Sarevok wrote:I am not saying Astronauts lives are expendable. That simply is not true. Astronauts are some of the most valuable and respected people in the world. But at same time consider what happens each time an accident or disaster happens. The entire manned space flight program is grounded for years. In the future if humans are serious about spaceflight there will be a lot of rocket launches. There will be regular accidents and many people will perish despite the best efforts. Yet despite deaths and tragedy spaceflight must go on. But in present climate learning from accidents and moving on seems to have become a thing of the past. If a future US or European manned spacecraft blows up you are certainly looking at years of soul searching before anyone even proposes a follow up mission.
The entire purpose for the suspensions of manned spaceflight (the longest being the 32 month period following the loss of the
Challenger, BTW) after each accident is to reduce the chances of another accident. Spaceflight in the present time is not like air travel: astronauts represent not only operational personnel but also walking storehouses of operational experience vital to the functioning of NASA, and these are very expensive pieces of machinery that are being sent up. Determining the technical and managerial failures behind an accident are not mere "soul searching", but a painstaking process to find answers.
As for "learning from accidents and moving on" being "a thing of the past", you're babbling. In the wake of Apollo 1, no space capsule, or shuttle, went up with a pure oxygen mix for cabin atmosphere and materials which could flash-burn in oxygen as well as metals prone to collecting static charges were removed. After
Challenger, a new SRB O-ring design and a new set of strict protocols for scrubbing a launch under cold-weather conditions were set in place. After
Columbia, new protocols for the coating of the external tank with its foam insulation combined with video monitoring during launch for breakaway material were set in place. Additional measures to examine wing surfaces for damage were also instituted. As a result of what you call "soul searching", lessons are indeed being learned and manned flight continues, despite tragedy, and each of those accidents has not been repeated: there has not been a second loss of vehicle due to O-ring embrittlement from cold weather (24 years), and there certainly has not been another space cabin fire due to the use of a pure-oxygen atmosphere (43 years). Nor have we suffered another shuttle loss due to wing damage from a debris impact (7 years).
So in future, do please spare us from goofy-talk about "burying our heads in the sand" and "soul searching" because it was decided to actually investigate the causes of accidents in order to correct them, during the course of a manned spaceflight programme that has only seen three fatal and one non-fatal but life-threatening incidents in nearly fifty years of mission experience —for the very reason that the accidents that did occur were investigated.