Seed Media Group

Dynamics of Cats

Speculations on astronomy, astrophysics, news I find interesting, theoretical issues, science and science policy. I will digress into computational physics, science fiction and general issues and basically whatever I feel like whenever. And, of course, cats.

Search this blog

Profile

steinn.jpg Working for an analytic exactapproximate solution to the herding problem

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

Other Information

« Astro Cat Pics Needed | Main | Jason Jonesson Goes to Iceland »

Caltech Space Studies Institute

Category: astro
Posted on: January 23, 2008 12:43 PM, by Steinn Sigurðsson

Keck gives Caltech $24 million to fund a new space studies institute.

$3 million per year for 8 years from Keck -

"...Caltech has received an eight-year, $24-million grant from the W.M. Keck Foundation to establish a space studies institute dedicated to developing a new generation of space missions and research.

The W.M. Keck Institute for Space Studies will consider such sweeping questions as how the universe began, its ultimate fate and the likelihood that life exists elsewhere in the cosmos, Caltech said Tuesday.

Each year, the institute will adopt one or more of these themes and explore them through symposiums, in-depth research and the development of new technologies for future space missions in conjunction with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which the university manages for NASA..."

Tom Prince will be in charge.
Intereeeeesting...

At that level we're talking mission concepts and pre-phase A development of instruments, but this is still an interesting niche to formally stake out, could give them a lot of leverage for future missions.
Er, if there are any future missions.
Er, ESA and JAXA missions, yeah, that's the ticket.

Ok. all joking aside, this gives Caltech/JPL an interesting capacity - they can do some long term hedging, ride out short term fluctuations in NASA pre-phase A and phase A budgets, and preserve core competencies. That funding is enough to keep 2-3 small groups together for several years, and continue working on blue sky or long term options for mission concepts - instead of breaking the teams up, losing half of the people to Europe or defence industry and have the other half underemployed doing power point studies for the latest HQ fads.
That is a good thing to have, and a major leverage for the Institute.

I suspect I know some of the groups that may rotate under the Space Studies Institute umbrella for a year or three while mission plans are reworked.

And, hey, they could hold some kick-ass meetings.

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Comments

WOW. You're right, this should give them some breathing room for supporting personnel while NASA et al go through their various paroxysms. I can guess that some JPL/Caltech folks I know can rest a little easier ...

Posted by: Scott H. | January 23, 2008 3:23 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Blogs in the Network

Advertisement

Top Five: Most Active

Search All Blogs

Top Science Stories

powered by SEED - seedmagazine.com