inappropriate to ask Roscosmos to redesign Soyuz to match NASA's human-rating process.
A sensitive word related to human rating is "tradeoff." It's always possible to build something sturdier and, presumably, safer, but at some point it will be doomed by its own weight or expense. When launching a satellite, businesses will accept a certain amount of risk as a tradeoff for keeping costs down. But the public, and by extension, NASA, will not do the same with people.


Comments
Why have I not heard of any NASA astronauts being sent to SpaceX for Dragon familiarisation?
Posted by JRS on March 19,2009 | 06:09AM
The author fails to mention is that you can change an EELV flight path so that it does not have a "lofted trajectory". Boeing and Bigelow are studying it to send people to Bigelow's space station as early as 2013. http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2006/09/lockheed-and-bigelow-human-rated-eelv-deal/ Another reason that NASA may not like EELV's is if they are safe, why do you need Ares I??? Notice that none of the COTS finalist that proposed using EELV's got a contract from NASA. Since if the COTS finalist proved that an EELV was fine to launch humans, again why would you need Ares I?
Posted by PHILLIP GEORGE on March 19,2009 | 07:38AM
I'm excited about this project. That will be a huge leap for humanity.
Posted by John on April 11,2009 | 08:03PM
What you fail to mention is that time-consuming, very costly and complex design changes must be made in order to fly EELV's on manned-rated, non-lofted trajectories. Flight loads are different, any second stage engine must be replaced with a larger one. Control computers, wiring and piping must be changed and the first stage thrust profile must be matched to suit the new flight trajectory. Everything must be retested and re-certified. All this will take years and 100's of million, if not billions of dollars, especially with large hulking bureaucratic companies. Ares I would likely fly before this changes could be made, if it flies at all.
Posted by Dr. Kenu Filuit on April 12,2009 | 07:40AM
Articles like this should have a heading of "Vaporware" around the edge, like the "Advertisement" on papers. This is all vaporware, and as Dr. Filuit points out, there is some serious physics involved in making this "ready" rocket, actually ready (for people or cargo). BTW, the non-sense by Terrafugia (and all other flying cars for the masses) could do the same. That way one can get to the disciplined, researched articles worthy of one's time.
Posted by LuF on May 20,2009 | 06:32AM
Maybe it would be easier to buy the technology from the russians, as they have a safety standard that will not be met by anyone else in at least 30 years. When it comes to space, experience is a plus, and the manned russian soyuz is a winner.
Posted by David on July 23,2009 | 03:13PM