Two public sessions today will focus on Mars mission
BY JOHN KELLY
FLORIDA TODAY
CAPE CANAVERAL - A sophisticated science laboratory bound for Mars will draw its electrical power either from a nuclear generator or solar arrays, and local residents this week can weigh in on NASA's choice.
The space agency plans two public hearings today on the potential danger of launching the Mars Science Laboratory with a plutonium-powered generator, which is NASA's preferred method of powering the craft.
Launch of the big Mars rover is set for sometime between September and November 2009 on an Atlas 5 rocket.
Safety studies by NASA and the Department of Energy show there is a 1 in 420 chance of an accident early in the flight resulting in a release of radioactive material over communities near Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
Two public hearings, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. today, will give area residents a chance to hear NASA's explanation of the mission, the dangers and the safety measures being taken by the government.
The three-hour sessions at the Florida Solar Energy Center in Cocoa also include time for people to speak in support of or opposition to the launch of the new Mars rover.
The nuclear generator is similar to ones launched on past space missions, including the launch earlier this year of the New Horizons probe bound for Pluto and the 1997 launch of the Cassini probe now orbiting Saturn. Public hearings are a routine step in the government's effort to inform the public and get feedback before launch.
In the past, such missions have prompted protests of varying size and intensity. Anti-nuclear protestors protesters have argued against the mission on the basis that the danger to the public is too great and that the science purposes touted by the space agency are a cover for plans to test technologies that could ultimately become nuclear space weaponry.
"Time will likely prove us to be right as we say that fabricating and launching nuclear power is too much of a risk and danger to this planet," said Bruce K. Gagnon, who is the leader of an anti-nuclear peace organization that has repeatedly protested such launches. Gagnon said in an e-mail interview that his group would fight this launch, too.
Past protests have not stopped NASA from launching probes carrying the plutonium power plants, which are called Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator. The device generates electricity that powers the spacecraft's science instruments, communications tools and other systems on the surface of Mars.
NASA has a backup plan to outfit the Mars Science Lab with solar arrays to do the same job if it is ultimately deemed that the nuclear generator should not be used. Doing so would require the addition of some smaller nuclear-powered heating devices, but those would carry a fraction of the plutonium and pose substantially less risk.
The plutonium fuel is not the highly explosive kind used in weapons. It is a different grade that is only dangerous to people if reduced to fine dust, and the generator itself is designed to make sure that does not happen. The generators are subjected to intense testing to make sure they will hold up to violent rocket explosions. Pellets of plutonium, much like ceramic, are designed not to break up even if they somehow escape the generator in a mishap.
The biggest danger for Brevard residents comes from an accident on the launch pad or within a minute after liftoff. Studies found once the rocket arcs out over the ocean, there is no chance of a plutonium release if it crashed into the water.
If there is an accident, people living near the launch site would be told to take shelter inside buildings until government detection teams determine whether there was a radioactive release and whether residents are at risk.
COCOA - A power generator that uses plutonium dioxide would give a 2009 Mars rover more freedom to explore questions about life and water on the red planet, NASA officials said in a hearing today.
In two sessions at the Florida Solar Energy Center on Wednesday, they gave the public a chance to comment on a draft statement on the potential dangers of a launch accident. The Mars Science Laboratory would ride a Lockheed Martin Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral.
Less than a half percent of launches would have the potential to release radiological material, they said.
"The risks from this mission would be low," said Mark Dahl, NASA program executive for the mission.
They received only one comment during the afternoon session
, from engineering consultant John Martin of Indialantic.
"This thing seems to be super safe as far as actually releasing any kind of radiation," he said. "I hardly see any possibility."
Engineers and scientists want to use the generator, instead of solar power, so the roving laboratory can go to areas where there might be less sunlight and more slopes to climb.
Otherwise, the mission would be limited to a narrow latitude band on Mars.
"That certainly would limit us fairly significantly in being able to pick a very scientifically interesting site," said project manager Richard Cook of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.
"I feel comfortable when we go through these kind of things," Brevard County emergency management chief Bob Lay said. "I would not feel comfortable if we didn't do this. This lets me see what kinds of problems it might present for the county and then to look at those kinds of problems and address those problems with some of the people here that are leaders in this field in the nation."
The rovers now on Mars are about the size of golf carts. The Mars Science Laboratory will be closer to Mini Cooper size, Cook said.
"It's just taking a step forward, not only scientifically, but technically," Cook said.
It will include instruments that can identify chemicals that form the basis of life.
"We want to understand if Mars has these chemicals present that life seems to need and makes use of," said deputy project scientist Ashwin Vasavada.
The craft would launch in fall 2009 and arrive at Mars in 10 to 12 months. It would be the first to use a Skycrane landing system, in which a flying descent module lowers the rover to the surface with wires.
The twin rovers, meanwhile, are still exploring, long after their early 2004 arrival at Mars. Wednesday, Opportunity made it to the highly anticipated Victoria Crater after a nearly two-year quest.