SubscribeYou may have some contempt for those "Luddites", but that's nothing compared to their contempt for the people who decided it was okay to put 72 pounds (not the "six or seven" pounds you erroneously mentioned) of the deadliest substance known to man atop a rocket that has been known to blow up on occasion.
Pardon me if I think that wasn't the brightest move NASA ever made. I don't think that makes me a "Luddite".
True, the post-launch Earth flyby wasn't as dangerous as the launch itself, but it was still worrisome. NASA changed the figures for just how close the probe was supposed to come to the Earth several times. That, combined with recent crash of a Mars probe, didn't exactly inspire people's confidence. I think those "Luddites" were right to be concerned.
posted by Potsy at 3:28 PM on January 1, 2001
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In the outer solar system there isn't enough light from the sun to power a satellite with photocells. So all the satellites which go to the outer system carry nuclear power plants -- in particular, several pounds of refined plutonium, which is constantly warm. They then use that heat to generate electricity which powers the craft. This was true of both Voyager craft, of Galileo (which is at Jupiter now) and of Cassini, on its way to Saturn.
Just before the gravity assist at the Earth, some luddites tried to get a court order to force NASA to change the course of Cassini so that it wouldn't come close to the Earth. Doing so would have destroyed its orbit and aborted the mission. They were afraid that the craft might actually hit the earth, and that its plutonium would be released into the atmosphere -- and apparently that millions of people would have died, or something like that. Given that hundreds of pounds of plutonium are already in the atmosphere from all the atmospheric nuclear tests in the 1950's, it's hard to see how the 6 or 7 pounds in Cassini would make much difference. But the whole issue was moot, because Cassini wasn't going to hit the earth. NASA had the orbit under control.
Fortunately, NASA was able to convince the appropriate federal judge to dismiss the suit before the encounter, and were permitted to make the earth flyby on schedule. It went flawlessly, as expected.
But had certain hyper-suspicious Luddites had their way, this mission would have failed before it began. I get really tired of people who get terrified of anything which has the word "radiation" attached to it.
More on Cassini can be found here.
posted by Steven Den Beste at 11:03 PM on December 30, 2000