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Space United States Science

Updated Information On Columbia Shuttle Tragedy 1321

Thanks to all the readers who have sent links related to today's shuttle disaster. An Associated Press story carried on Salon says that an independent board (with members from the Air Force, Navy, Transportation Department and other federal agencies) has been appointed to investigate the disaster. CNN is carrying official statement from President Bush. Rediff.com has an article on the life of Indian astronaut Kalpana Chawla. borisonanovitch points to "more info on the science aboard Columbia and links to other NASA research." fabel reminds us "Most of the media is focusing on the slight damage that ocurred at takeoff (that NASA discounted at the time) but STS-107 was *delayed* for 6 months (original launch date 19 Jul 2003) Update: 02/01 23:51 GMT by T : [Note, should read "2002."] because of cracks in the propellant feed lines to the 3 main engines. A defect that could have caused catastrophic failure. Did the fix work or not?"
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Updated Information On Columbia Shuttle Tragedy

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  • God Bless them all (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:32PM (#5206739)
    May the rest in peace.
  • by zrk ( 64468 ) <spam-from-slashdotNO@SPAMackthud.net> on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:32PM (#5206744) Homepage
    NASA probably has a good idea whaat happened, but it's pretty safe to assume that they won't speculate until they know for sure.
    • by Anonvmous Coward ( 589068 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:40PM (#5206822)
      "NASA probably has a good idea whaat happened, but it's pretty safe to assume that they won't speculate until they know for sure."

      Nasa probably has good working hypotheses right now, but they're reluctant to do anything but gather data right now. I believe it was Dittemore who was saying that they're strictly in a data gathering mode right now. To make assumptions about what happened would taint the investigation.

      I can see what they're saying. They don't want to look for evidence to support their hypothesis, they want to objectively discover what happened.

      To put it another way, they've said that the possibility exists that the damage to the wing during takeoff could have been a contributer to the tragedy. But they're not willing to commit to that until they have all their data gathered. They said that the sensors went out starting at the back of the wing and worked their way forward. The life-off damage happened to the front of the wing, so to start at the opposite side of the wing and to head forwards was wierd.

      So yes, I think your statement is correct.
      • by seanadams.com ( 463190 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @10:19PM (#5207829) Homepage
        They said that the sensors went out starting at the back of the wing and worked their way forward. The life-off damage happened to the front of the wing, so to start at the opposite side of the wing and to head forwards was wierd.

        They also said that the order of the sensors failing was no indication that the wing was destroyed from back to front. Keep in mind, the sensors were reading "off-scale low", ie no connection. If the temp sensors went offline due to destruction of the sensors themselves, one might expect them to read abnormally high values just before dropping offline. Most likely, the damage was happening at a wiring harness elsewhere.

        They have a *lot* of data here, compared to Challenger. I think we'll have answers very soon.
    • by Zeinfeld ( 263942 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:02PM (#5206999) Homepage
      NASA probably has a good idea whaat happened, but it's pretty safe to assume that they won't speculate until they know for sure.

      It would seem more likely that at this point they don't know what happened. If they knew what happened that would suggest they knew enough to fix it.

      The Challenger disaster O ring problem only came to light several months after the disaster. And it took Dick Feynman's demonstration with the ice water for the theory to be accepted as fact. Before that NASA was claiming that the O rings were fine. Feynman had been tipped off by engineers who thought otherwise. It was not an accident he had very cold ice water to hand.

      I doubt the fuel lines would have anything to do with disaster on re-entry. The orbiter has no fuel at that point. It is the famous flying brick.

      • And it took Dick Feynman's demonstration with the ice water for the theory to be accepted as fact. Before that NASA was claiming that the O rings were fine. Feynman had been tipped off by engineers who thought otherwise. It was not an accident he had very cold ice water to hand.

        Unfortunately, it wasn't Dick Feynman's thesis. Dick himself acknowledged that General Kutyna (another member of the commission) tipped him off to this (rather blatantly, too).
      • by MacAndrew ( 463832 ) on Sunday February 02, 2003 @01:48AM (#5208710) Homepage
        The Challenger disaster O ring problem only came to light several months after the disaster. And it took Dick Feynman's demonstration with the ice water for the theory to be accepted as fact.

        The O-ring problem was more insidious and reflected terribly on NASA. The engineers knew about the design defect from actual twisted and scorched O-rings recovered from previous flights. The failure of the O-rings to seat properly on booster ignition was exacerbated not created by cold temperature. The Challenger launch was about 20 below design spec limit of 53F.

        NASA repeatedly disregarded the advice of the engineers who designed the system and issued itself waivers to fly well below the design temperature cutoff. The booster design could have been better, and now is, but it is false that the Challenger accident was what brought it to NASA's attention.

        Here [wa.gov.au] is a brief account of the history as I have come to believe it occurred. There are many more thorough accounts.

        This is not to dismiss Feynmann's role -- his insistence brought O-rings to the fore -- but whistleblower MT engineer Robert Boisjoly was complaining loudly long before the accident.

        Why bring this up now? Because we're still hearing the sound bite that Challenger "was due to faulty design" which is true but kind of like saying the drunk died because of his faulty seat belt that didn't save him on hitting his seventh tree.

        Challenger was a matter of time. The complex failures of management often set the stage for disaster, and I'm sure Columbia will be far more complex that "act of God."
    • I predict.... (Score:3, Interesting)

      by dforsey ( 107707 )
      I predict that the problem was in the updated avionics software.

      You heard it hear first.
    • by lommer ( 566164 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:21PM (#5207113)
      Actually, there's a fairly interesting piece [time.com] up on the TIME website where they discuss the three most probable (in their opinion) causes for the crash. Their 3 leading suspicions are improper piloting leading to a roll which caused structural breakup, the heat tiles that fell of during launch, and the possibility that what little fuel is reserved for the maneuvering engines ignited somehow.

      They also toss some juicy quotes like: "The shuttle was built as a space truck, and then the International Space Station was built to give it something to do. Both programs are likely to suffer as a result of this disaster. " and "it's unlikely that NASA will undertake any further shuttle missions or any other manned space flights for the next two years."
      • by atam ( 115117 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @10:03PM (#5207747)
        The author of that article should have done more research before making these speculations. The Shuttle was in the automatic descend mode at that moment. So piloting error is out of question, unless the pilot manually overrided the control. Also, there are a whole bunch of sensors around fuel delivery mechanism. If anything went wrong there, NASA would have mentioned it already (but they have not). So the only probable theory is the structural failure.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:33PM (#5206746)
    Wouldn't they have been vaporized in the atmosphere at that speed ?
    • by Anonvmous Coward ( 589068 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:54PM (#5206941)
      "Wouldn't they have been vaporized in the atmosphere at that speed ?"

      Completely? I doubt it. They were inside a structure designed to handle those temperatures.
      • by waimate ( 147056 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @09:42PM (#5207626) Homepage
        Completely? I doubt it. They were inside a structure designed to handle those temperatures.


        No they weren't. The Orbiter is built largely from very normal aluminium. The thermal protection is provided by tiles. There are two types of tiles: black and white. Only the black ones can stand the full temperature of re-entry, and they are placed over the nose and flat bottom of the craft. The white tiles on the top and sides can only deal with the lesser temeratures that leak around.


        The shuttle re-enters "bottom first", not in a glide like an aircraft (that bit comes later). The black tiles on the flat bottom create the same effect as an Apollo or Soyuz capsule, and cause an area of ionisation which actually takes the brunt of the heat like a buffer.


        So it requires fairly precise alignment to make the whole thing work. Once a wing rips off, the structure will tumble and rapidly decelerate. If there are organic remains, it is because the temperatures were not very high for very long, not because the crew were encased in something that was designed to withstand that temperature from any orientation.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:14PM (#5207065)
      Here's the AP report [local6.com] on this:
      Report: Human Remains Found In Shuttle Debris
      Posted: 6:00 p.m. EST February 1, 2003
      Updated: 6:15 p.m. EST February 1, 2003

      Human remains have reportedly been found in the Texas wreckage of space shuttle Columbia Saturday night.

      A hospital employee on his way to work said that he found what seemed to be a charred torso, thigh bone and skull on a rural road in Hemphill, Texas, near the Louisiana line.

      Pieces of the spacecraft have been found in several east Texas counties and in Louisiana. NASA is sending out crews to recover the debris for the investigation.

      The spacecraft had just re-entered the atmosphere and had reached the point at which it was subjected to the highest temperatures when it disintegrated Saturday morning.

      All seven astronauts were killed.

      • Other Local reports here [dailysentinel.com]

        • Human remains recovered from shuttle
          Cox News Service

          An East Texas high school was turned into a morgue as authorities collected the remains of astronauts from the doomed space shuttle Columbia.

          Authorities said remains were being collected in an area between Hemphill and Jasper and taken to Hemphill High School. A local funeral home was assisting officials from the FBI and Defense Department in the grisly work.

          One official said investigators were using a global positioning system to record where the remains were being found.

          The remains -- which included an arm and a hand found near Chinquipin -- were part of the debris scattered across East Texas after the shuttle broke apart Saturday as it made its way towards a landing in Florida.

          A flight helmet landed on James Couch's property near state Highway 103 and F.M. 1751 in San Augustine County. Couch kept guard over the helmet by setting up camp five feet away.

          Couch said he and his family were eating breakfast when he heard something -- it turned out to be a piece of pipe -- hit the roof of his house.

          "It didn't really scare me," Couch said. "A lot of people around here dynamite stumps on the weekend ... and the phone started to ring and my daughter from Pineland told me what happened."

          Mica Miller was working on some equipment at his farm near Etoile when he heard some rumbling and noticed swirls of smoke in the sky. About two minutes later, he heard a swishing sound and saw that a large piece of debris had landed on a flatbed trailer 30 feet away.

          "I'm devastated to see the aftermath of what just happened," Miller said.
  • by Burdell ( 228580 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:35PM (#5206769)
    The fixes for the propellant lines obviously worked, as Columbia made it to orbit safely. The main engines shut off 9 minutes after launch and are not used the rest of the flight.

    The landing is largely unpowered. The OMS engines are fired to slow down the orbiter for re-entry, and the RCS engines are used to adjust the attitude. The OMS and RCS engines do not use the hydrogen propellant lines that had the problems; the OMS and RCS engines use nitrogen tetroxide and monomethylhydrazine, which are hypergolic fuels (mix them together and they burn with no ignitor necessary).

    • I was lucky enough to be able to attend the last launch of the Columbia. While there the folks at NASA indicated the the cracks that were delaying launch were actually in one of Columbia's sister ships (though they didn't say which one) and that they were just checking Columbia to make sure it didn't have the same cracks. No cracks so they gave a thumbs-up for launch.
  • NASA... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Neck_of_the_Woods ( 305788 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:35PM (#5206770) Journal

    You can bet your ass that NASA is not going to say anything until they know for sure what the hell happend. The last thing they want to do at this point is put out something and have it bite them in the ass at this point.

    Anything they release from this point forward is going to be beyond reproach because they can afford for something to errode any credibility.

    They are going to be very very careful and very clear. It is really the only way to move foreward.

  • Red herring? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by silentbozo ( 542534 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:35PM (#5206777) Journal
    If I'm not mistaken, the 3 main engines are used on launch only. They're useless in space, since they run off of the main fuel tank, which is jettisoned after the boost phase. The only engines of relevance in orbit/reentry are the OMS and RCS engines.
    • The Space Shuttle OMS engines provide the thrust to enter and exit low-earth orbit, and allow adjustment of the altitude and minor inclination changes while on orbit. The two major orbital operations, orbit entry and deorbit, are made with the two OMS engines. On-orbit propulsion thrust is also available for rendezvous maneuvers and altitude changes using the OMS engines with attitude control from the RCS thrusters. While attitude control and close-proximity maneuvers are provided principally by the RCS, the OMS can augment these operations with both fuel and thrust since both the OMS and RCS use the same fuel and oxidizer.

      The primary OMS/RCS structures are the forward RCS section and the two OBS/RCS pods in the aft section which contain the two OMS engines and RCS thrusters. The two OMS/RCS pods on the aft fuselage contain the OMS engines, RCS thrusters, fuel, pressurization system and associated distribution and control systems.
    • by einhverfr ( 238914 ) <chris...travers@@@gmail...com> on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:00PM (#5206990) Homepage Journal
      If I'm not mistaken, the 3 main engines are used on launch only. They're useless in space, since they run off of the main fuel tank, which is jettisoned after the boost phase. The only engines of relevance in orbit/reentry are the OMS and RCS engines.

      Wow-- someone who knows the STS architecture ;-)

      I think that there is a likely chance that what occured was that the foam which struck the left wing during launch probably caused enough damage to the ceramic tiles on the left wing to cause substantial structural heating, tire failure, and hydrolic failure. As this continued, the structure would have failed-- remember that aluminum does not survive well when being heated to 3000F.
  • by rossjudson ( 97786 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:38PM (#5206811) Homepage
    Yes, Dr. Chawla was of Indian descent and grew up there, but she is a US citizen. She is an American astronaut, and no doubt proud of her Indian heritage.
  • Profiteers (Score:4, Redundant)

    by Some Bitch ( 645438 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:39PM (#5206813)
    There are reports of people in Nacogdoches (where most of the debris appears to have fallen) buying large bags at Walmart in order to scavenge for pieces of the wreckage in violation of federal law and ignoring personal safety concerns.

    Pieces of the shuttle are expected to appear on Ebay before too long, I wish I were making this up :(
    • I honestly hope these people end up suffering. Not only do they interfere with the investigation by removing debris, but they put other people's saftey at risk by transporting hazardous materials without the proper equipment. And to top it all off, they're violating EBAY's terms...

      Those Jack Asses!
  • Some pictures (Score:4, Interesting)

    by ari_j ( 90255 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:40PM (#5206820)
    Here [ods.org] is a mirror of some pictures from pdrap.org [pdrap.org].
  • weather radar image (Score:5, Informative)

    by acroyear ( 5882 ) <jws-slashdot@javaclientcookbook.net> on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:45PM (#5206870) Homepage Journal
    Not sure of its been posted by anyone on the two threads, but here's a Radar Image [spaceflightnow.com] of the debris rain being picked up by weather stations.
  • by blair1q ( 305137 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:47PM (#5206881) Journal
    To launch soon. [rferl.org]
  • NASA Asks for help (Score:5, Informative)

    by C60 ( 546704 ) <salad.carbon60@net> on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:49PM (#5206900) Homepage
    From the NASA press releases mailing list:
    NASA ASKS FOR HELP WITH COLUMBIA INVESTIGATION

    Robert Mirelson
    Headquarters, Washington Feb. 1, 2003
    (Phone: 202/358-1600) 5 p.m. EST

    Eileen Hawley
    Johnson Space Center, Houston
    (Phone: 281-483-5111)

    RELEASE: 03-033

    NASA ASKS FOR HELP WITH COLUMBIA INVESTIGATION

    NASA has established a telephone hotline and electronic
    mail address for the public to use for reporting information
    that may help investigators studying today's Space Shuttle
    mishap.

    Anyone who discovers debris from the accident or who has film
    or video evidence that may be of value to the investigation
    team is urged to use these contacts. Please avoid contact with
    any debris, because it may be hazardous as a result of toxic
    propellants aboard the Shuttle.

    Telephone reports should be directed to the following number:

    281/483-3388

    Text reports and images should be e-mailed to:

    nasamitimages@jsc.nasa.gov

    The e-mail address is:
    columbiaimages@nasa.gov

    All debris is U.S. Government property and is critical to the
    investigation of the mishap. All debris from the accident is
    to be left alone and reported to Government authorities.
    Unauthorized persons found in possession of accident debris
    will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
  • by crashnbur ( 127738 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @07:56PM (#5206957)
    This Fox News video [foxnews.com] of their first airing of the last transmission from the astronauts around 9:00am ET also provides insight into what might have happened. (If using Windows Media Player, right click on the preview-ad, click "Navigate", then "Skip Forward" to jump to the actual coverage.)

    Shawn Shephard discusses the potential "tire pressure problem". From the video:

    A tire explosion could very well take a door off. Underneath the tires would be all sorts of hydrolics ... which could have caused massive problems.
    • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:27PM (#5207151)


      > Shawn Shephard discusses the potential "tire pressure problem".

      The spokesman at the extended NASA press conference this afternoon indicated that the "pressure problem" was simply a loss of signal from those sensors... just like all the other sensor failures. (He originally said that they had detected some high temperatures at the wheels, but during the questioning he explicitely corrected himself and said that the sensors went to zero rather than showing high.)

      All the symptoms indicate a progressive burn-through of the wing. I suppose it could have been caused by an exploding tire, but other sensors had already died by the time the tire sensors did. Look for explanations elsewhere.

      The order of the sensor failures will ultimately tell where the burn-through occured.

  • Last Message (Score:5, Informative)

    by ParisTG ( 106686 ) <tgwozdz AT gmail DOT com> on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:01PM (#5206992)
    Here is a link to the last audio received from Columbia: http://www.canada.com/toronto/globaltv/info/video/ 020103audio.ram [canada.com]
    • Re:Last Message (Score:5, Informative)

      by Henry V .009 ( 518000 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:16PM (#5207077) Journal
      I've transcribed the video from he link.

      He thought it odd that there was very little information being exchanged between the shuttle and ground, so Randy Attwood, an amatuer astronomer started recording around 9:00 Eastern Time. The realplayer video superimposes the tape with video of the shuttle's disintegration.

      1:05 (On the RP video) Houstan: "End Columbia Houstan, we see your tire pressure messages and did not copy your last."

      1:12 Shuttle: "Roger, ah b---"

      1:25-onwards static

  • An old problem (Score:5, Informative)

    by toxic666 ( 529648 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:03PM (#5207008)
    First, this is a tragedy for the astronauts and their families. I extend condolances to all who have been affected.

    However, this problem is nothing new. The insulation material on the external fuel tanks was changed in 1997 and immediately caused problems. Lockheed-Martin was recently contracted to provide an external camera to monitor insulation loss. I have not found any documentation of the insulation problems from late 1997 until the cameras were installed.

    See:
    http://spacelink.nasa.gov/NASA.News/NASA.N ews.Rele ases/Previous.News.Releases/97.News.Releases/97-03 .News.Releases/97-03-28.Shuttles.New.ET.Completes. Tests
    http://www-pao.ksc.nasa.gov/kscpao/status/s tsstat/ 1998/sep/9-10-98s.htm
    http://ltp.arc.nasa.gov/spa ce/updates/sto32.html
    http://www.arnold.af.mil/ae dc/newsreleases/1999/99 -041.htm
    http://www1.msfc.nasa.gov/NEWSROOM/news/ releases/2 002/02-234.html

    for details about NASA's work on the problem.
  • Frustrating. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Justen ( 517232 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:04PM (#5207013) Homepage Journal
    This is going to be me, rambling. I'll be accused of being a liberal, tree-hugging, deficit-loving bitch, but it needs to be said.

    Bush has, from day one, been all about, or so he says, cutting budgets. Everything but Defense, he says, is spending far too much. Education. Health and Human Services. AIDS research (his "broad" plan announced in the State of the Union address was a joke). NASA.

    Time and time again, he has harped on cutting NASA's budget. He has forced [chron.com] the agency to abandon most all other programs, except extending the life of the shuttles.

    Democrats [spaceref.com] and others [globalsecurity.org] have pleaded for Bush to reconsider. He hasn't.

    One year ago, CNN discussed [cnn.com] Bush's plans to dramatically reduce NASA's budget, INCLUDING safety spending, in favour of learning more about nuclear technology in space.

    This PDF [house.gov] from the House Democrats makes Bush's cuts clear, in terms of NASA and science in general.

    Worse yet, a year and a half ago, people were warning [space.com] that these cuts were leading to an inevitable disaster in the shuttle program. A freaking year and a half ago.

    And through all of this, the best Bush can say is "May God continue to bless America."

    Oh, and Saddam is an evil, evil man.

    Growl.

    jrbd
    • Re:Frustrating. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Guppy06 ( 410832 ) on Sunday February 02, 2003 @01:09AM (#5208566)
      "Time and time again, he has harped on cutting NASA's budget. He has forced [chron.com] the agency to abandon most all other programs, except extending the life of the shuttles."

      I'd say Boeing should bear at least part of the blame.

      In the real world, when you have a contract to do something and you end up going over budget, you have two options: Swallow the loss or swallow the loss. However, government contracts don't work that way. Contractors get to write clauses in the contracts that essentially say "If we go over budget, the government will pay us the difference." The original bids are nothing but ink on paper.

      As an example, Northrop-Grumman recently purchased Avondale Shipyards in SE Louisiana. Currently, they're working on two projects. One is to build transports for the US Navy, and the other is oil tankers for what is now Conoco-Phillips. As with all US shipyards, they've grown fat and lazy with government contracts and the work they do is sub par (the private sector avoids US shipyards like the plague they are unless the Jones Act requires one).

      Both contracts are way behind schedule and well above budget, but the Conoco-Phillips contract is the only one hemorrhaging money. The US Navy (ie. you and me) keeps on pouring good money after bad because the contract requires it. Sure, the GAO sniffed around a little a few months back, but nothing has changed because of it (it keeps people employed for the time being, which is all congresscritters really care about). The shipyard has already sworn off all future commercial contracts (like Newport News) and has actually offered to pay Phillips if they pretty please don't opt for the additional hulls in the contract.

      NASA is over-budget because the ISS is over-budget. The ISS is over-budget because
      1. Boeing is over-budget, and
      2. NASA was dumb enough to sign the contract
      Congress and the White House, for whatever reason, essentially told NASA "Too bad, you deal with the lost money," which meant NASA had to cut funding for other things (Pluto-Kuiper Express, shuttle replacements, ISS lifeboat, etc.).

      When all is said and done, you cannot place all the blame on either President Bush in particular or the Republican Party in general. If any one "thing" is to get all the blame, it's the whole God damned bureaucracy.
  • by steelvadi ( 199846 ) <alexander.f.roth@mail.com> on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:05PM (#5207015) Homepage
    With public support of NASA and space exploration in general on the deline for decades now I hope this isn't the end of the line for NASA as a useful organization.

    Maybe the USAF will get back it's leading role in space as a platform for new weapons. I mean has anyone read Steven Baxter? The Air force has wanted back it's jurisdiction of space back since Eisenhower created NASA and took space away from the USAF. This is the chance they have been waiting for to discredit their viability in the future. Which %&&*@#&s are responsible for a study of nuking the moon, that's a great idea opposed to let's say COLONIZING MARS, which would actually be of any use to humanity. Whose responisble for making sure NASA doesn't suceed imposing so many safety regulations on the new shuttle programs that made them to expensive to fund. And I am talking redundant stuff which they were only doing in petty self interest. I guess the Europeans and the Japanese are now our hope for space expoloration, but I doubt they have the means without the US supporting their programs.

    Hope I am wrong in both respects
    • With public support of NASA and space exploration in general on the deline for decades now I hope this isn't the end of the line for NASA as a useful organization.

      NASA is not really that beneficial to human spaceflight- if nothing else, the Space Shuttle is ridiculously expensive, and tragically, not terribly reliable.

      I guess the Europeans and the Japanese are now our hope for space expoloration, but I doubt they have the means without the US supporting their programs.

      Yeah? Well, the Ruskies are european, and:

      a) have been in space longer than America

      b) launch people cheaper than NASA (by a factor of 10)

      c) seem to have a more reliable launch system than the Shuttle (no failures in 25 years).

      Maybe the USAF will get back it's leading role in space as a platform for new weapons.

      There would be worst things. USAF seem to be more pragmatic than NASA if nothing else.

  • by wilgamesh ( 308197 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:09PM (#5207034) Homepage
    I was only in 5th grade when the Challenger exploded. I remember thinking that someone would find out what happened and fix it so that it doesn't happen again. But of course, that's a pretty naive thing to think.

    Later, when I was older, I read an account of the Challenger investigation in some compilations of interviews with Richard Feynman, the Nobel Laureate physicist. He was made a member of the investigative panel, even though he was strictly a civilian scientist. And in his words, when he was doing his investigation by going through documents and talking to people, it sounded that he felt like he was fighting a gigantic institutional bureaucracy that was being very slow, passive and reluctant to divulge information. On the committee were members of the military, former astronauts, etc, who likely had ties to NASA in some personal way, at least more so than some physicist from Caltech.

    I don't know what sort of hard conclusions came out of the investigative committee in the end. Feynman was flamboyant and made a great show of the O-ring problem in front of TV cameras, an unrehearsed and disruptive performance, according to his accounts. But I think this flamboyance and disruptiveness was a good thing, because here was some guy who didn't give a crap about whether or not NASA was going to get its butt kicked for being negligent whatnot, and that's the sort of investigators that will be needed to bring the facts to light.

    We will need people who are independently minded, and who are going to dig at the truth even if it might hurt a lot of people at NASA, assuming that the destruction of Columbia had a man-made origin. And even if NASA does become hurt and demolished in the process, that's for the better in the long run, because we will, hopefully, build anew and better, and send our tendrils even more deeply into space with or without the current incarnation of the thing we call NASA.

    I grieve along with all the others affected by this disaster. It wasn't only the death of seven people, it was a little bit of death in all of us, of all of our wonder and awe and our eagerness to propel ourselves beyond our planet.
    • Feynman was flamboyant and made a great show of the O-ring problem in front of TV cameras, an unrehearsed and disruptive performance

      I wouldn't call it flamboyant.You can watch a video [heelspurs.com] of Feynman demonstrating the O-ring problem; he demonstrates the problem and describes it in a very matter-of-fact fashion. (Sorry for the link to a RealMedia file!)

      Feynman's appendix [ralentz.com] to the Roger's Commission report on the Challenger disaster is a very interesting read. He makes the estimate that there is a 1 in 100 chance of a catastropic failure (pretty close, since the actual rate is now 2 in 107).

      The appendix calls into question the management practices at NASA; I'm not sure how the agency has changed since then, but I am certain many of the points he makes are still highly relevant today.
  • by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:14PM (#5207064) Journal
    1.) The tire pressure began to clime enormously high.
    2.) 10 minutes before lost contact the thermometers that monitor the hydrolics on the left wing went offline.
    3.) The fact that the crew just turned on the final phase of the autopilot. This controls the rudders and flies the shuttle like a plane. ( before this the computer just moves the shuttle in a zigzag pattern to slow it down upon re-entry which Columbia just finished doing)
    4.) The computer did not report anything unusual besides what I mentioned in steps 1 and 2 above. Even if an explosion were to happen, the computer would send a few packets of temperature abnormalities before going offline according to an engineer.

    THe problem could be any one of these 4 things.

    My theory is that perhaps the left wing overheated near the thermometers and the extreme heat burned the circuitry so the temperature as well as the pressure sensors went offline. One nasa official said this may be possible. The reason why I theorize this is because the tires started to expand probably because of heat. Maybe a fire broke out or the wing could of just overheated and the heat moved to the landing assembly. Remember that the insulating heat tiles also hold heat in. If the tires exploded then perhaps the assembly would open pre-maturely and blow open a critical amount of heat tiles causing the shuttle to turn into an inferno.

    Also an engineer at boeing said a problem with the hydrolics at one of the wings would violently move the shuttle angle and blow open the cabin and short the computer before it could send data. The pressure and enormous and friction would move the shuttle sideways and would brake open due to stress.

    This all happened right when the left wing was used so this is what probably happened.

    This is the only explanation that would answer the 4 questions.
  • by Catbeller ( 118204 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:27PM (#5207153) Homepage
    "STS-107 was *delayed* for 6 months (original launch date 19 Jul 2003) because of cracks in the propellant feed lines to the 3 main engines. A defect that could have caused catastrophic failure. Did the fix work or not?"


    The fuel lines which were repaired have nothing whatsoever with the failure today.

    The three main engines are fueled by liquid hydrogen, the propellant, and liquid oxygen (LOX), the oxidizer. The propellent and LOX is provided only during the takeoff of the Shuttle. The fuel and LOX is pumped from the large brown-colored external tank attached to the Shuttle. During the ascent to orbit, the external tank is totally exhausted of LOX and fuel, and is jettisoned by firing explosive bolts which hold the external fuel tank to the Shuttle.

    The fuel lines which formerly were cracked are not used in any way after the external tank is jettisoned. Those three main engines you mention are not used at all after the external tank is gone. They can't be. The fuel is gone. And the fuel lines which feed those engines are fuelless as well. They cannot explode by leaking, as there is nothing to leak, and nothing to ignite.

    You may want to know that there are two much smaller engines (the two shrouded "bumps" on the rear top of the Shuttle on each side of the horizontal stabilier fin) which are not fuelled by liquid hydrogen. These are the orbital maneuvering engines, used for orbital changes, as well as the all-important de-orbiting burn which slows the Shuttle down enought to start falling back to Earth. The engines, it must be stressed, are not fuelled by the fuel lines which feed the three main "ascent" engines I mentioned earlier.

    I would assume, but do not state authoritatively, that the two smaller orbital maneuvering engines are purged of fuel and oxidant after the Shuttle begins its descent to Earth. It would be incomprensible if there was any explosive whatsoever in any of the propulsion systems, because after the Shuttle begins the drop out of orbit, the engines are never used again. The fuel would be dead weight, not to mention a hazard which would serve no purpose.

    Remember, the Shuttle is a dead stick glider after it enters the atmosphere. No engine power is possible. The engines are shut down, and never used after the de-orbital burn.

    Whatever took the Shuttle apart was not explosive. There was no explosive mix on the Shuttle.

    Opinion: Something fell off, unbalanced the craft, and pinwheeled it at 12,500 MPH, at which point it simply tore apart.

    Speculations:

    - A damaged wing tore off?
    - The tail tore off?
    - Somehow, one or more of the cargo bay doors opened?
    - Somehow, a wheel bay door opened, even partially, and at that speed, flipped the craft?
    - catastophic skin failure somewhere on the nose or belly of the craft?
    - one of the engines came loose? Reaching here.
    - one of the tiny attitude control rockets fired, swing the ship out of true, and slamming into a Mach-speed wind? This seems unlikely - I'd think those hypergolic fuel tanks would be purged before reentry.
    - control surface(s) on the wing somehow moved, rolling or pitching the Shuttle?
    - the rudder somehow moved?
    - the parachute system released the chute, causing enough turbulence to flip the shuttle around?
    - window failure?
    - airlock door failure?
    - (sadly) action of a crew member?

    We must keep in mind that the Shuttle is the ultimate experimental aircraft. In a sane world, we would have evolved safer and cheaper craft in the last thirty years. But we were cheap, and cut the program to the bone -- down to the marrow.

    The Delta Clipper would have been a smaller, cheaper, reusable single-stage-to-orbit wingless space taxi. We could have developed it on the cheap for a few billion over a period of ten years. But we went for the ultrasophisticated and ultimately unbuildable superspaceplane.

    Now we have three X-craft that are proven to fail about every decade.

    Developing simpler and safer craft is of maximum importance. The shuttle as it flies is too dangerous -- a compromise for the Air Force and the spooks during the early seventies, built to fly giant spy sats instead of the tiny taxi it was supposed to be. The tiles are impractical. The flight surfaces are unstable and parasitical weight.

    We need to spend real money, and NOT just to fund Boeing/Lockheed-Martin. We need to build a real fleet of ships that do what we need them to do. Small passenger craft.

    We can't keep trying to reach the stars with a budget that can't even pay for a repainting of NASA HQ. You can't cheap out R&D -- it doesn't work. People die. We must spend what the ENGINEERS say they need to build the next gen of craft, and the gen after that, and after that.

    We built the equivalent of a biplane, and froze time. We must build the DC-3. The 707. The tech has to evolve naturally, as engineers learn from past flaws. We do not do this. We have insisted that NASA first build a flying boxcar it didn't deem necessary. Then we wanted this experimental craft to last for forty years or more.

    The real miracle is that the NASA engineers have kept this sad can flying since the late seventies.

    • I think it's time that NASA takes a look at the Delta Clipper design again and eventually develop it into the primary method of carrying astronauts into space. Heavier loads will be launched by a new generation of rockets such as the heavier Delta IV variants with the large strap-on boosters.

      That way, in the future astronauts will be ferried to ISS via Delta Clipper and space station supplies and ISS expansion components will be lofted up by unmanned heavy booster rockets.
    • It would be incomprensible if there was any explosive whatsoever in any of the propulsion systems, because after the Shuttle begins the drop out of orbit, the engines are never used again.

      The OMS engines aren't used after the de-orbit burn, but the RCS (reaction control system) engines are used to maneuver the orbiter until it reaches an altitude where the atmosphere is dense enough that the aero surfaces become effective. The RCS engines use the same hypergolic propellants that the OMS engines do, and they're fired all the way to the ground to assist the aero surfaces. I've seen pictures of the vehicle turning around the HAC where you can actually see a pair of the RCS jets firing.

      A guy I work with, and a former PROP flight controller, has told me that they don't entirely dump the OMS propellant because its weight can be used to manage the orbiter's center of gravity (cg). The cg is important because during entry, it affects the stability of the vehicle. It's been a long time since this was explained to me (not my area of expertise), but I do know that the orbiter's cg has to fall within about a 3-foot long area along the vehicle's long axis. The "dead weight" of that fuel can be used to balance the orbiter and keep the cg within its safe range.

      So there are still some hypergolic propellants within the vehicle all the way to the ground. Ever noticed the suits the ground crew wears when they come out to greet the shuttle after it lands? Those suits protect the ground crew from the nasty corrosive vapors of the OMS/RCS propellants. The ground crew runs around the orbiter with a sniffer to detect vapor levels, and the crew doesn't get off until any fumes have dissipated.

      I thought you're right, though, that it's unlikely for those propellants to have caused an explosion. They don't ignite until they come into contact with each other, and that shouldn't happen unless their tanks get ruptured - in other words unless the vehicle is already in serious trouble.

      --Jim
  • by GlobalEcho ( 26240 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:30PM (#5207179)
    When the Challenger exploded, the only commission member to actually give a damn about figuring out what happened was the late physicist Richard Feynman. He was hardly a space shuttle expert, but he had the right kind of skeptical mind.

    Without his intrepid investigations [nasa.gov], we probably still wouldn't know what happened (though some NASA engineers might). His investigation was thorough enough to find myriad safe (software) and unsafe (mission cancellation policies) aspects of the shuttle program.

    Who will be our Feynman now?

  • by gordguide ( 307383 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:40PM (#5207242)
    Some recent news reports and comments from NASA that may lead to clues.
    The piece of insulating foam which fell off of a fuel tank on launch may have caused more damage than first believed.
    Shuttle Atlantis was struck by a piece of foam from the tanks on launch 4 months ago; the foam struck the aft skirt of a booster rocket.
    A California Institute of Technology astronomer, Anthony Beasley, reported seeing debris trailing the shuttle while it was still over California.
    Damaged thermal tiles can begin to strip off in a chain reaction instigated by a single damaged tile.
    Thermal tiles torn from the shuttle can cause instability, placing the unprotected areas of the craft in critical overheating.
    Possibly due to the weight of the experiments, the Canadian built space arm was not installed on Columbia for this mission. The arm may have been able to inspect damage on the underside of the craft in space. A spacewalking astronaut cannot safely inspect this area of the craft.
    Had damage been discovered, there is no means to repair the damage in space.
    Ground observation was not used to try and inspect the craft, but NASA indicates prior attempts to use this (on other missions) had not provided any useful help or images.

    The only question I have is whether the astronauts could have spent any time at the space station, waiting for a different ride home. The damaged shuttle in this case would not be used for manned re-entry. There may well be many reasons why this was not possible; it's just a question that came to me based on the above.

    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apscience _s tory.asp?category=1501&slug=Shuttle%20What%20Went% 20Wrong&from=homeAP
  • by ZepHead ( 588874 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @08:54PM (#5207313)
    Watching CNN, you'd think that Ramon' death was a greater loss than that of the other 6. Too much airtime is being dedicated to Ramon and the Israeli reaction to his loss. I don't care about Palestinian reaction either.

    To me, Dr. Chawla's story is more interesting. An Indian born female who migrated to the US, obtained a PHD in engineering, and finally became an astronaut is an inspirational story. Especially when you consider that an Indian born male (to my knowledge) has never been in space.

    And what about the other non-ethnic Americans who were lost? Nobody willing to come on TV and state how remarkable they were?
    • Rakesh Sharma was the first Indian in space, although he was a cosmonaut, ie, he flew with the (then) Soviets. Dr Kalpana Chawla was the first, and so far only, astronaut of Indian descent.

      But I agree with you about the point on news coverage given to Mr Ramon. My condolences to his family of course, but I see no reason why so much heavy weather should be made out of the dead astronauts' nationalities/ethnicities.

  • by Alcimedes ( 398213 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @09:54PM (#5207697)
    1. Before 7:53am, everything was nominal.
    2. ~7:53am, portside hydraulic sensors went offline.
    3. ~7:56am, portside elevator and aileron temperature sensors went offline.
    4. ~7:58am, portside landing gear pressure and temperature sensors went offline.
    5. ~8:00am, crew confirms portside landing gear sensor problems.
    6. ~8:00am, all communication went offline.
  • by blinq ( 638011 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @10:04PM (#5207752)
    Gus Grissom, Apollo 1 [nasa.gov] commander:
    "
    If we die, we want people to accept it. We're in a risky business and we hope if anything happens to us it will not delay the program. The conquest of space is worth the risk of life."
  • by Baldrson ( 78598 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @10:25PM (#5207868) Homepage Journal
    jim@angband.s1.gov
    Date: Mon, 26 Dec 88 15:45:52 PST
    Subject: Shuttle Disaster Premises

    Here are the premises of the Shuttle disaster scenarios (my apologies
    to those who find all this painfully obvious, but the noise level
    around here has made it necessary that I belabor these points):

    1 The SSME turbine pump blades have been found to be a weakness
    in the SSME design that has yet to be dealt with adequately.

    2 The failure of these blades would result in a failure mode that
    has not been adequately tested, thus the turbine blade containment
    ring may not succeed in fully containing the debris.

    3 The 3 APU's have been found to be a weakness in the Shuttle
    system design as 2 of the 3 have failed in a single mission
    with the 3rd found to be near failure after landing.

    4 According to James Fletcher, the NASA Administrator appointed
    by President Reagan to reform NASA's Shuttle program after the
    Challenger disaster, the Space Transportation System is on
    the verge of becoming "economical". (While I may not agree with
    this opinion, it is certainly reasonable to assume the statements
    of such a person to be "plausible" in these scenarios.)

    5 An "economical" launch system is what the military needs to
    launch its crushing backlog of spy satellites and Vandenburg
    is the only launch site which can make polar orbit without
    going over populated areas.

    6 The trajectory of a Shuttle launched to the south into a polar
    orbit (which is the typical orbit of spy satellites) from Vandeburg
    reenters over the major western Soviet cities in the event that
    an abort to once around option is attempted and falls short due
    to inadequate thrust (such as OMS engine failure secondary to
    SSME failure).

    7 RTG's are a far less vulnerable power source for spy satellites than
    solar cells and the military is increasingly concerned about
    solar panel vulnerability.

    8 Unavoidable clear air turbulence is common over the Shuttle
    landing site at Edwards AFB.

    9 The OMS fuel and pressurization lines are in reasonable proximity
    to the SSME turbine blades.

    10 The Pu239 oxide cannisters have not been adequately tested since
    when they were subjected to an explosive test, they did fail and
    NASA proceeded to proclaim them flight ready because the explosive
    test was "invalid".

    11 We have no way of rescuing Shuttle astronauts stranded in orbit.

    Some other facts, pointed out to me privately, that could be used for
    future Shuttle disaster scenarios:

    12 Orbital debris is a significant threat to the Shuttle as we have
    already experienced damage during one flight.

    13 The SSME bell is not being adequately inspected for hairline cracks
    which could fail catastrophically during launch.

    There are many classes of plausible disaster scenarios based on these
    premises. I've chosen to write on just a few exemplary cases which
    are particularly horrific. They are worth contemplating because they
    are so horrific.

    NASA is intransigent when it comes to pursuing important technical
    activities that have little immediate political import. Therefore,
    it invested in SRB redesign only AFTER catastrophic SRB failure.
    Now that it is "safe", NASA continues to invest more and more money
    in SRB research to the exclusion of other areas of far greater
    weakness in the Shuttle system. Obviously, it will not invest adequate
    money in those areas until they, too, fail catastrophically.

    Tom Neff, Bob Pendleton, Jim Merrit, et al, start educating the
    net for a change. Maybe you should start by reading some nonfictional
    accounts of space technology and history rather than continuing to
    worship mythology authored by such great story-tellers as Hans Mark, Gen.
    Abramson, Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, Barney Roberts, Jessco Von
    Puttkammer, James Fletcher, et al.

    PS: If NASA ignores reality in its largest, currently most important
    and most immediate program -- the Shuttle program -- how do you think
    it is doing on future systems like Shuttle C, NASP, Space Station,
    lunar bases, space resource utilization and mars missions?

    Date: Fri, 11 Nov 88 18:17:25 PST
    From: jim@angband.s1.gov (Jim Bowery)
    Subject: Stranded in LEO due to APU failure

    In order to prepare for the next Shuttle disaster, we need to examine
    the various scenarios that may occur, their likelihood, consequences
    and what work should be done, in advance to prepare ourselves, our
    space program and our citizenry.

    For example, consider what would happen if an orbiter were stranded
    in LEO due to total APU failure. The logic of the situation would
    unfold in this scenario:

    Hundreds of millions of people on Earth would watch every detail
    of the dramatic situation unfold over several days (assuming they
    have that much life support). During the first few days, there
    will be many attempts to repair the problem with ground crews working
    round the clock on a simulated orbiter in a similar failure
    mode. They will come up with any of a number of futile attempts
    to fix the problem which the astronauts will, at first, dutifully
    carry out. This work will proceed even though there is little or no
    possibility of an actual fix. The public, the astronauts and NASA
    personnel will feel hope and dispair in cycles at each attempt,
    until, eventually, the charade will wear thin. At that point, the
    astronauts, the ones who are facing certain death, will be under
    enormous psychological pressure to end the charade.

    Such a break-point will carry with it the likelihood of one or more
    astronauts venting frustration and hostility -- possibly built up
    over many years of disillusionment as part of the crippled US space
    effort.

    NASA will attempt to blank-out all communications with
    the astronauts at or before this point. Some or all astronauts will
    not want to cooperate with this black-out and will refuse to allow
    the their communications to be encrypted. Ham radio operators and
    others around the world will band together to pick up the transmissions
    of the doomed astronauts and make them available to the public.

    After breaking from the bureaucracy's authority, the astronauts
    may become extremely critical of specific individuals in NASA and
    its contractors. They will have nothing to lose and will finally
    have a chance to right what they perceive as the wrongs in the
    space program.

    A few weeks after the dying words of the astronauts are heard,
    the shuttle will reenter the atmosphere at 5 or 6 miles per second.
    It will break up. A few large fragments will scatter widely and
    unpredictaby, hitting the ground before total disintigration due
    to the ablative coating. The public, ignorant of probability theory,
    will be in terror at the thought of the shuttle crashing into their
    communities causing mass destruction. The fireball could easily be
    visible from large population centers and will most likely be viewed
    on television broadcasts around the world.

    Date: Tue, 15 Nov 88 21:52:48 PST
    From: jim@angband.s1.gov (Jim Bowery)
    Subject: Possible consequence of terminal approach APU failure

    Another possible Shuttle disaster:

    During reentry 2 of the APUs fail and the third has some problems (as
    has occured before). But unlike the previous instances, the Shuttle
    comes into the terminal area energy management manuver a little bit high
    and a little bit fast. It encounters a little clear air turbulence
    while in a tight turn to bleed off this excess energy. As the pilot is
    lining up on the runway, the third and last APU gives out due to the
    buffetting. Unfortunately, the APU failed before he completed the final
    turn. The control surfaces go dead. The Space Shuttle, now out of
    control, impacts at supersonic speed into the waiting crowd which never
    hears it coming. Thousands perish.

    Date: Wed, 30 Nov 88 21:17:18 PST
    From: jim@angband.s1.gov (Jim Bowery)
    Subject: Secret Shuttle Launch Disaster Scenario

    Here's another possible Shuttle disaster:

    The DoD reopens the Vandenburg Shuttle launch facility. A payload
    with a plutonium radioactive thermal generator needs to be placed in
    an LEO polar orbit. About 2 minutes after SRB separation, a main
    engine pump turbine blade fails causing the turbine to fly apart
    at supersonic speed. The containment works pretty well but a few
    blades get out. One of them nicks the pressurization system for
    the fuel oxydizer tanks in one of the OMS pods. The astronauts sense a
    loud THUD and the loss of one of the main engines. They opt to abort
    once around using the remaining two main engines. Everything goes
    according to the contingency plan. All fuel is consumed from the
    main tank. The tank separates. The OMS engines start up. Only
    one of them lights. Since this produces an off center thrust, the
    RCS consumes excessive amounts of fuel to keep stability. The OMS
    system, only capable of using half its fuel, fails to put the Shuttle
    into a once around trajectory. It reenters short, somewhere near
    the Persian Gulf. In the early phase of reentry, when the aerodynamic
    control surfaces are insufficient to orient the spacecraft, the already
    overtaxed RCS runs out of fuel. The Shuttle begins tumbling somewhere
    over the Caucasus Mountains. By the time the control surfaces could
    be used, the Shuttle is in a fatal spin. It breaks up. When it
    breaks up, the RTG canister, designed to withstand reentry, is struck
    by one of the structural members of the Shuttle. Not being designed
    to withstand this, it shatters. 22 kilograms of Pu238-dioxide are
    distributed in the atmosphere over Moscow, Kalinin and Lenningrad.

    The Soviet ballistic missile warning radars, primarily facing north,
    are briefly treated to the spectacle of hundreds of reentering
    objects coming down around Moscow and Lenningrad. The two largest,
    most economically important and strategically significant cities in
    the Soviet Union.

    Pu238 is 284 times more radioactive than the fissionable isotope Pu239
    due to its relatively short half-life of 86 years. It decays by alpha
    emmission of 5.5Mev. While this is somewhat higher than the decay
    energy of Pu239, it is far higher than the decay energy of U235 and
    not similar to the decay energy of any other common nuclide. Thus
    to the relatively unsophisticated instruments initially used to
    evaluate the sudden release of radioactive material, it will appear
    as though 5.5 metric tons of weapons-grade Pu239 has suddenly reentered
    over Moscow.

    5.5 metric tons of Pu239 is enough to support on the order of 500
    warheads. Areasonable surmize would be that a US secret launch out
    of Vandenburg was to illegally emplace a facility containing 500 or
    so nuclear warheads into an orbit where it would pass over the
    Soviet Union 4 times per day from the south whre their early warning
    radars could not detect it until it was far too late.

    Vandenburg is a highly secured facility. Due to the local geography,
    neither the launch pad nor the assembly building can be viewed from
    sites not on the base. The Soviets will have very limited intelligence
    about launch preparations and the launch itself. Our belated
    protestations that it was merely a routine Shuttle launch will be met
    with a great deal of skepticism.

    The Soviets, sensitized by the Chernobyl disaster to nuclear
    catastrophe, will be react unpredictably.

    Date: Tue, 6 Dec 88 08:24:13 PST
    From: jim@angband.s1.gov (Jim Bowery)
    Subject: Brilliant Soviet Rescue of Astronauts Stranded in LEO

    As in the "Stranded in LEO Due to APU Failure" scenario, all 3 APU's fail,
    leaving the astronauts helplessly adrift.

    The Soviets, hearing Tom Neff's idea of a rescue effort, come up with
    a brilliant plan. They launch an unmanned Soyuz from Space City
    with the stated intent of making a rendevous with the drifting Shuttle
    and rescuing some of the astronauts (the Soyuz wouldn't have capacity
    for all of them). Space City, being at a much higher latitude than
    KSC, gives the Soyuz craft a much higher inclination orbit than the
    Shuttle. The Soyuz, being incapable of correcting its inclination
    by the required amount, intersects with the Shuttle's orbit at a few
    miles second or so.

    Thus the Soyuz saves our brave astronauts from the senseless torture
    of a slow death.

    Why would the Soviets would go along with such an imbicilic
    rescue attempt when it requires the sacrifice of a launched Soyuz
    (worth $15 to $20 million)? The Soviets draw attention and blame
    for the disaster away from NASA. This allows NASA to contain the
    political damage and maintain its appearance of conducting a space
    program, leaving the Soviets free to develop space without competition.

    ---------------
    And now for a little space policy...

    Date: Wed, 7 Dec 88 21:43:32 PST
    From: jim@angband.s1.gov (Jim Bowery)
    Subject: Diversity vs Monolithism

    Humanity can promote the richness and diversity of life by providing a
    greater variety of habitats in space rather than encroaching on existing
    terrestrial habitats. We can enhance richness and diversity in systems
    at all levels -- technological, economic, governmental, cultural, and
    biological. We can bring this gift to our world and, indeed, our
    universe, if we adhere to the principle that it is better to
    err on the side of diversity than on the side of monolithism.

    In a series of seminars with environmental groups over a period of
    years, space activists in the San Diego area have succeeded in laying
    a foundation of trust with these groups based on the above vision.
    This trust is a fragile one, more prone to misunderstandings than
    the internal factions of the National Space Society.

    As guardians of the biosphere, environmental groups are particularly
    sensitive to the issue of diversity and quality of life. The vision
    of space habitats usually comes wrapped in conventional aerospace
    concepts such as "the space program" and the National Commission on
    Space's "50 year plan". Unfortunately, for too many of us, this
    wrapping is an accurate reflection of our values. Environmental groups
    reject our vision, and rightfully so.

    Until we clean up our own act, and recognize that large government
    projects are not the way to a diversity of space activities, we will
    fail to make inroads with grass-roots America, and our gift will be
    rejected by those in the environmental movement who can lend it
    deeper ethical and moral credibility.

    We are desparate for things to happen in space. We are easy prey for
    the agents of monolithic space programs who would use us to
    prop up funding for such dubious big projects as Space Shuttle
    and now Space Station. These projects do more than waste money, they
    sap the will of our people to take responsibility for space activities
    into their own hands. Like monocropping, they displace the richness
    and diversity of natural selection with the errors of monolithism.

    We were willing to wait a decade for NASA to build Shuttle. It failed
    miserably to live up to our expecations. Now, 15 years later, NASA is
    asking us to, again, wait a decade for Space Station. It will have
    been 25 years of waiting from Skylab to a pig-in-the-poke Space Station.

    25 years.

    Think about it.

    The monolithism of our government's "X year plans" is as abhorrent
    as the "5 year plans" of totalitarian bureaucracies of communist nations.
    Do we really need the government's "help" in the form of "the space program"
    in order to realize the potential of space?

    No!

    "The space program" is merely the decaying carcas of Apollo which
    monolithists keep around like a psycho with his long dead mother.
    The stench is becoming unbearable.

    If we are going to wait 5, 10, 25 or 50 years for something, let it be for
    something of real and abiding value. Just as it takes several years
    for a dispoiled environment to regain its biodiversity, so it will take our
    economy several years to fill the markets dispoiled by government encroachment.
    Let us abandon the idea of "the space program" for the atavism it is. Let us
    not wait for yet another miracle from Uncle Sam. Instead, let us wait for the
    life force, as embodied on our free enterprise economy, to grow and flourish,
    filling all the territories that "the space program" has dispoiled by its
    decaying presence. Let us no longer accept morsels of opiated carrion from
    NASA to satiate our craving for space activity. Let us, instead, get back
    in touch with our true needs which are the mother of invention.

    Beyond business regulatory functions, let government restrict itself
    to the support of basic research through a wide variety of independent
    agencies that have their own reasons for being interested in space.
    Leave technology development and services exclusively in the hands of
    the citizens, buying technology and services on the open market when needed.

    When our people see groups of other citizens getting together to do things
    in space on their own initiative, without government help or interference,
    the life force will speak to them. Then, the National Space Society's
    mission will be accomplished and only then will we the people understand
    that space is a place to live work, play and grow.

    Jim Bowery
    PO Box 1981
    La Jolla, CA 92038

    INET: jim@pnet01.cts.com

  • by infolib ( 618234 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @10:55PM (#5208010)
    Here (Realmedia) [www.dr.dk]

    14 minutes with pre-launch shots of crew, launch, space views and landing.
    Very bad sound unfortunately.
  • by RockyJSquirel ( 412960 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @11:18PM (#5208115)
    I just heard a report on NPR that the most likely cause of the loss of the shuttle was a auxilary power unit exploding and causing a quick loss of control.

    The APU's are turbines that use hydrazine fuel. It's highly explosive and there's been talk of finding a safer power source, but the problem is that batteries would be much heavier, and coming up with a lightweight replacement would be a multi billion dollar research project.

    Anyway the turbines were due to come on line about the time the shuttle broke apart.

    Scientist Michio Kaku said that the explosion was "par for the course" in that "about 1 in 75 space launches explodes" and this was columbia's 102 mission. Which is only to say that rockets are a dangerous form of transportation.

    His next point was that this is a reason to think that the nuclear powered rockets that some (who?) are considering are a bad idea.

    Rocky J Squirrel

  • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Saturday February 01, 2003 @11:18PM (#5208119)
    There always are. This from people who would defend their Ford Taurus to the death, despite the fact that their Ford Taurus is about the most likely thing to kill them. Unless, perhaps, it's their own bathtub.

    In the meantime there are people all over the world dying at the hands of other people, quite maliciously, by the score of scores.

    The later is a tragedy. The Space Shuttle failure is an *accident.* In essence no different than a fatal car accident due to some trivial mechanical failure or other. It happens. No one threatened the cancelation of the Navy after the Thresher disaster which took the lives of 129 men, some civilians, despite the fact that these men had no more business being in the deep ocean than man has in space.

    Why do we do such things as fly into space in the first place? Well, in the words of one of the great martyrs of going someplace no one has been before, "Because it's there."

    When left to his own devices, rather than simply being asked idiotic questions by a mindless press agent, he could be quite a bit more eloquent though, and I'll depart with these words of Mr. Mallory:

    "The first question which you will ask and which I must try to answer is this, 'What is the use of climbing Mount Everest ?' and my answer must at once be, 'It is no use'. There is not the slightest prospect of any gain whatsoever. Oh, we may learn a little about the behavior of the human body at high altitudes, and possibly medical men may turn our observation to some account for the purposes of aviation. But otherwise nothing will come of it. We shall not bring back a single bit of gold or silver, not a gem, nor any coal or iron. We shall not find a single foot of earth that can be planted with crops to raise food. It's no use. So, if you cannot understand that there is something in man which responds to the challenge of this mountain and goes out to meet it, that the struggle is the struggle of life itself upward and forever upward, then you won't see why we go. What we get from this adventure is just sheer joy. And joy is, after all, the end of life. We do not live to eat and make money. We eat and make money to be able to enjoy life. That is what life means and what life is for."

    -George Leigh Mallory, 1922

    May the crew of the Columbia rest in peace, and joy, and may others live to experience the same joy of stars reached for.

    KFG
  • by eclectro ( 227083 ) on Sunday February 02, 2003 @03:26AM (#5209025)

    The local news reported on skywatchers in Southern Utah who video taped the Shuttle as it crossed the southern part of the state.

    What is interesting (no link yet, I'm surprised that the national news doesn't have a copy yet) is that in a certain place in the video you can see a very slight trail very close to the shuttle. In another video you see a very small blue dot pull off from the shuttle and follow it (after enhancement).

    Also very interesting is this report [4utah.tv] that an eyewitness decribes the shuttle changing color from "orange-yellow" to a "white with a purplish color".

    This is speculation, but I think what is being described here is the flight surface being peeled away.

    The sensors in the tire compartment that showed heating was probably because it was exposed to the air at mach 18.

    By time it reached Texas it was already a fireball.
  • Godspeed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Angst Badger ( 8636 ) on Sunday February 02, 2003 @06:36AM (#5209426)
    One of my earliest memories is seeing the last of the Apollo launches from the beach in Florida. I watched the first launch of the Columbia with my class in school. I got to see it in person, once, when it was being kept briefly at Ft. Campbell, KY, to avoid some hurricane or other.

    My ten-year-old doesn't understand why this is a big deal. Space travel, to her, is like CDs and PCs and microwave ovens -- a routine part of the world as it is. She was born after the cold war, after the glory days of the space program. Maybe when she's older, she'll understand that the space program transcended all the petty factional divisions and murderous religious and political ideologies of this sad world and was for a lot of us a shining example of the very best of the human race and a beacon of hope for a better future.

    Growing up in the 70's, astronauts were the only people I ever really thought of as heroes. NASA was the only government agency I could admire, whatever its faults, without a trace of cynicism. That hasn't changed.

    I wish I could somehow take my daughter back in time to that day on the beach when I looked southward towards the Cape and saw a Saturn V rise from the horizon on a pillar of flame. Maybe then she could understand why her parents were crying in front of the TV today. Instead, the best I could manage to say was, "They were astronauts. Our dreams went with them."

    Godspeed, folks. You were the best of the best. You will not be forgotten.

"No matter where you go, there you are..." -- Buckaroo Banzai

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