Vote for John Grunsfeld – National Geographic Adventurer of the YeAR

Astronaut John Grunsfeld, National Geographic Adventure

"Around NASA, he's known as "the Hubble Repairman." And last May, on his third visit to the orbiting space telescope, John Grunsfeld pulled off the repair to end all repairs. Working at zero gravity some 350 miles above the surface of the Earth, the astronaut restored sight to a half-blind Hubble--called the greatest scientific instrument ever invented--and ensured that it will continue to send back the stunning images and mind-boggling data that have transformed our understanding of the universe."

Lunar Orbiter: Comparing Old and New Images

Keith's note: These images are taken from Lunar Orbiter II image LOII_092H1 Framelet 522. On the left is the highest resolution scanned version available online at LPI (or USGS). On the right is our partially processed version that we retrieved this morning. In addition to providing a much sharper image, note that our new image also allows contrast to be controlled such that features can seen in the areas that are darkened in the older image. More information and high res images.

LaRC internal Poll Update

NASA LaRC Poll: Helping People Feel Attractive and Lovable (#21), earlier post

Reader's note: I believe your posting in regard to this topic and the comments it has generated have missed the mark given that the original reason for this survey as conveyed in the e-mails announcing it has not been included. The real question that should be asked is what in the world does any of this have to do with the "Langley Message?"

Official NASA memo and instructions below:

From: Skora, Mary M. (LARC-H1)
Sent: Tuesday, December 08, 2009 5:37 PM
To: Larc-DL-All
Subject: Let Your Voice Be Heard -- Only 3 more days to complete survey

To: Langley Civil Servants and Contractors

The Langley Story survey will be available for only a few more days. This is your chance to influence the Langley message.

For this external communications program to be most successful and to make sure the story belongs to each of us we need your input. The survey is available online and takes about 15-20 minutes to complete.

1. Go to:

https://surveys.kenexa.com/infinity/Survey/SurveyLogin.asp?s=1455

Click on the link or copy and paste the address into your browser.

2. On the opening screen, type your user name and password:
User name: KCINASA
Password: *******

3. Follow the instructions for completing and submitting the KCI survey.

NOTE: Make sure you have disabled any pop-up blocker.

In Firefox, a yellow warning banner appears at the top that tells you that the browser is preventing a pop-up and to the right gives you the option of allowing it.

In Safari, you don't get any warning. You have to allow pop-ups by deselecting "Block Pop-Up Windows" under the "Safari" menu.

Internet Explorer is working for most employees.

Let your voice be heard. Your participation is critical for this initiative to be meaningful and effective. Please take a moment to complete the survey.

If you have questions about the survey or about this communication initiative, contact Marny Skora at ext. 46121 or by email at marny.skora@nasa.gov.

Coalition for Space Exploration Does a (Much Needed) Reboot

Aerojet's Glenn Mahone and Jacobs Technology's Jeannie Kranz to guide the Coalition for Space Exploration Public Affairs Team in 2010

"Two veteran aerospace communicators will lead the Coalition for Space Exploration's Public Affairs Team in 2010. Aerojet's Glenn Mahone and Jacobs Technology's Jeannie Kranz were recently named the organization's new chair and deputy chair, respectively. Each will serve a one-year term, effective January through December 2010."

New Ways to Use Constellation Stuff

Feasibility of Using Constellation Architecture or Robotic Missions for Servicing Existing and Future Spacecraft

"In conjunction with this RFI, NASA will conduct an open workshop tentatively scheduled for February 16-18, 2010 to bring potential users and providers of on-orbit servicing capabilities together with the NASA study team. The study team will present the notional mission definition process and the first draft of the notional mission suite. RFI responders will have an opportunity to present ideas, technologies and capabilities as well as forecast existing and planned spacecraft/observatories that would benefit from on-orbit serviceability. The study team will then finalize the notional missions based on the RFI responses and the presentations and discussions at this workshop."

SpaceBook Featured by White House

Spacebook (NASA), Open Government Initiative, White house

"Additional Details: Spacebook was launched in June 2009 and now has over 850 users across NASA."

Keith's note: For an agency that has tens of thousands of employees inside the firewall, you (at least) need a zero on this number in order to call it a success - especially when you consider what these employees (and their kids) use out in the real world. Then again, it is a good start. I can clearly recall what it took back in the 80's for my supervisors at NASA to start using email - personally (instead of having their secretaries check it once a week).

Looking at Boulders on the Moon

Keith's note: Tonight we are testing out our newest Mac computer at the Lunar Orbiter Image Recovery Project located at NASA ARC. We'll be using this machine (8 processors and 10 TB of storage) to do near-real time processing of imagery once we have pulled it off of original Lunar Orbiter analog data tapes using our restored FR-900 tape drives. We hope to do a live webcast this coming Thursday so that you can look over our shoulders as we bring another image to light for the first time in more than 40 years.

As we were flying through a portion of one of the images we came across a boulder field. The image was taken by Lunar Orbiter II on 20 Nov 1966 at an altitude of 52.2 miles with a ground resolution of 1.14 meters/pixel. The framelet image shown here is approximately 220 meters across. You can clearly make out a number of boulders around 1 meter in size sitting on the surface.

Hi res images here.

Big Party in The Mojave Tonight

Virgin Galactic unveils SpaceShipTwo, the world's first manned commercial spaceship

"SpaceShipTwo will be unveiled after darkness has fallen over the Mojave Desert to the sound of a space-themed anthem from Britain's biggest DJs, Above & Beyond. Fittingly titled "Buzz" the track will sample Buzz Aldrin's original moon landing dialogue. Following the naming by Governors Richardson and Schwarzenegger, the DJs will also perform an exclusive set at the celebration cocktail party which will follow and feature the first ever IceBar in the desert hosted by Absolut and the world famous Swedish IceHotel. All the guests will be protected from the desert cold by designer space jackets supplied by PUMA. Finally, to close off the celebrations, all the guests will have the opportunity to view the stunning night skies using specialist telescopes supplied by Ron Dantowitz of the Clay Observatory whose unique tracking cameras followed SS1 into space during the epic flights of 2004."

Keith's note: Apparently the festivities were cut short and moved indoors when high winds threatened to rip down the party tents and cold temperatures made the IceBar less than enticing...

... Video after the break

NASA Employee Claims To Have Witnessed Hijacking Planning

NASA Diver Insists Tale Of Porn-Watching Muslim Hijackers Is True, Despite Discrepancies

"There's one other wrinkle to the story: Petruna sent the e-mail out from an account marked "Petruna, Tedd J. (JSC-DX12)[RAYTHEON TECHNICAL SERVICES COMPANY]." Raytheon partners with NASA on the Neutral Buoyancy Lab, where Petruna is a diver. And Petruna told us he works for Raytheon as well as NASA. But Raytheon spokesman Jon Kasle tells TPMmuckraker, "This individual is not a Raytheon employee." Kasle says he's not sure why Raytheon's name is on Petruna's e-mail account, and declined to comment on whether the company is looking into the matter."

AirTran 297- Anatomy of an Urban Legend, AirTran

Keith's note: I really am not sure what to make of this story - but if you go to people.nasa.gov there is a "Petruna, Theodore John" with an email address of tedd.j.petruna -at - nasa.gov and the organizational code JSC-DX12 is what is used for the Neutral Buoyancy Lab at JSC i.e. http://dx12.jsc.nasa.gov/site/index.shtml

Software Aids Design of Ares V Composite Shroud Structure

NASA’s Ares V space launch vehicle makes significant use
of composites, and during flight, the shroud of the Ares V
will separate into four petals to release the Lunar Lander. In
the design of the structure, the aerodynamic pressure on
the shroud is resolved into internally distributed forces. A
combination of two software packages — HyperSizer structural
sizing software and Abaqus FEA (finite element analysis)
software from SIMULIA (Providence, RI) — was used to
model and simulate this process.

Industry Update: Analysis & Simulation Software

Changing Roles in a
Challenging Environment

In our annual poll of executives at leading analysis and simulation software companies, we posed questions
dealing with virtual prototyping, the changing role of the analyst, and how the economic environment is
affecting software users and vendors. Here’s what they had to say about market trends for 2010, and maintaining
competitive advantages in a challenging business market.

Battery Will Provide Backup Power for Space Shuttles

International Battery is building a battery prototype for
NASA that will provide backup power in support of the space
shuttle program. NASA is interested in the company’s largeformat,
high-energy-density prismatic cells that provide
advanced energy storage, as well as their Battery Management
System (BMS). The BMS is specifically designed for large-format
cells and provides increased safety through individual cell
monitoring and continuous cell balancing. The entire system
is being deployed as an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) to
maintain backup power for critical ground operations.

Will White House Speak Soon About NASA?

Lawmakers try to prevent Obama from cutting NASA, Orlando Sentinel

"Congress and the White House have signaled that they envision sharply different futures for NASA and its manned space mission. At an aerospace luncheon, NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden said President Barack Obama wants the agency to embrace "more international cooperation" after the space-shuttle era ends in 2010 and hinted that its Constellation moon-rocket program could see major changes. "We are going to be fighting and fussing over the coming year," Bolden told an audience of aerospace executives and lobbyists Wednesday. "Some of you are not going to like me, because we are not going to do the same kind of things we've always done." But hours earlier, congressional appropriators reached a different conclusion, approving legislative language declaring that any change to Constellation, which aims to return astronauts to the moon by 2020 but is running well behind schedule, must first get the approval of Congress."

Keith's note: Charlie Bolden cancelled a speech that he was supposed to deliver in San Diego today at the last minuute to stay in Washington. All NASA field center directors meet early next week with Bolden. Something is up.

According to a Twitter post by Erika Wagner who attended an appearance by Norm Augustine at MIT last night "Augustine: "I'm told that some of the decision documents are on [Obama's] desk right now"

Making NASA Cool

Recently the NASA Langley Center Leadership Council created a mid-term strategic objective of ‘Making NASA Cool’. They actually set several objectives along this same vein, looking into the merits Participatory Exploration, STEM education and Telling the NASA Story. Teams have been formed to make recommendations to center leadership on what the center, and what the agency can do to work towards these goals.

So far the ‘Making NASA cool’ initiative has hosted a whiteboard session, posted a blog on OpenLaRC seeking recommendations,  and created wiki for ideas on how to communicate the cool things that NASA does on a daily basis to the public. Some of the recommendations are included in the attached presentation, though it is only a start. Comments are welcomed and the feedback will help to craft an action plan of how to move forward.

Engaging JSC’s Next Gen: A Leadership Analysis

A little over 18 months ago, a group of about 30 young professionals at JSC were assembled in a conference room off-site and tasked with developing their own vision for the Center, as well as an associated strategic plan (1 year) to get closer to realizing this vision, over the course of a 2-day workshop. A response to the Gen Y Perspectives presentation that previously made the rounds within the agency, the JSC 20-Year Vision development effort was specifically designed to engage young professionals at the center and allow them to provide their own perspective of where they collectively hoped to see the Center in 20 years.

The team recognized at the end of those two days that its task was daunting enough to need extra work, and so the team members set out to accomplish their task. The result, after a little over a month of diligent work, outlined their vision for the JSC of 2028 and provided 5 suggestions of “immediately” implementable ideas that would, in the end, help realize this vision (presentation can be found in the Documents section of this website).

In recognizing the value of documenting and analyzing the leadership lessons learned throughout this experience, a subset of the team worked to compile the following paper. We are, of course, anticipating updating and adding to this paper as we chat more about our collective experiences. In the mean time, we hope that it can provide some more insight on the activities over the past year and a half and spark some interest in the dynamic leadership model that was utilized by the 20-Year Vision Team.

The paper can be found at the following link: Next Gen at Johnson Space Center - Boldly Expanding the Frontiers of Human Space Exploration

Dumpster Diving for Rockets

Excalibur Almaz has done something cool by using old Russian manned modules and dusting them off to do more missions with them.

According to Wikipedia, there are a few dozen Titan 2 rockets waiting to be scrapped or “turned into monuments” in Tucson Arizona.

How much payload could these send to the moon? Could this be a boon to Google Lunar X-Prize contestants? These can put 277 KG on an escape trajectory. That could get a real lightweight payload to the surface of the moon.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titan_(rocket_family)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGM-25C_Titan_II

What other obsolete rockets are moldering about in warehouses?

TEDx NASA

NASA and the National Institute of Aerospace are excited to be hosting TEDx NASA - a unique day of ingenuity, beauty, passion, innovation, laughter, creativity, sharing and, most importantly, ideas capable of changing the world – ideas worth spreading.

TEDx NASA – Space to Create will be held on November 20, 2009, at the Ferguson Center in Newport News, Virginia.

Please visit tedx-nasa.org for complete details and ticketing information. Tickets will be available to the public on November 14, more information to follow.
“Space to Create” is the perfect platform to explore new ideas, creativity and innovation.  Following the TED (ted.com) model of “riveting talks by remarkable people, free to the world,” TEDx NASA speakers will give ‘the talk of a lifetime’ in 18 minutes or less. This fast paced event will have woven into it shorter talks and entertainment featuring truly unique thinkers, musicians, artists, inventors, research students, and creative-types. A speakers list will be available soon; but, as with all TED events, there will be unannounced special guests.
Event:               TEDx NASA
Web site:          tedx-nasa.org
Theme:             Space to Create – ideas worth spreading
Attendance:     1,700 guests
Date:                November 20, 2009
Location:         Ferguson Center at Christopher Newport University
Time:                Day-long event

This Isn’t Your Typical Conference
This is much more than just putting a group of famous, and not so famous, name speakers on a stage to entertain an audience. TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events modeled after TED conferences. They are about bringing together a unique group of people, presenters and attendees alike, to join in on extraordinary conversations. At a TEDx event, videos and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection. In fact, one of the main reasons to come is to unite with other attendees. It is about passion, laughter, beauty, brilliance, ingenuity, innovation, contribution, and, most importantly, ideas capable of changing the world – ideas worth spreading.

Our Speakers
Our presenters look after some of the Nation’s most valuable assets, teach at some of the best universities, entertain at some of the world’s biggest venues, design some of our most useful products, author inspiring books, research to find solutions to some of our biggest challenges, invent world-changing devices and machines, and create ground-breaking media. They range from rocket scientists to guitar virtuosos. They are a combination of familiar trusted voices and convention-breaking mavericks, icons and geniuses. They will be persuasive, creative, courageous, fascinating, inspiring, ingenious, funny, and informative. We have also sought out some of our local emerging artists, scientists and thinkers, to introduce them to our new TEDx NASA community. For the most part, speakers will stay for the entire event and mingle with the audience.

Our Audience
The TEDx NASA attendees will be just as extraordinary as the speaker line-up; they will include internet pioneers, local technology leaders, movie producers, architects, creative directors, CEOs, entrepreneurs, authors, engineers, investors, celebrities, scientists and leading opinion formers of every kind. Indeed, we expect all 1,700 spaces at the Ferguson Center to be occupied.

Program Structure
This year’s theme for our TEDx NASA event is “Space to Create.” For NASA, the word space has one meaning, for others, space can be a studio or a library, or a city park. Each session will contain a great variety of topics.

In the tradition of TED Talks, some basic speaker guidelines will be followed There will be no keynotes – all speakers are equal. There are no panel discussions, no Q&As, and no podiums. Keeping within the allotted timeframe, speakers will clearly communicate the core message agreed upon with the conference organizers.

Generous breaks will be scheduled between sessions to give the audience time to think about what they’ve seen, and to share their thoughts with other attendees and speakers.

Reflections On a Business Trip in Huntsville

I’m sitting in front of a rusty gate closed by a chain and padlock. Birds are chirping behind me and I hear crickets in the woods on both sides. I feel a peaceful serenity and solitude at the end of this torn up road. In the distance in front of me, beyond the gate and a row of low trees rise two towers of steel webbed girders, adorned with propellant and oxidizer tanks and cranes that look as if they have been caught in a spider’s web waiting to be consumed and sucked dry. I can not see the base of the towers; they are obstructed by different kinds of trees. A low pitched whirr is coming from the base of the towers, perhaps some sort of refrigeration system? A wren calls out. The road that I am on, at the southern end of Redstone Arsenal and the Marshal Spaceflight center, is cracked and the asphalt litters the road in spots with pebbles. A wasp just performed a flyby of my computer screen. Perhaps he wonders why someone has come here to sit on the hood of his car and type into his computer. The wildlife gets louder. Perhaps they are more comfortable now that I have been here for a while. I wonder how the wildlife reacted when the mammoth F-1 engines were tested at this test stand in the 1960s.
This morning, my manager told me that the engineers had not considered the magnitude of the acoustic shock from the engine, and with no suppressing countermeasures, windows for miles around were broken out by the shockwave. That was the first time the engineers working on that engine had operated something so powerful. Perhaps only weaker than the atom bomb, but the F-1 engines sustained continuous explosion, while a nuclear bomb is over in an instantaneous flash.

I hear a clang. The whirring stops. When the airplane overhead moves on, I expect to hear no man made sounds at all. Only the birds and crickets inhabit this place, along with the inanimate man made objects.

Two walkers approach me from behind, and give me a nod. They reach the gate, turn around, and return back down the winding wooded avenue.

30 minutes ago I stood in front of the Jupiter C, Redstone, Saturn 1, Hermes, and V2 rockets lined up in a row about a mile north of where I sit. The Jupiter was riveted together, like a vintage airplane with round rivets that protruded from the metal, unlike modern airplanes where the rivets are flush. It looked like something that was put together a long time ago. These rockets weren’t that big, either. I looked up at the Redstone rocket, which carried Allan Sheppard into his suborbital flight so long ago. I could be on top of that, I thought. It’s not even that tall. I did a full walk around the Jupiter C. The V2 Stood next to the Hermes. It’s comical bulbous pointy shape pointed to the sky. “I aim for the stars” was the name of the movie made about Von Braun. “But sometimes I hit London,” a satirist suggested as an addendum to the title. That V2. Here in Alabama. Far from Penuumbre where it was conceived and manufactured. It came to these woods in Alabama with the designers to show the hunters how to begin the ascendance above the atmosphere. This same machine above me at the time served as a beacon along the trail to the stars, whereas if it had been picked before one of the other V2 rockets in the final days of World War Two at Penuumbre it could have been one of the rockets that killed 168 people at Woolworths in New Cross, London. Its brother V2, which actually struck Woolworths, could be the one standing erect at the Redstone arsenal in 2009. Would it feel survivor’s guilt like the Apollo moon walker Eugene Cernan felt guilt for not being shot at in fighter planes over Vietnam because her was flying in space missions to the moon?

The V2 rocket and Von Braun both came here to Alabama to shake their dark past of fatal slave labor from Jews and merciless arbitrary killing against the people of London. They came to Alabama, with no pretentions about their past, but a dogged determination to make good with the evil gift that had been a mainstay of Nazi desperation in the waning days of World War Two. Still, here at the Redstone armory, both Von Braun and V2 were saddled side by side with the development of the nuclear-carrying ICBM missiles. Hitler had pushed rockets for war in the 1940s, and in the 1960s, Von Braun was not free from the clutches of a country that used every advance in space exploration to further the military technology of missiles.

I pondered on the simple calculations that I had done the night before as I took my propulsion midterm exam. Those formulas that I employed to answer the arbitrary questions, did the engineers who built this hardware really know them much better than I did when they were grappling with the Redstone rocket design? I saw the smooth tubular shell of the rockets. “How complicated is it in there?” I wondered. As I looked carefully, I saw a bird pecking about inside the rocket inside the mesh. That bird was more familiar with the inner workings of the rocket than I was. When I draw my sketches on paper for a homework problem, they are so simple. I know that there are mysteries that the engineers had to discover and uncover as they built these rockets. The unseen intricacies underneath the white painted skin are what has become ingrained in these Alabama hunters. It’s that mystery that has been frozen into these steel webbed towers that rise before me. They wait for us to build again.

I hear a rocket firing to my left. It is still going. Is it an engine? It sounds throttled back. The birds complain, breaking out into shrieks. I still hear the sound. It sounds like metal being dragged across the floor. It sounds like a waterfall.

The rocket is throttled up again. It sounds like sparks flying. It sounds like standing under a shower head, echoed through the hilly wooded countryside. I can’t imagine anything other than a rocket test that could make that noise. Now I hear crows in front of me beyond the trees beginning to caw. Perhaps they have had enough. Or maybe they are going to go and see what I can only imagine as I sit here.

These test stands wait here. They stand ready for America to build new engines, to try new technologies never before built by man. These towers are sleeping giants ready to roar to life with the birth of the engineering artifacts that will carry other men’s dreams, other men’s fears, and other men’s pride forward and upward through the atmosphere to unknown worlds and lands..

Men like Von Braun, who walked this very road countless times from the time that the government brought him here to this army base in 1960 with a mandate to put America on the Moon. Some of the Alabama country folk stopped hunting deer in the forests to start building rockets. They never stopped hunting deer, they just moved to other forests. One of the first things that I heard here in Alabama was when I got my security clearance at the Arsenal entrance: A group of locals were standing outside the security post and one said: “When I was gutting a deer this weekend…” in a deep southern drawl. I smiled as I headed to the rental car. These Alabamans didn’t put down their guns when they picked up their tools to construct this oddity in the universe; this portal to change. Where hunters ascend to Knowers. Doers. Makers. Be-ers.

I sit here, surrounded by birds, the very creatures that moved Wilbur and Orville off the sands of the beach in Kitty Hawk. An airplane flies above me now, a creature of man’s making that further moved men to build spaceships and rockets. I sit in front of the towers with their mechanical whirr (it started up again). The towers are creatures that are moving me to some future transcendence. What is it? I can envision interplanetary voyages, as the Wright brothers and Da Vinci envisioned flight when seeing the birds; as Goddard, Oberth, and Braunn envisioned space travel after seeing the airplanes. I see the current day spaceships, the test stands before me right now… I envision permanent settlement on the Moon and Mars. I envision simplified reliable rockets bringing up satellites, experiments, people, and energy into space. I envision a people who identify themselves not with their country, but with their planet and solar system. I envision knowledge spread among the people.

The walkers return again. The same walkers, dressed in sweatshirts and jeans. How many times do they make this trip? I asked them what the noise was earlier. They didn’t even notice. They told me, in their Alabama accents, about how different parts of the arsenal were used to test army missiles and NASA motors. They didn’t notice the sounds. It is such a regular occurrence to them that it only enters their subconsciousness. Those sounds are as natural to them as the birds and crickets.

I set the laptop down and walk down a small street that comes off the dead end where I sit toward the sound that I heard earlier. Perhaps I will catch a glimpse of the source of the noise. Writing on the back of a receipt that I find in my pocket, I make note of these things: The street is covered with dead tree bits. I pass a white blockhouse with a silent diesel generator installed on the side. The blockhouse can’t be larger than 15 feet by 8 feet. Next to it stands a rusty radio tower, consumed with vines. The old-school antennas atop the tower point toward the source of the sound. In big blue letters 4692 is written on the side of the building. A little further down the road, I meet another rusted gate, this one marked with a small white sign with C-12 painted on it, the paint mostly washed away by years, rain and sun. The padlock is rusted, the barbed wire atop the gate is rusted. An old metal mailbox bolted to the gate has been bent to the point that it no longer closes. I see through the open top that the bottom has been rusted out. What type of letters were delivered here, next to the sign that reads “DANGER: Explosives Keep Away.” Perhaps the neighbors dropped off letters asking the workers to keep down the noise. Perhaps the wives of the engineers dropped off lunch in the little box? The gate itself has had vines growing from one side all the way to the other, only to die years ago. The dead vines now cross through the gate, past the padlock, as if to confirm the prohibition of access and the permanency of closure. The road continues past the gate in a straight line, ending in trees far away. Dead branches from the encroaching forest lay in the path, not even causing enough of a nuisance to warrant removal.

When I return to the car, a different walker passes by. He wears mesh shorts and is listening to headphones. He walks decidedly to the gate and taps the little white “C-18″ sign as a token of reaching the end of his lap. And this is the end of my lap.

This is Huntsville. This is the Redstone Arsenal. This is the Marshal Spaceflight Center.

For me it is, anyway.

As I ready to leave, I hear once again the sound of rushing water, sparks, a metal plate being drug along the ground, or whatever it is.

I guess this place isn’t sleeping after all.

Staying the Course

Anyone who pays half cent’s worth of attention to national news these days will know that NASA is getting more airtime than it normally does.  Generally, NASA and it’s employees are content to remain in the national background where they go about their daily professional lives with minimal intrusion from curious outsiders.  This is both blessing and curse.  While they are allowed a relatively quite environment to go about their brainy work, most people outside of NASA have little to no clue what goes on inside NASA.

It’s funny how being at a crossroads will change things literally over night.

Ever since the HSF Committee (aka Agustine Committee) was officially announced in May of 2009, national attention has been focused on NASA, it’s budget, and how it spends said budget on various projects.  Those who are used to this sort of attention (aka those usually not associated with NASA) know that it’s all apart of the process.  When a federal agency asks for what amounts to a pay raise, folks start taking stock of how well the agency has performed in the past and if such a hike in money is warranted.   This can cause a very large distraction for people working in the agency, especially when they are not used to such scrutiny.

This fact has not gone overlooked by group leads, managers, center directors and the folks at “NASA HQ” in DC.  About once a week or so, we the workers at JSC will get some sort of email/briefing/all-hands-meeting/talking to from various members of management at various levels about “staying the course”.  In short, they are telling us that while we may be looking forward to the future, past shuttle retirement, into ISS-only operations for awhile, and possibly (hopefully) developing and launching a new capability in space, we still have a job to do.  Even though the shuttle program is almost 30 years old, each mission presents it’s own unique challenges and hardships to overcome.  There are still new problems to solve (remember the knurled knob in Atlantis?), astronauts to train, facilities to upkeep, and orbiters to process.  All of this work requires a uniquely high level of devotion and concentration.

Make no mistake about it; launching shuttles is not your run-of-the-mill activity.

But as I sit here in the NBL taking part of STS-129’s last practice for an EVA activity, I’m very aware of the cocoon that seems to surround the astronauts and their trainers.  Sure, everyone is aware that Ares I-X is sitting on the pad just a few miles from Atlantis, but it doesn’t dominate their thinking or their ability to focus on the task at hand.  We are dedicated to the work and readying ourselves for the -129 mission.

And it’s just not the -129 crew and trainers that I noticed.  Everyone I know that trains, or works in MCC as a flight controller are supremely focused on the successful completion of the shuttle program.  Staying the course, it would seem, is definitely not a problem with these folks.