NASA
plans to delay the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) nearly two
years, to 2013, to cope with $1 billion in cost growth on the
mission, a senior program official said.
Paul
Geithner, JWST program executive at NASA Headquarters here, said the agency elected
in September to cover the additional costs rather than scale back the mission's
science objectives. The delay, he said, will soften the cost spike's impact on
the lean budget years immediately ahead.
Geithner called the
launch slip "a compromise between what JWST needs and what money is available,
especially during the next two fiscal years."
The mission's estimated
cost remains $4.5 billion, including spacecraft
development, launch and operations, Geithner said in an interview. By delaying
the launch 22 months, and relaxing certain technical requirements for making
low-priority observations at certain wavelengths, NASA believes it can keep the
ultimate price tag close to that level while keeping the mission's science
objectives largely intact, he said.
The latest plan for the infrared observatory,
the designated successor to NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, is expected to be
finalized in April. It is based on the recommendations of a panel of
astronomers dubbed the Science Assessment Team.
"When the cost increase
came along we naturally asked ourselves what de-scope options do we have as a
way to get cost down," Geithner said. "Basically the Science Assessment Team
confirmed that the science case for JWST is at least as strong if not stronger
than it was at the time of the last decadal survey when JWST was ranked No. 1."
The panel effectively nixed drastic
cost-saving measures such as reducing the size of JWST's 6.5-meter mirror or dropping
certain instruments. Instead, the members recommended relaxing some of the observatory's
more-stringent manufacturing specifications that were tied to relatively low-priority
science objectives.
In a related measure, NASA will drop
a short-wavelength tunable filter that
the Canadian Space Agency was going to provide as an enhancement to Webb's Fine
Guidance Sensor. While important to astronomers interested in
very specific wavelengths of light given off by celestial objects, the filter was considered among the lowest of
Webb's science priorities, Geithner said.
Deleting the tunable
filter will not save any money, but it will eliminate about 80
kilograms of mass from the telescope. That is important, Geithner said, given that engineers are trying to keep JWST's weight under 6,200
kilograms.
Geithner said giving up
some of Webb's short-wavelength observing capabilities
also should simplify testing and
validation of the telescope.
While the launch slip
will help NASA avoid big cash infusions on the program in the near term, Geithner
conceded it will not save money in the long term. In fact, he
said, about half of the $1 billion in cost
growth is now attributable to the two-year delay.
"The net result of all
of this is we are not going to get that $1 billion back but we've improved our risk
posture and reduced the likelihood and magnitude of future overruns," Geithner
said.
Because NASA has
decided to absorb the cost increase on Webb, lower-priority astronomy
programs will continue to face budgetary pressure in the years ahead.
"JWST
and the Hubble Space Telescope are really the two biggest things in the
universe division, so they sort of drive what else happens," Geithner said. He acknowledged
there would be "collateral damage"
to other space science missions from the Webb stretch-out.
"It's
mainly SIM," he said, referring to the Space Interferometry Mission, an ambitious
planet-finding observatory that already has had its launch date pushed back at
least once in recent years.
JWST is being designed
and built by Redondo Beach, Calif.-based Northrop Grumman Space Technology, which beat out Lockheed Martin
Space Systems of Denver for the contract in late 2002.
Geithner said Northrop
Grumman's contract, already worth over $1 billion, will grow again in light of
the program changes, but would be specific. A contract modification, he said,
will be negotiated and ready for
signature by the time NASA formally adopts the new JWST plan in April.
Meanwhile,
NASA is awaiting U.S. State Department approval to
conclude a formal agreement with the European Space Agency to launch the Webb
telescope aboard an Ariane 5 rocket.
While
NASA Administrator Mike Griffin signed off in June on the use of the European rocket, Geithner said State is still reviewing the draft memorandum of
understanding NASA intends to take to Europe to cement the deal.
Geithner
said the Ariane launch is "not a done deal" because State has yet to approve
the memorandum that would grant NASA the authority to negotiate with the
European Space Agency. But he added that NASA intends to "pursue the Ariane
offer" put forth by the Europeans.
Geithner said he expects NASA and the
European Space Agency will conclude the launch agreement
by the end of 2006.
Comments:
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