And accidents have occurred.
In 1964, for example, an American satellite failed and re-entered Earth's atmosphere.
As planned, it jettisoned its nuclear payload, releasing radiation over the
Indian Ocean at an altitude of 75 miles, according to the Bulletin.
In 1973, the Apollo 13 spacecraft carried an RTG to be used to power a seismic
station on the Moon. The mission was aborted and the spacecraft returned to
Earth. The RTG was attached to the lunar module, which broke up on re-entry.
NASA officials say the RTG re-entered intact, with no release of plutonium,
and now sits on the floor of the Pacific Ocean.
In 1978, a Soviet radar reconnaissance satellite malfunctioned and crashed
in Canada's Northwest Territory, releasing thousands of highly radioactive fragments
into a lake and the surrounding area.
No evidence has tied these mishaps to any cancer cases or deaths.
Destination Mars
Still, over the years, political and social pressure from these accidents,
and others in terrestrial nuclear reactors, have combined to compel NASA to
design Mars probes and rovers that rely on solar power.
But for robotic exploration, especially on the surface of a planet far from
the Sun, with nighttime darkness and changing seasons thwarting solar collectors,
nuclear power would be an indisputably more powerful exploration tool.
A stark example of solar power's shortcomings was provided by the successful
Mars Pathfinder mission in 1997, which worked in tandem with the Sojourner rover
to beam back pictures of the surface of Mars. While outlasting its 30-day life
expectancy, the craft's batteries died just shy of three months after landing.
Researchers expected the batteries to die, because they required constant recharging
from the solar panels. Solar energy cannot be used directly, because it fluctuates
so much.
And solar panels are heavy, not to mention complicated to unfurl in space or
on a planet.
How to kill a mission
Bob Anderson, a geologist and mission planner, said in a recent interview at
JPL that the weight of solar panels and their poor performance compared to nuclear
power severely constrain the amount of science that can be done for a given
mission's price tag.
"Two things will kill a mission," Anderson says. "Power and mass."
And future Mars missions will require more of both. A pair of missions in 2003
will send the most advanced and capable rovers ever designed to study Martian
geology and search for signs of water. If there, this water could provide the
trail to any past life that might have existed on the Red Planet.
The craft may be sent inside giant craters, where orbiting spacecraft have
spotted signs of water. But to ensure safety, the spacecraft will land in flat
areas, likely near the crater center.
"But the best information is probably in the rim," Anderson says.
Anderson is helping engineers design rovers that will allow the geologist to
remotely drill into rocks and figure out what they're made of. It is a critical
science tool, but also a tremendously power-draining activity, he said.
Nuclear power could turn short, daytime-only missions into long, 24/7 operations,
Anderson said. He notes, however, that rovers would have to be redesigned to
make all their parts capable of sustaining such a long mission.
Naderi, the JPL manager, worries that Americans have been jaded into assuming
that going to Mars is a relatively simple operation nowadays. But given that
favorable planet alignments limit Mars missions to launching every 26 months,
he laments solar-powered rovers die before the next one can be launched.
"People think [landing on Mars] is like driving to Grandma's on Sunday," Naderi
said. "But it is expensive and it is horribly difficult to land on Mars. Once
you do, you want to last more than 90 days."
Living on the Moon
While nuclear power can improve the efficiency of a rover, some say it is imperative
for more ambitious missions.
An increasingly vocal group of space enthusiasts argues that the post-Apollo
space program is stagnant due to the lack of a major goal. Many think that what's
needed is a firm plan to set up permanent human colonies on the Moon or Mars.
Peter Eckart, of the Institute for Astronautics at the Munich University of
Technology in Germany, says that if a lunar base is to be built anywhere except
at the poles, where sunlight is constant, then "the only reasonable engineering
solution is to go with nuclear power."
Likewise, others say, any future colonization of Mars will likely depend not
just on nuclear electric propulsion, but nuclear power generation on the surface.
Most engineers question whether even the most perfectly situated site can be
sustained by solar power. And at best, these sites would not necessarily be
located where researchers would want to explore.
Despite the benefits of nuclear power, Eckart is not one to discount the dangers.
"I'm personally not too much in favor of using nuclear power on Earth, if we
can avoid it," he said after a recent conference on space colonization at Princeton
University. "But in space, it's not a problem."
Eckart calls the fear of contaminating the lunar surface with radiation "total
nonsense, because up in space there's so much radiation already -- all the galactic
and cosmic radiation, all the stuff that's coming in from the Sun. A nuclear
reactor does not make a difference at all. The only risk is launching it, and
there you have to be careful from an engineering point of view."
Such a system would be launched in safer pieces, then assembled once at its
destination, providing a further measure of safety, proponents say.