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INSIDE JPL Part 4: Incredible Shrinking Spacecraft
posted: 07:00 am ET
08 August 2001

Untitled Document

Too many rules, staff cuts and radically altered goals put NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory on a course destined for failure. Each Wednesday, go inside JPL and learn what works, what doesn't, and what's being done to rejuvenate the robotics institute.

THIS WEEK'S STORIES
STORIES FROM WEEK 1
Mission Impossible
Charles Elachi's Vision

The new director wants to remake JPL, saving what works and tossing out anything that stands in the way of doing the really tough missions. But he'll need the courage to take risks and accept failures. Find out what Elachi has planned.

Powering the Future
Soup-Can Spacecraft
and Postage-Stamp Engines

Take a hundred soup-can sized spacecraft, toss them into the rings of Saturn, and expect a third of them to crash and burn. They're cheap, so you can afford to lose a few. That's one of many dreams of John Brophy and his colleagues in JPL's ion propulsion lab. Brophy left JPL for greener pastures. Twice. And he returned both times to "do cool things."

Dark Times
Hope on the Heels of Failure
JPL management embarks on torturous change in an effort to emerge from "the darkest time." Go inside JPL, learn what makes the place tick, what fueled a recent exodus of talent, and what is being done to win back the glory.

Tales of the RAT Man
A History and Future
of Mars Rovers

Before you send a robot to explore Mars, you have to teach it to be a geologist. That's what the RAT Man does. And he can't imagine working anywhere else. The reason is simple: "I come to work and I play with toys."


STORIES FROM WEEK 2
STORIES FROM WEEK 3

Shoot From the Hip
A History of Rocket Science

The guys who set off the first rockets that led to the formation of JPL earned their name: Suicide Squad. In the old days, if you had a good idea, you did it. Herman Bank, now 84, remembers a time when scientists took risks "that we wouldn't do these days."

Vital Signs
Wrestling With a Wearable HAL
Except for its dark side, Space Odyssey's HAL 9000 was a marvel of human assistance yet to be achieved in real life. Ann Devereaux wants to put the best of HAL into a wearable computer that will give astronauts the vital signs of their spacecraft and their own bodies. In taking the pulse of JPL, she worries it is losing some of its romance.

Lessons to Learn
JPL and The Competition

As JPL struggles to adjust to the new world of "faster, better, cheaper," a small and nimble competitor says it's been doing business that way for decades. Can JPL learn from APL?

Tomorrow's Telescope
Wish Upon a Fake Star

Working on a mission that may or may not fly, Gary Blackwood and colleagues cobble together off-the-shelf parts to develop a fake star. Like any JPL team, they're in a race against time and money to sell their concept: a pair of novel telescopes that would fly in formation to explore distant stars and set the stage for a mission to find Earth-like planets.


About this series
Over four Wednesdays, SPACE.com takes you inside JPL to see what's right, what's wrong and what's changing.

Each week, you'll meet a technologist who plays with a cool toy. And each week, you'll learn about the organizanation that is struggling to regain its spirit and craft a new vision for exploring the universe.


Inside JPL was written and produced by Robert Roy Britt
and edited by Robin Lloyd.
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