April 03, 2006 —
He left his boot prints and an American flag on the moon 36 years
ago, but he brought back new insights into space travel to the moon and
beyond. On March 29, 2006, legendary Apollo 11 astronaut Edwin E.
“Buzz” Aldrin Jr. shared those insights with USC students and faculty
in the USC Viterbi School's Astronautics and Space Technology Division
lecture to celebrate 100 years of engineering at USC.
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| Buzz
Aldrin addresses astronautics students and staff at a Viterbi School
centennial lecture entitled "To the Moon and Beyond." Photo by
Brian Morri. |
In a lecture entitled, “To the Moon and Beyond,” Aldrin, the second
human being to walk on the moon, laid out a long-term plan to return
Americans to the moon and make space travel to Mars routine.
“Apollo 11 symbolized the success of our program to send humans to the
moon,” he said, “but to reignite public support for space, this country
needs to make a long-term commitment to establishing a permanent
presence in space…and we need the will to do it.”
A familiar face to engineering and architecture graduate students,
Aldrin has been visiting the campus on final exam day for two years now
to critique ASTE 527 (Space Exploration Architectures Concepts
Synthesis Studio) class projects. Each fall semester, the students are
challenged to present designs for moon and Mars transportation systems,
habitats, roving vehicles, spacesuits, and communications
systems. The course is taught by Madhu Thangavelu, a studio
conductor and longtime aerospace industry consultant, and it’s always
full.
Aldrin’s dedication to space exploration hasn’t wavered in the
years since Apollo. Nor has his worldwide reputation as one of only 12
human beings ever to have walked on the moon. That moon-walking
fame has kept him in the forefront of many debates over the
Moon-to-Mars initiative. He’s written books and technical papers
on the subject, and given thousands of talks all over the world. In
fact, it’s hard to keep up with his activities.
Today he oversees a rocket design company, Starcraft Enterprises in
Laguna Beach, CA, holds a patent for a space station design, sits on
the boards of many space R&D companies, and runs a nonprofit space
foundation, the ShareSpace Foundation, which is devoted to space
tourism.
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Aldrin with USC astronautics faculty and students in Davidson Conference Center. Photo by Brian Morri.
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Space Tourism
He called space tourism “essential to getting
people behind our programs of exploration,” but said the Russians are
making more headway than the U.S. with the “Clipper” spacecraft.
“I’m afraid that if we don’t finance it, somebody else will, and while
we’re sending capsules and landers to the moon, they’ll be taking over
tourism in low-Earth orbit and going to our space station,” he said.
Part of the problem lies in the country’s short-sighted goals for space.
“We’re focusing too much on short-term interests that suit contractors
rather than visions of evolving a human spaceflight capability beyond
low-Earth orbit,” he said. Among many alternatives, Aldrin’s
company has investigated some new reusable launch vehicle designs that
would bring down costs and increase the reliability of rockets.
Starcraft Enterprises has also developed blueprints for crew vehicles
that are based on designs derived from a Russian BOR-4 mini-shuttle.
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Aldrin salutes the American flag that he's just set up on the moon on July 20, 1969. |
“Nobody’s going to build a 60-person spacecraft,” he
said. “NASA doesn’t need it and the private sector can’t afford
it, but we have six-person spacecraft, so the only answer is to put
five or six spacecraft on a big rocket, at least that’s my guess right
now. We can’t have a program of tourism just for the wealthy.”
While space tourism begins to take hold, Aldrin believes the country
should initiate a Moon-to-Mars program and start sending astronauts
back to the moon. But unlike the Apollo program, the moon should
be treated as a jumping-off point only, rather than a final
destination. From the moon, payloads and people could go on to
Mars.
Aldrin Cyclers
Aldrin devised a transportation system of “cyclers” back in the
mid-1980s to continuously shuttle cargo and passengers between Earth
and Mars. More recently, he joined forces with universities such
as Purdue, MIT and the University of Texas to design these vehicles.
Cyclers would take advantage of gravity assists to gain momentum and
make periodic flybys of Earth and Mars. “Taxi” vehicles carrying
cargo and passengers could rendezvous with these orbiting spacecraft
for trips to both planets. Aldrin believes that NASA’s next generation
space shuttle, the new Crew Exploration Vehicle, could be used as a
taxi for the cyclers.
Aldrin’s interest in space transportation systems goes back to his
graduate student days at MIT. He grew up around aviation,
with a father who studied rocketry under Robert Goddard. After
earning a bachelor’s degree with honors in 1951 from the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, New York, he entered the U.S. Air Force and
earned his pilot’s wings. Between 1950 and 1953, he flew 66 F-86 combat
missions in the Korean War and shot down two MiG 15s. Later he
entered MIT to study “piloted rendezvous” — bringing two spacecraft
into close proximity with each other — and wrote his thesis on
“Guidance for Manned Orbital Rendezvous.”
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In lunar orbit aboard Apollo 11. |
In 1963, NASA selected him for the third group of
astronauts. He was the first astronaut to have a Ph.D., so he
quickly earned the nickname Dr. Rendezvous. But during his Gemini
12 flight in November 1966, Aldrin’s rendezvous abilities were put to
the test: an onboard radar failed, forcing him to manually recompute
all of Gemini’s rendezvous maneuvers.
Lunar Orbit Rendezvous
Aldrin’s expertise helped his Apollo training as well. He praised a
behind-the-scenes engineer at Langley Research Center in Hampton, VA,
for coming up with the idea of a “lunar orbit rendezvous” (LOR) for the
Apollo flights. Later, he got involved in the first test flights in
which two astronauts in a Lunar Module separated from the third
astronaut in the Lunar Command and Service Modules. The
engineer’s name was John Houbolt and his LOR strategy made the Apollo
11 moon walk possible.
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Daedalus Crater, seen from the window of Apollo 11. |
During the lecture, Aldrin recounted some of the humorous
moments of Apollo 11, such as the difficulty he had stretching out the
American flag and standing it upright in the ground. Although the
top inch or so of lunar soil was soft, subsurface layers were hard and
compressed, making it difficult to hammer the flagpole more than five
or six inches into the ground.
“Absolutely, there’s no doubt about it, Apollo 11 had the
best looking flag on the moon, until we lifted off and it blew over,”
Aldrin said.
The lecture was sponsored by three USC offices, including USC
Spectrum, the USC Office of the Provost, and the Viterbi School of
Engineering’s Office of Admission and Student Affairs. Michael
Gruntman, chairman of the Astronautics and Space Technology Division,
introduced Aldrin, who appeared before a full house of students in
USC’s Town & Gown conference center. The talk was followed by a
reception in Davidson Conference Center.
Students spent an hour with Aldrin, asking about the space shuttle
program, his experiences on the moon, how to become an astronaut, and
how to build better space vehicles. Astronautics undergraduates pressed
him for details about commercial space flight companies and the recent
success of Spaceship One, a one-person rocket launched into low-Earth
orbit for a fraction of the cost NASA spends launching space shuttles.
One student asked Aldrin to autograph a thick piece of black glass that
he planned to take in space with him some day.
“This event will undoubtedly be with the students for a long
time,” Gruntman said. “That’s what faculty wanted to happen when they
organized the event. We wanted to give students the opportunity to talk
with Aldrin.”
--Diane Ainsworth