Another of Stephenson's rambling geek-porn asides (which I love, BTW)

Udhay

http://www.slate.com/id/2283469/pagenum/all/

Space Stasis
What the strange persistence of rockets can teach us about innovation.
By Neal Stephenson
Posted Wednesday, Feb. 2, 2011, at 10:02 AM ET

This article arises from Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona
State University, the New America Foundation, and Slate. A Future Tense
conference on whether governments can keep pace with scientific advances
will be held at Google D.C.'s headquarters on Feb. 3-4. (For more
information and to sign up for the event, please visit the NAF Web site.)

The phenomena of path dependence and lock-in can be illustrated with
many examples, but one of the most vivid is the gear we use to launch
things into space. Rockets are a very old invention. The Chinese have
had them for something like 1,000 years. Francis Scott Key wrote about
them during the War of 1812 and we sing about them at every football
game. As late as the 1930s, however, they remained small, experimental,
and failure-prone.

There is no way, of course, to guess how rockets might have developed,
or failed to, were it not for the fact that, during the 1940s, the
world's most technically sophisticated nation was under the absolute
control of a crazy dictator who decreed that vast physical and
intellectual resources should be hurled into the project of creating
rockets of hitherto unimagined size.

These rockets, which were known as V-2s, were worse than useless from a
military standpoint, in the sense that the same resources would have
produced a much greater effect had they been devoted instead to the
production of U-boats or Messerschmitts. Accordingly, the victorious
nations showed only modest interest in their development immediately
following the war. It is reasonable to suppose that little more would
have been done with them, had it not been for another event, happening
at the same time, even more bizarre and incredible than the seizure of
absolute control over a modern nation-state by a genocidal madman. I
refer, of course, to the sudden and completely unexpected development of
nuclear weapons, undertaken over the course of a very few years by a
top-secret crash program atop a mesa in New Mexico.

Atomic bombs turned out to be expensive, dirty, controversial, and of
limited military use (it was difficult to find targets sufficiently
large to be worth using them on). So they might have fizzled out, were
it not for the fact that there just happened to be another victorious
nation, controlled by a dictator, every bit as evil as the V-2 maker,
but not so crazy, who insisted that his nation, the USSR, had to have
atomic bombs too. Moreover, the conditions existing in the USSR then
were such as to enable the development of that bomb in near-perfect
secrecy. The United States could only guess at what the Soviets were
doing; and given the stakes, they naturally tended to make the scariest
guesses possible. The military logic of nuclear warfare forced them to
develop the hydrogen bomb.
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Rockets and H-bombs are made for each other. The rockets of the 1950s
and 1960s were so expensive, and yet so inaccurate, that their only
effective military use was lobbing bombs of inconceivably vast
destructive power in the general direction of large urban areas.

Conversely, because those bombs were so destructive (making it tricky to
drop them out of a manned aircraft without killing the crew) and the
consequences of a first strike so dire, ICBMs—which could be launched
from hardened, dispersed silos, as contrasted with bombers, which must
take off from concentrated, vulnerable air bases—were the best way to
deliver them.

Vast, nation-bankrupting expenditures were now directed to the
development of such rockets. In Dark Sun, Richard Rhodes estimates the
cost of the nuclear weapons and missile programs at $4 trillion in the
United States and the USSR each.

Since the countries were on opposite sides of the planet, the rockets
had to be large enough to throw their payload halfway around the world:
only a small step short of putting payloads into orbit.

The unthinkable destructiveness of nuclear warfare now led the two
superpowers to compete by proxy in other arenas, notably the exploration
of space. Astronauts became heroic figures. Killing them accidentally
became a no-no. A "failure is not an option, price is no object"
mentality became prevalent.

To recap, the existence of rockets big enough to hurl significant
payloads into orbit was contingent on the following radically improbable
series of events:

    1. World's most technically advanced nation under absolute control
of superweapon-obsessed madman

    2. Astonishing advent of atomic bombs at exactly the same time

    3. A second great power dominated by secretive, superweapon-obsessed
dictator

    4. Nuclear/strategic calculus militating in favor of ICBMs as
delivery system

    5. Geographic situation of adversaries necessitating that ICBMs must
have near-orbital capability

    6. Manned space exploration as propaganda competition, unmoored from
realistic cost/benefit discipline

The above circumstances provide a remarkable example of path dependency.
Had these contingencies not obtained, rockets with orbital capability
would not have been developed so soon, and when modern societies became
interested in launching things into space they might have looked for
completely different ways of doing so.

Before dismissing the above story as an aberration, consider that the
modern petroleum industry is a direct outgrowth of the practice of going
out in wooden, wind-driven ships to hunt sperm whales with hand-hurled
spears and then boiling their heads to make lamp fuel.

We move now to the phenomenon of lock-in.

Space travel has not proved nearly as useful to the human race as boys
of my generation were once led to believe, but it does have one
application—unmanned satellites—that is extremely lucrative to the
civilian economy and of the highest imaginable importance to the
military and intelligence worlds.

It is illuminating here, though utterly conjectural, to imagine a
dialog, set in the offices of a large telecommunications firm during the
1960s, between a business development executive and an engineer.

    Biz Dev Guy: We could make a preposterous amount of money from
communications satellites.

    Engineer: It will be expensive to build those, but even so, nothing
compared to the cost of building the machines needed to launch them into
orbit.

    Biz Dev Guy: Funny you should mention that. It so happens that our
government has already put $4 trillion into building the rockets and
supporting technology we need. There's only one catch.

    Engineer: OK, I'll bite. What is the catch?

    Biz Dev Guy: Your communications satellite has to be the size,
shape, and weight of a hydrogen bomb.

As satellites became important, the early H-bomb-hurling rockets were
modified to the point at which they became unrecognizable. A quick scan
of the Wikipedia entry for the Titan rocket family tells the story in
pictures: This machine started out in the late 1950s as an ICBM but, as
the military and economic importance of launching satellites became
obvious, underwent a lengthy series of modifications, evolving beyond
recognition. Similar stories can be told about the Atlas and Thor-Delta
families and some of their Soviet counterparts. Since H-bomb-hurlers,
even heavily upgraded ones, were not big enough to launch large manned
space vehicles such as Apollo, entirely new rocket families such as the
Saturn were developed. So it would be erroneous to suggest that more
recent satellite designers have been limited by the H-bomb form factor
in the way that they might have been at the dawn of the Space Age.

That is not, however, the most important way that rockets generate
lock-in. In order to understand this, it's necessary to know a few
things about (1) the physical environment of rocket launches, (2) the
economics of the industry, and (3) the way it is regulated, or, to be
more precise, the way it interacts with government.

1. The designer of a rocket payload, such as a communications satellite,
has much more to worry about than merely limiting the payload to a given
size, shape, and weight. The payload must be designed to survive the
launch and the transition through various atmospheric regimes into outer
space. As we all know from watching astronauts on movies and TV, there
will be acceleration forces, relatively modest at the beginning, but
building to much higher values as fuel is burned and the rocket becomes
lighter relative to its thrust. At some moments, during stage
separation, the acceleration may even reverse direction for a few
moments as one set of engines stops supplying thrust and atmospheric
resistance slows the vehicle down. Rockets produce intense vibration
over a wide range of frequencies; at the upper end of that range we
would identify this as noise (noise loud enough to cause physical
destruction of delicate objects), at the lower range, violent shaking.
Explosive bolts send violent shocks through the vehicle's structure.
During the passage through the ionosphere, the air itself becomes
conductive and can short out electrical gear. Enclosed spaces must be
vented so that pressure doesn't build up in them as the vehicle passes
into vacuum. Once the satellite has reached orbit, sharp and intense
variations in temperature as it passes in and out of the earth's shadow
can cause problems if not anticipated in the engineering design. Some of
these hazards are common to all things that go into space, but many are
unique to rockets.

2. If satellites and launches were cheap, a more easygoing attitude
toward their design and construction might prevail. But in general they
are, pound for pound, among the most expensive objects ever made even
before millions of dollars are spent launching them into orbit.
Relatively mass-produced satellites, such as those in the Iridium and
Orbcomm constellations, cost on the order of $10,000/lb. The
communications birds in geostationary orbit—the ones used for satellite
television, e.g.—are two to five times as expensive, and ambitious
scientific/defense payloads are often $100,000 per pound. Comsats can
only be packed so close together in orbit, which means that there is a
limited number of available slots—this makes their owners want to pack
as much capability as possible into each bird, helping jack up the cost.
Once they are up in orbit, comsats generate huge amounts of cash for
their owners, which means that any delays in launching them are terribly
expensive. Rockets of the old school aren't perfect—they have their
share of failures—but they have enough of a track record that it's
possible to buy launch insurance. The importance of this fact cannot be
overestimated. Every space entrepreneur who dreams of constructing a
better mousetrap sooner or later crunches into the sickening realization
that, even if the new invention achieved perfect technical success, it
would fail as a business proposition simply because the customers
wouldn't be able to purchase launch insurance.

3. Rockets—at least, the kinds that are destined for orbit, which is
what we are talking about here—don't go straight up into the air. They
mostly go horizontally, since their purpose is to generate horizontal
velocities so high that centrifugal force counteracts gravity. The
initial launch is vertical because the thing needs to get off the pad
and out of the dense lower atmosphere, but shortly afterwards it bends
its trajectory sharply downrange and begins to accelerate nearly
horizontally. Consequently, all rockets destined for orbit will pass
over large swathes of the earth's surface during the 10 minutes or so
that their engines are burning. This produces regulatory and legal
complications that go deep into the realm of the absurd. Existing
rockets, and the launch pads around which they have been designed, have
been grandfathered in. Space entrepreneurs must either find a way to
negotiate the legal minefield from scratch or else pay high fees to use
the existing facilities. While some of these regulatory complications
can be reduced by going outside of the developed world, this introduces
a whole new set of complications since space technology is regulated as
armaments, and this imposes strict limits on the ways in which American
rocket scientists can collaborate with foreigners. Moreover, the rocket
industry's status as a colossal government-funded program with seemingly
eternal lifespan has led to a situation in which its myriad contractors
and suppliers are distributed over the largest possible number of
congressional districts. Anyone who has witnessed Congress in action can
well imagine the consequences of giving it control over a difficult
scientific and technological program.

Dr. Jordin Kare, a physicist and space launch expert to whom I am
indebted for some of the details mentioned above, visualizes the result
as a triangular feedback loop joining big expensive launch systems;
complex, expensive, long-life satellites; and few launch opportunities.
To this could be added any number of cultural factors (the engineers
populating the aerospace industry are heavily invested in the current
way of doing things); the insurance and regulatory factors mentioned
above; market inelasticity (cutting launch cost in half wouldn't make
much of a difference); and even accounting practices (how do you
amortize the nonrecoverable expenses of an innovative program over a
sufficiently large number of future launches?).

To employ a commonly used metaphor, our current proficiency in
rocket-building is the result of a hill-climbing approach; we started at
one place on the technological landscape—which must be considered a
random pick, given that it was chosen for dubious reasons by a
maniac—and climbed the hill from there, looking for small steps that
could be taken to increase the size and efficiency of the device. Sixty
years and a couple of trillion dollars later, we have reached a place
that is infinitesimally close to the top of that hill. Rockets are as
close to perfect as they're ever going to get. For a few more billion
dollars we might be able to achieve a microscopic improvement in
efficiency or reliability, but to make any game-changing improvements is
not merely expensive; it's a physical impossibility.

There is no shortage of proposals for radically innovative space launch
schemes that, if they worked, would get us across the valley to other
hilltops considerably higher than the one we are standing on now—high
enough to bring the cost and risk of space launch down to the point
where fundamentally new things could begin happening in outer space. But
we are not making any serious effort as a society to cross those
valleys. It is not clear why.

A temptingly simple explanation is that we are decadent and tired. But
none of the bright young up-and-coming economies seem to be interested
in anything besides aping what the United States and the USSR did years
ago. We may, in other words, need to look beyond strictly U.S.-centric
explanations for such failures of imagination and initiative. It might
simply be that there is something in the nature of modern global
capitalism that is holding us back. Which might be a good thing, if it's
an alternative to the crazy schemes of vicious dictators. Admittedly,
there are many who feel a deep antipathy for expenditure of money and
brainpower on space travel when, as they never tire of reminding us,
there are so many problems to be solved on earth. So if space launch
were the only area in which this phenomenon was observable, it would be
of concern only to space enthusiasts. But the endless BP oil spill of
2010 highlighted any number of ways in which the phenomena of path
dependency and lock-in have trapped our energy industry on a hilltop
from which we can gaze longingly across not-so-deep valleys to much
higher and sunnier peaks in the not-so-great distance. Those are places
we need to go if we are not to end up as the Ottoman Empire of the 21st
century, and yet in spite of all of the lip service that is paid to
innovation in such areas, it frequently seems as though we are trapped
in a collective stasis. As described above, regulation is only one
culprit; at least equal blame may be placed on engineering and
management culture, insurance, Congress, and even accounting practices.
But those who do concern themselves with the formal regulation of
"technology" might wish to worry less about possible negative effects of
innovation and more about the damage being done to our environment and
our prosperity by the mid-20th-century technologies that no sane and
responsible person would propose today, but in which we remain trapped
by mysterious and ineffable forces.


Neal Stephenson is an author of science fiction and historical fiction,
and a lifelong rocket lover. He lives in Seattle.
-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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