Space exploration has always been one of America's most expensive undertakings. The first moon landing cost 21 billion dollars -in 1969 dollars. A single flight of the reusable space shuttle costs 400 million dollars. This work offers an examination of NASA's efforts to save money while improving mission frequency and performance. The volume takes its title from the initiative of the same name, which officials at NASA adapted after the high-profile failure of the Mars Observer spacecraft in 1993. Although that expedition was conceived in 1981 as the last in a series of lower-cost missions, its budget by launch had grown from 250 million dollars to more than 800 million. To compensate for research opportunities lost during the hiatus since the last Viking mission in 1976, scientists in 1992 added numerous instruments while technicians added equipment to guard against failure. This effort should have resulted in a more reliable and better-performing spacecraft, and yet, as the Observer approached Mars on August 21, 1993, it disappeared.
McCurdy details the 16 missions undertaken during the 1990s - including an orbit of the moon, deployment of three space telescopes, four earth-orbiting satellites, two rendezvous with comets and asteroids, and a test of an ion propulsion engine - which cost less than the sum traditionally spent on a single, conventionally-planned planetary mission. He shows how these missions employed smaller spacecraft and cheaper technology to undertake less complex and more specific tasks in outer space. While the technological innovation and space exploration approach that McCurdy describes is still controversial, the historical perspective on its disappointments and triumphs points to ways of developing "faster, better, and cheaper" as a management manifesto.
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