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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions (2011)
Space Studies Board (SSB)

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. "Appendix C: Characteristics of NASA's Recent Interagency Collaborations." Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2011.

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions

C
Characteristics of NASA’s Recent Interagency Collaborations

Table C.1 shows a side-by-side comparison of some of the key attributes of selected recent interagency collaborative efforts that were reviewed by the committee. In addition to the type of collaboration and governance structure, the committee noted whether the collaboration was directed by Congress or the administration or whether it emerged in a more spontaneous fashion from the agencies and scientists themselves.

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions C Characteristics of NASA’s Recent Interagency Collaborations Table C.1 shows a side-by-side comparison of some of the key attributes of selected recent interagency collaborative efforts that were reviewed by the committee. In addition to the type of collaboration and governance structure, the committee noted whether the collaboration was directed by Congress or the administration or whether it emerged in a more spontaneous fashion from the agencies and scientists themselves.

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions TABLE C.1 Selected Recent Interagency Collaborative Efforts   NPOESSa OSTM/Jason-2 Fermi/GLAST JDEM/Omega Nation(s) Involved United States United States, France United States United States Type of Collaboration Cooperation Coordination (NASA-NOAA) Cooperation Cooperation   Cost-sharing (NOAA, DOD)         CNES: bus, 2 instruments, launch and early orbit phase (LEOP), and checkout   NASA: telescope, main science instrument, spacecraft bus   Technology infusion (NASA)         DOE: fabrication of major science instrument, development of science operations center     NASA: 3 instruments, launch services       NOAA/EUMETSAT: ground segment   Agencies Involved NOAA, DOD, NASA NASA, NOAA, EUMETSAT, CNES NASA, DOE NASA, DOE Governance Structure Integrated Program Office (IPO) for NPOESS Developed by NASA, CNES and operated by NOAA, EUMETSAT NASA: project office, instruments NASA: lead agency responsible for overall success of the mission       DOE: instruments           DOE: science and operations contribution Project/Program Program—multiple spacecraft Single project Single project Single project Directed/Organicb Directed (executive order) Organic Organic Directed

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions GOES-R Landsat 7 LDCM C/NOFS ACE United States United States United States United States United States Procurement of services Coordination Coordination Coordination Use of resources   NASA: development and launch of the spacecraft; development of the ground system NASA: development and launch of the spacecraft; development of the ground system   NASA: spacecraft and instruments NOAA: provides direct oversight for the GOES-R program, flight and ground segment   NOAA: small ($680,000) contribution to modify the ACE spacecraft and enable 24-hour continuous transmission of real-time data on the solar wind   USGS: operates the satellite and captures, processes, and distributes the data and is responsible for maintaining the data archive USGS: operation of the satellite and responsible for a ground system to receive, ingest, archive, calibrate, process, validate, and distribute LDCM science data   NASA: procurement, management, and execution of the flight project in accordance with overall NOAA guidance       DOD: Air Force ground stations NASA, NOAA Development: NASA, NOAA, USGS NASA, USGS Joint USAF Space Test Program (STP) and Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL); participation by NASA, NRL, universities, federally funded research and development centers NASA, NOAA, DOD   Operations: NASA, USGS     Developed by NASA for NOAA on a cost-reimbursable basis NASA: spacecraft, instrument, and ground system NASA: development of spacecraft STP: spacecraft, launch vehicle, launch and first year of on-orbit operations Managed by NASA     USGS: development and operation of the ground system     NOAA: spacecraft and ground systems operations and functions     AFRL: payload, payload integration and test, model development, data center operations, and product generation and distribution     USGS: Landsat data distribution and archiving           NASA: CINDI instrument   Single project Single project Single project Single project Single project Organic Directed Directed Organic Organic

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions   NPOESSa OSTM/Jason-2 Fermi/GLAST JDEM/Omega Year Started 2006 (spacecraft development) 2002 September 2000 (SRR) 2010 (Phase A) Launch (or Launch Readiness Date) 2014 (C-1) June 2008 2006 (ICRR, 2001) June 2008 (actual) 2017 Number of Spacecraft Originally 6, now 4 (not including NPP) 1 1 1 Number of Instruments 7 (C-1), 8 (FOC) 5 2 1 Initial Budget   $76 million (no LV, NASA only, March 2006) $76 million (no LV, NASA only, at launch) $454 million FY 2006 (ICRR, 2001) ~$900 million (FY 2009) Budgetary Outcome Significant overrun; program descoped: $6.8 billion through C1, $8 billion through C2 Met launch date on budget $508 million FY 2006 (at launch) Not yet selected Motivation for Collaboration at the Outset Cost: “eliminate the financial redundancy of acquiring and operating polar-orbiting environmental satellite systems, while continuing to satisfy U.S. operational requirement for data from these systems” Third in partnership; continue measurement record Similar science goals: GLAST draws on the interest of both the high-energy particle physics and high-energy astrophysics communities and is the highest ranked initiative in its category in the NRC 2000 decadal survey reportd Science goals are high priority to both organizations; leverage each agency’s expertise

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions GOES-R Landsat 7 LDCM C/NOFS ACE September 2004 (instrument development) October 2005 (preliminary spacecraft design) 1993 (SRR) 2007 At least 2000 1991 April 2015 (GAO, 2009)c 1998 (1993) instrument power supply failures during thermal/vacuum testing; 1999 (actual) 2011 (ICR, 2008) 2012 (PDR, 2009) 2003 (2001) 1997     February 2006 (October 2005) solar panel (18-month delay) and EMI probes; rebuilt harness April 2008 (actual)   2 1 1 1 1 4 1 Originally 1, now 2 6 9 $6.6 billion   $652 million (ICR, 2008)   Total cost for Phase C/D through launch plus 30 days of checkout not to exceed $141.1 million (in real-year dollars) $7.67 billion (GAO, 2009)c significant overrun; program descoped from 4 satellites/5 sensors to 2 satellites/4 sensors $718 million (at launch, includes $212 million DOD, $6.5 million USGS) Still in development, has overrun; USGS funding shortfalls have impacted ground system Combined cost of satellite development and construction, the Pegasus rocket, and the 13 months of in-space operations total about $135 million (at launch); solar panel design issues slowed the program; instrument RF sensitivities created technical challenges Final project cost $106.8 million, a $34.3 million under-run NOAA: procurement of next-generation GOES spacecraft Latest partnership to continue decades-long record of moderate-resolution measurements of the land surface (see text for details) NSTC directed collaboration to maintain continuity of Landsat-type data for civil, commercial, and national security interests NASA: science payload access to space as mission of opportunity Merging of NASA research interests with NOAA and Air Force operational needs for real-time data on the upstream solar wind and forecast and warning of severe space weather events NASA: Possible transition of GIFTS instrument to advanced sounder for GOES-R   DOD: means to expand scope of mission through hosting NASA-funded payload; support operational users of space weather information

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions   NPOESSa OSTM/Jason-2 Fermi/GLAST JDEM/Omega Primary Sources for the Committee’s Analysise See in the main text references cited in the section “NASA-NOAA Interagency Collaboration.” See in the main text references cited in the section “Coordination Example: Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason-2.” See in the main text references cited in the section “The Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope Mission.” See in the main text references cited in the section “The Joint Dark Energy Mission.” a As noted in the text, on February 1, 2010, it was announced that the NPOESS program would be restructured into two separate lines of polar-orbiting satellites to serve military and civilian users. Information in this table refers to the NPOESS program prior to the restructuring. b “Organic” and “directed” are used here to distinguish between agency collaborations that arise mostly from the normal self-interests of the agencies and in which efforts are made to align the structure with normal agency practices and culture (partnerships arise from the bottom up) versus collaborations that arise from external demands, for example, to meet a political objective beyond the agency’s own self-interests or to meet a mission requirement that is externally imposed (partnerships arise from the top down). c Government Accountability Office (GAO), “Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites, GAO Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Energy and Environment, Committee on Science and Technology, House of Representatives, Statement of David A. Powner, Director, Information Technology Management Issues,” GAO-09-596T, April 23, 2009. d National Research Council, Astronomy and Astrophysics in the New Millennium, The National Academies Press, Washington, D.C., 2010. e For all missions and especially for NPOESS, Fermi/GLAST, and JDEM/Omega, the committee also drew on the substantive knowledge and first-hand experiences of its members. f National Research Council, Ensuring the Climate Record from the NPOESS and GOES-R Spacecraft: Elements of a Strategy to Recover Measurement Capabilities Lost in Program Restructuring, The National Academies Press, Washington, D.C., 2008, available at http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=12254.

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Assessment of Impediments to Interagency Collaboration on Space and Earth Science Missions GOES-R Landsat 7 LDCM C/NOFS ACE NRC (2008)f See in the main text references cited in the section “The Landsat Program.” See in the main text references cited in the section “The Landsat Program.” Interview with Roderick Heelis, principal investigator for CINDI See in the main text references cited in the section “Use of Resources Example: Space Weather Data from the Advanced Composition Explorer.”