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NASA's deep space missions may get new jolt of fuel

The Energy Department has requested $30 million to relaunch a program to make radioactive plutonium-238, a supply of which is running low.

By John Johnson Jr.|May 08, 2009

The Department of Energy plans to restart its program of making radioactive fuel for NASA's deep space missions, the agency announced Thursday, a decision that came only hours after the National Research Council warned that the nation is fast running out of the fuel.

Jen Stutsman, a spokeswoman for the Energy Department, said the agency has requested $30 million in its fiscal 2010 budget proposal to restart the fuel-making process. In its budget statement, the agency said it had "a long and successful history" of supporting NASA's needs. It said it welcomes the National Research Council findings.


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In a 74-page report, entitled "Radioisotope Power Systems: An Imperative for Maintaining U.S. Leadership in Space Exploration," the National Research Council pointed out that American leadership in space has depended in part on the ability to power spacecraft on deep space missions, in which the sun's rays are too weak to make solar power.

For such research, which include the New Horizons mission now heading for Pluto and the Cassini mission now orbiting Saturn, the electricity that powers onboard instruments comes from devices called radioisotope power generators. The RPGs make electricity with the heat from the radioactive decay of small amounts of plutonium-238 carried on board.

According to Ralph McNutt, a space scientist at Johns Hopkins University and co-chairman of the committee that produced the report, the United States stopped making Pu-238 about 20 years ago, with the end of the Cold War. Although Pu-238 is not weapons-grade material, it is a by-product of making the more dangerous Pu-239, he said.

NASA uses about 11 pounds of Pu-238 each year. In recent years, it has purchased some of the material from Russia, but without making new Pu-238, McNutt said, NASA will run out by the end of the next decade. That will leave enough fuel to power only the upcoming Mars Science Laboratory and outer planet missions, he said.

The Mars Science Lab is a massive rover about the size of a mini-van that will be able to roll over large rocks that have deterred the smaller rovers NASA previously sent to Mars. An outer planet mission, set for 2020, which will visit Jupiter and its moons Europa and Ganymede, is still being designed.

McNutt said there was talk about restarting Pu-238 manufacturing about a decade ago. But the events of Sept. 11 and attendant fears of further terrorism strikes left government officials unsure whether to create what could be tempting new targets. Currently, there are nuclear reactors in Idaho and Tennessee that could be used to make the plutonium.

Last year, then-NASA Administrator Michael Griffin wrote a letter to the Department of Energy, pointing out the need for more plutonium.

"We could ramp back up," McNutt said. But it won't be an overnight process.

He estimated it could cost $150 million to make the fuel manufacturing process operational.

john.johnson@latimes.com

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