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Rationale and Goals of the U.S. Civil Space Program

 

A Joint Space Studies Board and Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board Study

 

Questionnaire for Public Input

Please provide input by January 30, 2009!

 
 
 

Statement of Task

An ad hoc committee will prepare a report to advise the nation on key goals and critical issues in 21st century U.S. civil space policy. The committee will identify overarching goals that are important for our national interest. Issues that are critically important to achieving these goals and ensuring the future progress of the U.S. civil space program will be identified, and options to address unresolved issues will be discussed. Using its best objective judgment and recognizing other national priorities, the committee will explore a possible long term future for U.S. civil space activities that is built upon lessons learned and past successes; is based on realistic expectations of future resources; and is credible scientifically, technically, and politically. The committee will, inter alia –

• review the history of U.S. space policy and propose a broad policy basis for 21st century leadership in space;

• examine the balance and interfaces between fundamental scientific research in space, human space exploration, robotic exploration, earth observations, and applications of space technology and civil space systems for societal benefits;

• assess the role that commercial space companies could play in fulfilling national space goals and the role of the government in facilitating the emergence and success of commercial space companies; and

• highlight options for government attention to address and potentially resolve problems that might prevent achieving key national goals.

Illustrative examples of potential topics for the committee's consideration in the study include the following:

• Near-term and long-term human spaceflight program goals and options for fulfilling them;

• Utility of satellites in understanding global climate change and in advancing geophysical sciences (physical oceanography, solid earth sciences, etc.), and roles and responsibilities of government agencies in such Earth observations;

• Potential opportunities in various space sciences, including planetary missions, space-based astronomy, astrophysical observations, extraterrestrial life searches, assessing planetary bodies in other solar systems, etc.

• Reconciling total program content and total program resources for the civil space program;

• Strength of the U.S. space industrial base;

• Developing advanced technologies for applications in remote sensing and other areas;

• Access to space, availability and cost of U.S. launch vehicles, use of foreign launch capabilities; and

• International cooperation and competition in space programs.

National security space issues will not be a main focus of the report, but may be addressed to the extent that they interact with or impact the civil space program.

 
 
 

Sponsor

This study is sponsored exclusively by The National Academies, and it is not receiving any funds from government agencies or any other external sources.

 
 
 

Give Us Your Comments on this Study

The committee invites you to comment on this study by
filling out a questionnaire. Questions you might consider when framing your input to the committee:

• What should be the rationale and goals for the civil space program?

• How can the civil space program address key national issues?

 
 
 

Upcoming Meeting Dates

Past Meetings

 

November 5-7, 2008, at the National Academies’ Keck Center in Washington, D.C.
--
View the agenda

December 3-5, 2008, at the National Academies’ Keck Center in Washington, D.C.
--
View the agenda

January 13-15, 2009, at the National Academies’ Keck Center in Washington, D.C.
--
View the agenda

 
 
 
 

Committee

 

Lester L. Lyles, chair
The Lyles Group

Joseph A. Burns
Cornell University

 

Raymond S. Colladay, vice chair
Consultant

Pierre Chao
Center for Strategic and
International Studies and the
Renaissance Strategic Advisors

 

Lennard A. Fisk, vice-chair
University of Michigan

Kenneth S. Flamm
University of Texas

 

Jay Apt
Carnegie Mellon University

Joan Johnson-Freese
U.S. Naval War College

 

James B. Armor, Jr.
Consultant and U.S. Air Force [retired]

Paul D. Nielsen
Carnegie Mellon University
Software Engineering Institute

 

Wanda M. Austin
The Aerospace Corporation

Michael S. Turner
University of Chicago

 

David Baltimore
California Institute of Technology

Thomas H. Vonder Haar
Colorado State University

 

Robert Bednarek
President and CEO of SES AMERICOM/NEW SKIES

 
 
 


Staff

 

Joseph Alexander
Study Director

Victoria Swisher
Research Associate

 

Brian Dewhurst
Study Director

Lewis Groswald
Research Associate

 

Carmela Chamberlain
Program Associate

 

This project in the Current Projects system.

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