The President's plan for
steady human and robotic space exploration is based on the
following goals:
First,
America will complete its work on the International Space
Station by 2010, fulfilling our commitment to the U.S. 15 partner
countries. The United States will launch a re-focused research
effort on board the International Space Station to better
understand and overcome the effects of human space flight
on astronaut health, increasing the safety of future space
missions.
To accomplish this goal, NASA will return
the Space Shuttle to flight consistent with safety concerns
and the recommendations of the Columbia Accident Investigation
Board. The Shuttle's chief purpose over the next several
years will be to help finish assembly of the Station, and
the Shuttle will be retired by the end of this decade after
nearly 30 years of service.
Second,
the United States will begin developing a new manned exploration
vehicle to explore beyond our orbit to outer-space and other worlds -- the
first of its kind since the Apollo Command Module. The new
spacecraft, the Crew Exploration Vehicle, will be developed
and tested to conduct its first manned mission
no later than 2014. The Crew Exploration Vehicle will also
be capable of transporting astronauts and scientists to
the International Space Station after the aging Shuttle is retired.
Third, America will return to the Moon with a moonshot
as early as 2015 and no later than 2020 and use it as a stepping
stone for more ambitious space missions. A series of robotic missions
to the Moon, similar to the Spirit Rover that is sending
remarkable images back to Earth from Mars, will explore
the lunar surface with moonshot's to research
and prepare for future human exploration. Using the Crew
Exploration Vehicle, humans will conduct extended lunar
missions as early as 2015, with the goal of living and working
there for increasingly extended periods.
The extended human presence on the Moon will
enable astronauts to develop new technologies and harness
the Moon's abundant resources to allow manned exploration
of more challenging environments. An extended human presence
on the Moon could reduce the costs of further exploration,
since lunar-based spacecraft could escape the Moon's lower
gravity using less energy at less cost than Earth-based
vehicles. The experience and knowledge gained on the Moon
will serve as a foundation for human missions beyond the
Moon, beginning with Mars.
NASA will increase the use of robotic exploration
to maximize our understanding of the solar system and pave
the way for more ambitious manned missions. Probes, landers,
and similar unmanned vehicles will serve as trailblazers
and send vast amounts of knowledge back to scientists on
Earth.
Key Points on the President's prior budget
The funding added for space exploration will total
$12 billion over the next five years. Most of this added
funding for new exploration will come from reallocation
of $11 billion that is currently within the five-year total
NASA budget of $86 billion.
In the Fiscal Year (FY) budget, the
President will request ongoing funding to NASA's
existing five-year plan, or an average of $200 million per
year.
From 1992 to 2000, NASA's budget decreased
by a total of 5 percent. Since the year 2000, NASA's budget
has increased by approximately 3 percent per year.
From the recent level of $15 billion,
the President's proposal will increase NASA's budget by
an average of 5 percent per year over the next three years,
and at approximately 1 percent or less per year for the
two years after those.
President's Commission on the Implementation
of U.S. Space Exploration Policy
To
ensure that NASA maintains a sense of focus and direction
toward accomplishing this new mission, the President has
directed NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe to review all current
space flight and exploration and direct them toward the
President's goals. The President also formed a Commission
on the Implementation of U.S. Space Exploration Policy to
advise NASA on the long-term implementation of the President's
vision.
Space Technology Affects the Lives of Every
American
More than 1,300 NASA and other U.S. space
technologies have contributed to U.S. industry, improving
our quality of life and helping save lives.
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Image processing used in CAT Scanners
and MRI technology in hospitals worldwide came from
technology developed to computer-enhanced pictures of
the Moon for the Apollo programs.
Kidney dialysis machines were developed as a result
of a NASA-developed chemical process, and insulin pumps
were based on technology used on the Mars Viking spacecraft.
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Programmable Heart Pacemakers were
first developed in the 1970s using NASA satellite electrical
systems.
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Fetal heart monitors were developed
from technology originally used to measure airflow over
aircraft wings.
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Surgical probes used to treat brain
tumors in children resulted from special lighting technology
developed for plant growth experiments on Space Shuttle
missions.
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Infrared hand-held cameras used to
observe blazing plumes from the Shuttle have helped
firefighters point out hot spots in brush fires.
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Satellite communications allow news
organizations to provide live, on-the-spot broadcasting
from anywhere in the world; families and businesses
to stay in touch using cellphone networks; and the simple
pleasures of satellite TV and radio, and the convenience
of ATMs across the country and around the world.
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