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NASA Space

NASA Commemorates Space Shuttle Tragedies 100

eldavojohn writes "Space.com is covering NASA's commemoration of the Apollo 1 crew & the last shuttle crews of both the Challenger and Columbia orbiters. The Apollo 1 crew was lost forty years ago yesterday to a fire while testing their spacecraft on a launch pad. From the article: 'While the nearly two decades separating NASA's three space disasters allowed room for the agency to grow complacent, the relatively short time between the 2003 loss of Columbia and the end of the shuttle program could avoid a repeat of such behavior.'"
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NASA Commemorates Space Shuttle Tragedies

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  • Antiques (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Original Replica ( 908688 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @01:16PM (#17790858) Journal
    the relatively short time between the 2003 loss of Columbia and the end of the shuttle program could avoid a repeat of such behavior.

    So could replacing the shuttles. Even if we keep the basic design, make one or two that are built for more frequent service and toss the rest. The only reason to "end" the shuttle program is that it became stagant.
    • Even if we keep the basic design, make one or two that are built for more frequent service and toss the rest.

      I thought the same thing. They should keep the vehicles and a single pad and launch them unmanned. It is a great capability.

      • by Hao Wu ( 652581 )
        These events are full of great woe and mourning. Nasa should celebrate the day with similar recreation of launch and avoid killing many more space men, so in order to prevent future tragedies due to sudden Oxygen explosion.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by massivefoot ( 922746 )
      I disagree. Whilst shuttle saftey could be improved by newer vehicles, the design in general just isn't safe, it doesn't allow for any reasonable launch escape system. The ejector seats that were fitted for the first few flights are impractical do to the very small section of the flight envelope in which they can be used, and the fact that several crew members are in the lower deck, making ejection impossible for them. The only abort modes of flight still require the boosters to run their course and then be
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Ok, so one important evolution of the shuttles would be an effective launch escape system where all of the crew is seated during lift-off. I'm sure there are many other issues that need to be addressed with the current design, but that's because the current design is so old. We need take these lessons and apply them, but I think further exploration of space still needs some heavy re-useable ultity vehicles. The shuttles were some real workhorses in their prime. Going back to rockets with single use capsules
        • Re:Antiques (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Dun Malg ( 230075 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @02:28PM (#17791322) Homepage

          The shuttles were some real workhorses in their prime. Going back to rockets with single use capsules is not the answer.
          No they weren't, and yes it is. The shuttles are piss-poor satellite delivery systems. They only go into low earth orbit. What we need is a cheap expendable unmanned cargo launch system, and a small passenger shuttle. Combining the two was sheer idiocy. The two tasks have very little crossover.
          • by wass ( 72082 )
            However - one of the major design points and motivation for the shuttle was the abiliy to retrieve satellites and bring them back down, hence use of the term 'shuttle'. Ultimately this was rarely done, and in the case of the Hubble Space Telescope the only shuttle which had large enough cargo bay to fit the Hubble was Columbia.
            • by amabbi ( 570009 )

              and in the case of the Hubble Space Telescope the only shuttle which had large enough cargo bay to fit the Hubble was Columbia.


              Eh? The HST was launched onboard Discovery on STS-31 [wikipedia.org]. I'm no rocket scientist, but I assume that the scope had to fit into the cargo bay in order to be launched... =)

              • Addition of the ODS (the docking port assembly for Mir/ISS ops) on Discovery, Atlantis, and Endeavour took up some space in the forward payload bay, prohibiting Hubble from being returned. Columbia did not have the ODS, but was scheduled to get one as soon as STS-107 was over (IIRC).
                • by solitas ( 916005 )
                  I haven't checked yet, but somewhere, sometime, in a /. posting I think I remember a conversation that gave links stating that the shuttles were incapable of deorbiting/landing with a payload of the mass of the HST.

                  Has anyone seen comparisons of the characteristics of the modules, satellites, and other payloads the shuttles have carried?
                  • Last I had heard, the upgrades delivered to the HST had rendered it too large to return to the Shuttle bays--any of them.
            • by mpe ( 36238 )
              However - one of the major design points and motivation for the shuttle was the abiliy to retrieve satellites and bring them back down, hence use of the term 'shuttle'. Ultimately this was rarely done,

              Because there isn't much actual reason to do so. In the case of a satellite with a failed booster the safe thing is to either fix it in orbit or deorbit it. Sticking a dodgy rocket engine in the back of a manned vehicle is not a good idea.

              and in the case of the Hubble Space Telescope the only shuttle which
          • Take a station wagon and a Jeep, mash them together, and you get a vehicle that is too expensive to take into the woods, and is too inefficient and rolls over too often on the road. There was some blog that I read a couple years back that showed how it was financially cheaper to own both a family car and a Jeep Wrangler, than to own a certain SUV. Can't remember which one. Even if it proved more expensive to own both, the benifits of having the right tool for the job are always worth it.
            • A rather clever, if pointless comparison. The whole point in trying to make the shuttles do everything, was that congress would only authorize one system. And it had to be able to do a whole list of unrelated and often conflicting things. Sure it would have been nice to have had several different systems, but who was going to pay for them? Remember also that the Delta launch vehicle, which was one of the only alternatives to using the shuttle to launch a satellite in those days, was plagued with failure
          • by mpe ( 36238 )
            The shuttles are piss-poor satellite delivery systems. They only go into low earth orbit. What we need is a cheap expendable unmanned cargo launch system, and a small passenger shuttle. Combining the two was sheer idiocy.

            They were combined for political reasons. A smaller manned vehicle might well be able to reach higher orbits, thus be more useful for repairing satellites.
        • Re:Antiques (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Nyeerrmm ( 940927 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @03:29PM (#17791750)
          Unfortunately the unsafe-ness of the shuttle isn't a small thing can be fixed, its a result of the side mounted configuration. With Apollo/Orion type capsules, or even a top mounted space plane, you can have an escape system that pulls the manned component off the top, and it's impossible to damage it with falling debris from other parts of the launch vehicle.

          Also, the very idea of the reusable manned/cargo vehicle is inherently flawed. My personal favorite analogy is like deciding that you should buy a truck (instead of a truck and a small car) because you need to haul stuff around occasionally, with gas costing $1000 per gallon.

          The new configuration, assuming it works as they say it will, is superior in l ways but one. The Ares V will have 130 m-T capability to LEO instead of the shuttles 24 m-T. The Orion capsule is in fact reusable, and while smaller than the shuttle, it doesn't make sense to launch the labs every time you go up. This goes with the idea that the ISS will become something useful. Having another tragedy like Columbia, while not only less likely, would also not cause a loss of our cargo capacity as well, which led to the current state of the ISS. The only real disadvantage is our inability to return things from orbit, and as far as I know we've never used that capability.
          • by cadeon ( 977561 )

            The only real disadvantage is our inability to return things from orbit, and as far as I know we've never used that capability.

            We used it on a few occations, the most noteable being STS-32, when Columbia brought back the absolutely massive LDEF satellite. http://setas-www.larc.nasa.gov/LDEF/index.html [nasa.gov]

          • I have to disagree with your contention that the side mount design for the shuttle was the cause of the "unsafe-ness" of the design. I believe is is a bad design on the central fuel storage tank that has caused all of the problems. Had the tank been designed with the insulation on the inside of a lightweight metal skin, surrounding the fuel tanks, rather than trying to coat the outside, there would have been no way for the insulation to fall off. It may not have saved the Challenger Crew, but it most cer
            • Both shuttle losses were directly attributable to the fact that the orbiter is next to rather than on top of the other elements.

              Challenger was lost because an SRB torched the main tank, located right next to it. Columbia was lost because of debris striking the orbiter, located right next to it. Consider that when Skylab was launched and entire solar panel deployed in the lower atmosphere where it was ripped off the rocket. It got to orbit anyway.

              The reason there's insulation on the tank in the first place i
              • While you are welcome to your opinion, I still have to maintain it is not the side by side design, but rather the fact that there is a giant fuel tank involved in the configuration.

                Had the orbiter been designed with either 3 or 4 SRB's, it would not have required an external fuel tank as the orbiters main engines would not have been required to reach orbit. There would have been no fuel tank to torch when Lockheed-Martin made the stupid decision to get the SRB manufacturer to sign off on a launch of the Ch
                • The fuel tank didn't get torched on Columbia. The SRB was leaking a jet of fire, which burned through the bottom SRB attachment. The SRB rotated around the upper connection where the nose of the SRB contacted the top of the fuel tank and caused it to collapse.

                  Even without the fuel tank in the picture, an SRB that comes lose from it's mount is going to cause a fatal situation. It doesn't matter if that SRB is attached to a fuel tank or to three other SRB's.

                  I can think of no instance where a catastrophic fail
    • by khallow ( 566160 )
      Unfortunately, at the launch rates that NASA has, a reusable launch vehicle (RLV) just isn't used often enough to be economically viable. And you need a number of vehicles not just "one or two" in case one of them breaks. I have to agree with NASA that expendable launch vehicles (ELV) like the Ares series are a better choice than RLVs until private space launch can develope enough launch volume and technology to properly test and deploy RLVs. My hope is that in 20 years (by the time the Ares I starts to get
  • by radu.stanca ( 857153 ) <radu@stanca.gmail@com> on Sunday January 28, 2007 @01:18PM (#17790866) Homepage
    god bless you all.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I first read the headline as "NASA Commemorates Space Shuttle Trajectories" and immediately saw (in my minds eye) a bunch of nerds in white collared shirts standing around toasting the outstanding flight paths of the last 25 years. What a strange thing to commemorate.
  • by canuck57 ( 662392 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @01:31PM (#17790956)

    For the heroic efforts of the astronauts who died for enhancing our knowledge of the universe, I salute you all!!! I just wish our governments would turn to peaceful efforts and get the space program back into space -- and further than ever before.

    We aught to get out of stupid wars, recover a little financial sanity and work on getting NASA going full tilt to warp drive...

    • While I think we all know this, if we could abolish war and the particular "waste" that goes with it and its preparation, there is virtually no limit to what we as a race could accomplish.

      The problem is that like wolves, lions, and Apes, we are a highly territorial creature*. So long as we keep pissing on fence posts to say "this is mine" then we will have war where two peoples have pissed on the same post.
      -nB

      * as am I, and I ain't volunteering to change first (fourth or fifth maybe...)
      • The problem is that like wolves, lions, and Apes, we are a highly territorial creature*. So long as we keep pissing on fence posts to say "this is mine" then we will have war where two peoples have pissed on the same post.

        When was the last time you saw a war fought over territory? Territory didn't get us into Iraq, or Vietnam, or Korea. The only actual territorial war going on now that I can think of off hand is the Israeli/Palistinian conflict.

        Most wars these days are fought to gain political or economic a
        • Especially in the case of economic advantage, that's still territory.
          Territory of money, territory of thought, still is control.
          -nB
    • by joe 155 ( 937621 )
      I partly agree. I actually watched first contact yesterday and I can't help but feel that the way they painted "history" (ie. 2060s->) is largely the way that we can expect our future to go. After the phoenix made its warp flight and humanity discovered that there was more to the universe than just us it put a whole new light on it and wars (and capital accumulation) ended - replaced with the persuit of classic virtues.

      I do think that humanity could be infinately perfectable but maybe we need to meet
      • wars (and capital accumulation) ended - replaced with the [pursuit] of classic virtues

        At no time in history, including the "classical" period, has more than a trivial amount of humanity not been focused on either survival, war, or capital accumulation.

        Neither Regan (yes, President Ronald Regan) nor Berman are prophets. The mere existence of alien life will not cause humanity to unite behind a utopian ideal. Maybe if those aliens give us magic boxes that solve our food, water, and energy needs, then we'll
        • I'd argue that in the long run it would lead to a longer term unity, though certainly not an immediate utopia. The reason is that we are very territorial, but if we have aliens to worry about, we can 'forget our differences' and focus all our territorial energies on other species instead of other nationalities. As long as we have someone to posture against.
      • by jbrader ( 697703 )
        If you are so naive that you actually think Start Trek is an accurate reflection of humaity and you're over 13 years old you should seriously consider having yourself committed. For your own safety.
    • NASA, which is and always has been nothing more than a civilian-esque slushfund on top of military appropriation and R&D budgets, accomplishes nothing for science or national defense that just directly funding science or defense wouldn't accomplish. The single usable accomplishment of the space program qua space program (as opposed to space program qua billion dollar R&D fund) is that we can now launch satellites cheaply in the private sector, and have no more need to do it through NASA.

      I am deeply
  • by turgid ( 580780 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @01:41PM (#17791012) Journal

    With safe, cheap access to Earth orbit.

    With a permanent human presence on the Moon.

    With human exploration of Mars.

    And with a long-range, focused, ambitious programme for human involvement in space exploration that will take us to all the major planets in our solar system, pushing science and technology for the benefit of the whole human race.

    Sorry, I've been at the malt whisky.

    • by Weaselmancer ( 533834 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @01:47PM (#17791058)

      Sorry, I've been at the malt whisky.

      It's really unfortunate that in this day and age you'd have to qualify a beautiful sentiment like the rest of your post like that. There was a time in this country, and not too long ago where you could say something like that and not have to cover your ass.

      I think what you said stands just fine on its own. If we really want to honor these people, we need to show them and the world in general that their sacrifice was not in vain. And the best way of doing that is to continue their work.

      • Sorry, I've been at the malt whisky.

        It's really unfortunate that in this day and age you'd have to qualify a beautiful sentiment like the rest of your post like that. There was a time in this country, and not too long ago where you could say something like that and not have to cover your ass.

        Yes - there was a period where people were deluded enough to think that such things were easily and cheaply doable. All we had to do was throw money at the project. (That these two beliefs are mutually incompatib

    • With safe, cheap access to Earth orbit.

      Aside from the spectacular view and parlor tricks, why?

      The moon was a chuck of dust. We learned next to nothing from it, except that golfballs can be hit really, really far.

      Mars is almost equally barren and inhospitable. We can't fix the problems on our own planet, but we presume that we can terraform Mars into something people could live on easily?

      We've been sending people into space for half a century. Has this:

      • Given us universal healthcare? (Most of t
      • by turgid ( 580780 )

        These are all problems of Human Nature. Nobody "wants" to solve them, for all kinds of reasons. People flourish when there is a positive goal to work towards, however.

        Perhaps GW should have overthrown the likes of Robert Mugabe instead of Saddam Hussein?

        We need to explore. These things may look futile just now, but I assert that it is stupid to write off an entire avenue of research and exploration because people of limited imagination can see no benefit at present.

        Political problems are never solved by

      • by turgid ( 580780 )

        ...and another thing. I'm British. When I say "we" I mean "we humans," not Americans. I'm not saying that exploring space should be entirely up to you Americans, merely acknowledging the great work and sacrifice some of you have put in.

        And yes, I agree, your country is terribly 200-year-ago when it comes to social policy.

      • by khallow ( 566160 )

        Aside from the spectacular view and parlor tricks, why?

        The single biggest technological hurdle keeping us from the rest of the universe is the cost of putting something in orbit.

        The moon was a chuck of dust. We learned next to nothing from it, except that golfballs can be hit really, really far.

        I'm far from impressed with NASA's manned lunar missions and their value, but if that's all you can see then it's a perception problem on your part. We do know a lot more about the early solar environment a

      • Don't forget that some of the people who are great at aeronautics might not be the best at educating or doctoring people. Just not all resources are equal.
      • We've been sending people into space for half a century. Has this:

        Given us universal healthcare? (Most of the rest of the industrialized nations have it. Please don't post "but universal healthcare often sucks" unless you've lived without ANY HEALTH CARE INSURANCE and needed health care.)
        Helped us educate our children, and feed the poor ones?
        Helped us cut CO2 emissions in industry and power generation?
        Helped turn the disadvantaged (disabled, undereducated, homeless) into productive members of society - or a
  • by Buran ( 150348 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @01:42PM (#17791024)
    They are already violating their own "rules". One important factor in both shuttle losses was the mindset of "We need to get this done, we don't have time to do it right." Challenger had to get off the ground as soon as possible. Columbia's loss was in part due to "we don't have time to check that" attitudes from those who could have looked for damage while the orbiter was still in orbit (i.e. photography from other spacecraft) and the assumption that there was no real problem.

    Yet, NASA continues to insist it will retire the fleet not when it is actually good and ready to do so (i.e. when it is truly safe to, when the station is done, not just rushing to an arbitrary deadline) in 2010. Every time this is brought up, they say 2010.

    Why, if they claim to have learned from these deadly accidents, are they continuing to be inflexible and continuing to cite the same hard date?

    The correct answer is, "When the station has been safely completed according to all our rules, including safety requirements."

    I've been a space buff for years and their repeated failure to learn even though they've lost THREE CREWS is mind-boggling. Going to a new design that doesn't have the design flaws (sidemount etc.) the Shuttle system does may help. But continuing to make the same mistakes, even after all this ... that's just amazing.
    • Challenger had to get off the ground as soon as possible. Columbia's loss was in part due to "we don't have time to check that" attitudes from those who could have looked for damage while the orbiter was still in orbit (i.e. photography from other spacecraft) and the assumption that there was no real problem.

      Challenger, yeah. Columbia? Not so much. Even if they did take the time to get satellite pics of the damage, there was nothing to be done. There was no feasible plan for rescuing the crew. Not enough fuel to fly to the ISS, not enough supplies for them to wait for Atlantis to be prepped for launch, and no means of resupplying them. NASA put all their eggs in one basket, and then broke the basket. Once that foam hit and they reached orbit, they were screwed. The shuttle is simply overly complex and delicate

      • by Y-Crate ( 540566 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @02:45PM (#17791444)

        Challenger had to get off the ground as soon as possible. Columbia's loss was in part due to "we don't have time to check that" attitudes from those who could have looked for damage while the orbiter was still in orbit (i.e. photography from other spacecraft) and the assumption that there was no real problem.
        Challenger, yeah. Columbia? Not so much. Even if they did take the time to get satellite pics of the damage, there was nothing to be done. There was no feasible plan for rescuing the crew. Not enough fuel to fly to the ISS, not enough supplies for them to wait for Atlantis to be prepped for launch, and no means of resupplying them. NASA put all their eggs in one basket, and then broke the basket. Once that foam hit and they reached orbit, they were screwed. The shuttle is simply overly complex and delicate.
        The problem is more that they went out of their way to not find out if Columbia was OK. Engineers were worried and put in a routine request with the DoD to have one of their birds take a few shots of the orbiter, but NASA managers found out and had it canceled. They were adamant that everything was fine and there couldn't possibly be a need to take a closer look at what happened, despite the fact it wasn't any skin off their back to evaluate the situation further. It wasn't like they were really putting the DoD out in any way, they would have gladly taken some pictures and then resumed whatever it was they were doing with the satellite.

        It was a case of "My theory is 100% infallible and don't you dare counter it even if it can be done effortlessly and for free"
        • by cnettel ( 836611 )
          Did you read the parent? You do not answer his concerns regarding what should have been done, had the damage been determined beyond doubt at that point, already in orbit.
        • by Illserve ( 56215 )
          The problem is more that they went out of their way to not find out if Columbia was OK.

          What if they had? What if some grainy picture suggested that there might be something like a hole that could cause problems... they still couldn't do anything about it. If true, they made a managerial decision and quite probably the right one.

          At best it could only cause worry and doubt in a crew powerless to do anything about it, which is a potentially fatal combination even in the absence of a real physical problem
          • by khallow ( 566160 )

            This is stupid. Even if the crew were doomed, you would know what the damage was. Instead, they had to figure out from a few hundred miles of debris what went wrong. I'll assume here that you couldn't save the vehicle even if you knew it couldn't survive reentry unrepaired (and assuming no help were possible) merely because either the crew or NASA wouldn't go along with allowing the crew to die in orbit.

            But let's say that they see that the wing is damaged (that knowledge alone would save NASA months of ti

        • A shuttle stuck in orbit can be resupplied within days. There are various ways to do it: Ask Russia, China, Japan, Europe, Navy and Air Force whether anyone has a rocket ready. At least one of them will have something that can be redied very quickly, then build a supply package to fit on it and launch. It would be easier to resupply a shuttle than to bring the crew down, but that can be done after a while, by Nasa, Russia or China.
    • by smoker2 ( 750216 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @02:49PM (#17791462) Homepage Journal

      I've been a space buff for years and their repeated failure to learn even though they've lost THREE CREWS is mind-boggling. Going to a new design that doesn't have the design flaws (sidemount etc.) the Shuttle system does may help. But continuing to make the same mistakes, even after all this ... that's just amazing.
      Oh yeah, 3 completely unrelated accidents in nearly 45 years, those dudes are way out of control ! Why don't they listen to you ? More people died building the Brooklyn Bridge, FFS !
      • by Buran ( 150348 )
        If you think institutional head-in-sand attitudes are not a common cause between all three, well let me tell you, that bridge is for sale -- want to buy it?
      • Um, there have been 2 total crew losses in 117 missions. Thats 1.7% chance of the space shuttle exploding everytime it is launched. Do you really think that is acceptable? Suppose the navy lost a nuclear submarine 1.7% of the time they went under the artic icecap? Would that be okay? Suppose 1.7% of fighter jets exploded when they used their afterburners. Is that acceptable?

        Seems pretty dismal to me but YMMV.
    • While I agree with some of what you stated, including the lack of learning from past mistakes. I must disagree with some of your contentions about what led to the Challenger and Columbia tragedies.

      The Challenger was the first major loss "in flight" of a crew. What has been well covered up is that the decision to launch on that cold morning was more about corporate ego on the part of the launch team and a head in the sand attitude from NASA. North American Rockwell, which designed and built the shuttle fl
      • "There was not enough fuel in the orbiter to reach the only 'life boat' in space, the International Space Station, as they were in a much lower orbit than the station."

        Sorry to nitpick... but it wasn't orbital _altitude_ that was a problem, it was the _inclination_. Plane changes are very expensive.
    • by khallow ( 566160 )

      I don't think the rules were particularly helpful. The problem is that they were wanting to do things like launch so that most of the launch trajectory was sunlit. But they simply didn't have enough launch window when they did all that. So then it becomes a choice between launching in less than perfect circumstances or delaying until it meets the exacting criteria. And even if safety is your only consideration, and it shouldn't be, then you still have the problem that any delay creates its own safety risks

      • by Buran ( 150348 )
        "I think one reason they're quoting the same hard date is that they really do need to phase out the Shuttle even if that means not completing the International Space Station"

        So why would it be impossible to simply say "We will retire it when the station is done" and still meet the goal of completing it in a timely fashion? The point is, the attitude of blindly quoting a 2010 date is a symptom of the same problem -- date-driven goals instead of readiness-driven goals. The continual parroting of the same date
        • by khallow ( 566160 )
          I think the motivation behind the 2010 deadline is that the current administration doesn't want the Shuttles to interfere with the new Ares I rocket. If the deadline is open, then that means some future administration might have leeway to keep them going and postpone development of the Ares line. Even so, it sounds to me like they've given a vague date of 2010. Given that the current administration won't be around then, I'm not sure there actually will be a problem. A future administration has absolutely no
  • 'While the nearly two decades separating NASA's three space disasters allowed room for the agency to grow complacent, the relatively short time between the 2003 loss of Columbia and the end of the shuttle program could avoid a repeat of such behavior.'"

    In other words: "Basically, we're gonna keep on doing the same unsafe shit as always, but now it doesn't matter since the odds only seem to catch up with us every 20 years or so and the shuttle won't be around that long."

    With that attitude, good luck finding
    • Let me clue you in. Rockets manned or otherwise are unsafe, and not as reliable as your laser mouse. They've taken unprecedented steps in recent shuttle missions to ensure the integrity of the ceramic tiles, the O-Ring debacle, rest assured, will not be repeated and Apollo was completely re-engineered with a herculean effort after the fire aboard Apollo 1.

      After all the emotional and engineering investments that are made into the one vital manned program that NASA has left, I'm sure the last thing they w
      • completely re-engineered with a herculean effort

        Yeah, because it was completely unforseeable that anything bad could ever happen. I mean, a locked capsule full of uninsulated electrical cables and flammable material pressurised with pure oxygen... what could POSSIBLY go wrong?

        Sheesh, it sounds like a Fark headline.
  • by jackb_guppy ( 204733 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @02:21PM (#17791270)
    Do not fly between Jan 27 and Feb 1, since all three accidents occur with in those days.
  • by Chysn ( 898420 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @02:45PM (#17791448)
    My parents have a time-share in Orlando during the first week of February. On our way to the time-share from the airport, on January 31, 2003, my parents told me and my siblings, "We have a surprise for you guys. We bought you tickets to Kennedy Space Center to see Columbia land tomorrow."

    Columbia was due at about 9:16am, and the tour bus dropped us off at about 8:55am. There was a crowd of maybe 200 people outside the main entrance of the space center looking up at the sky and listening to mission control's updates on a speaker mounted outside. 9:16 came and went, and the PA system went silent. At about 9:25 my dad called my cell phone and told me that they had lost communication with Columbia.

    At this point, we didn't know if they were going to close the space center to the public, so we redeemed our passes to get into the place. Kennedy staff members were crying, but they continued to be helpful. We made our way to the Shuttle Pavilion, where there was a feed from mission control indicating that there had been a "contingency," and that people who found parts of the orbiter should keep their distance due to potential hazardous materials.

    As the day went on, people flowed to the Space Center. At 1:00 or 1:30 there was a ceremony at the astronauts' memorial, and the flag was lowered to half mast.

    The tours of the facility were closed, but the displays, including the magnificent Rocket Garden, were available.

    It was an unreal day, one I'll never forget. I could have learned a lot more about what happened at home on CNN, but I'm glad I was there.
  • by SETIGuy ( 33768 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @02:55PM (#17791502) Homepage

    Before someone starts bemoaning how great and safe Apollo was compared to the shuttle, I'll say what everyone will subsequently ignore:

    If the Apollo program had gone to 117 launches, the best (max likelyhood) estimate is that there would have been 15 loss of vehicle accidents with 30 crew lost. While the error in that estimate is large, there is no evidence that Saturn launch vehicles were any safer than the shuttle, and it's a better than 1-sigma bet that they would have been worse.

  • This will likely dash the hopes of those with a romantic outlook on space exploration, but for the foreseeable future robots will be able to explore space faster, cheaper, and better.

    The complications with sending humans into space are all too obvious and too many to list here. In short, humans need to be packed inside an "earth simulation" wherever they go (air, food, water, exercise, sleep, protection from high-energy particles, etc). All that expense with very little, if anything, in return (from a sci
    • by slightlyspacey ( 799665 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @04:31PM (#17792166)
      This is a common theme that permeates almost all discussions that talk about sending humans into space. Why don't we just send robots? They're more capable, able to do more work, less costly, etc, etc, etc.

      I'm sure everyone is familiar with, or at least the work of, Dr Steven Squyre, Mars Exploration Rover PI (Spirit and Opportunity robots). He gave the following [nasa.gov] message at a NASA Administrator's Symposium back in 2004 and repeated the same message at ISDC in LA last year. It's a long read but well worth it. I've emphasized the central points:


      I'd like to finish this on a slightly lighter note by telling you a story. We had a lot of discussion yesterday about humans versus robots. And as the robot guy here, I want to tell a story about the experience that I had that really taught me a lot about that particular topic. We were at first trying to figure out how to use a set of rovers on Mars to really do scientific exploration. The technology folks at JPL [Jet Propulsion Laboratory] built a wonderful little vehicle called FIDO. And FIDO was a great test rover - you could take it out in the field and you didn't worry about getting a few scratches in the paint.

      We took it out to a place called Silver Lake in the Mojave Desert about 1997. And we went out there and it was the first time I had ever been out in the field. So I went out there with my team - a bunch of really high-priced geologic talent - some serious field geologists. And we got the rover out there and, of course, the rover breaks down. First time I've ever been out in the field, it's dusty, it's dirty, you know, the rover's not working. So okay, what am I going to do with all these bored geologists I've got on my hands? So I said, "Look, let's go on a geology walk. Let's go on a little field trip." So everybody got their boots and their rock hammers and their hand lenses and everything. And I picked up a notebook and a stopwatch. And we walked out to a nearby ridge where I knew there was some interesting geology exposed and we sat down - or rather I sat down - and they went off and they started geologizing.

      And I started timing them. You know, how long does it take for Andy Knoll to walk over to that rock? How long does it take Ray Arvidson to pick that thing up and break it open with his rock hammer and look at it with a hand lens? And they were doing a lot of things that our rovers couldn't do, but I focused on the things they were doing that our rovers could do. And, you know, I did it as quantitatively as I could - this was hardly a controlled experiment. And when I looked at the numbers afterwards, what I found was that what our magnificent robotic vehicles can do in an entire day on Mars, these guys could do in about 30-45 seconds.

      We are very far away from being able to build robots - I'm not going to see it in my lifetime - that have anything like the capabilities that humans will have to explore, let alone to inspire. And when I hear people point to Spirit and Opportunity and say that these are examples of why we don't need to send humans to Mars, I get very upset. Because that's not even the right discussion to be having. We must send humans to Mars. We can't do it soon enough for me. You know, I'm a robot guy. I mean, I love Spirit and Opportunity - and I use a word like "love" very advisedly when talking about a hunk of metal.

      But I love those machines. I miss them. I do. But they will never, ever have the capabilities that humans will have and I sure hope you send people soon.

      • I don't want to sound dismissive of the entire lecture since I have not yet read it, but I'd like to give my first impression from the portion you quoted.

        Though he spoke in 2004, he's talking about a preliminary experiment that was done ten years ago. One highlighted part says, "...what I found was that what our magnificent robotic vehicles can do in an entire day on Mars, these guys could do in about 30-45 seconds." Sounds good to me. Even that is still a big win for robotics (as opposed to humans) when
        • My inspiration to get into the space arena were from the Viking landers back in 1976, so I appreciate your response and can certainly understand your point of view. I'm a big believer in the robotic planetary missions and do believe it would be a grave error to shift all of those funds into the VSE. Agreed, it is vastly more expensive, difficult, and dangerous to send humans into space rather than these marvelous machines. If we are talking STRICTLY bang-for-the-buck, robot explorers are perhaps the most
    • I emphatically agree. Though I love human space travel, the biggest advances in the last 10 years have been in robotics, and the largest setbacks have been in human space travel. We have ignored the shift in the equation.... Mars Rovers and for that matter Roomba's make it clear that things have changed...
    • Then the species is doomed. Look up Dinosaurs sometime. You've got a target on your back.
  • So the shuttle launches, and lands safely, and each time it's world news? Bah. This isn't the Dan Dare future we were promised in the 70s.
    • so, you got your flying car yet? me neither :-(
    • by Chysn ( 898420 )
      It should be news. It's better than complete apathy like it was throughout the 90s. This isn't commercial airline travel; with respect to space exploration, we're not even to 1492 yet.
  • The loss of the astronauts serves as a reminder that exploration is dangerous - and complacency kills. In absolute terms, or even as a percentage, the exploration of space has been made with remarkably fewer deaths than other explorations. The body count for exploring the world, the seas, and the polar regions dwarfs that of space exploration.

    It's when we forget just how dangerous it is, that we get sharply reminded. Even more unfortunately, when the people who sent them there forget it. Even with t

  • Schools (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Satertek ( 708058 ) <brian@satertek.info> on Sunday January 28, 2007 @04:49PM (#17792366) Homepage
    Having gone to schools honoring two of these men (Roger Chaffee Elementary and Virgil Grissom High), I've had a deep respect for the Apollo 1 crew my entire life. (There is also an Ed White Middle, and all three are in Huntsville, AL)
  • In 2003 everyone said get rid of the space shuttle. It was too dangerous. Build a new launch vehicle.

    Then the Earth science projects started getting cancelled. People started losing their jobs. It was time to bring global warming back. Now we suddenly needed those earth science projects. Those low Earth orbit projects the Clinton beurocrats said weren't doing anything for us actually were doing everything for us.

    Then came new medicare entitlements, new social security entitlements. NASA's 2007 appropr
  • by Planetes ( 6649 ) on Sunday January 28, 2007 @10:21PM (#17794978)
    On January 28, 1986 I was a 12yo boy in Florida staring out of my math class day dreaming as a I watched that oh so familiar arc of light streak into the sky. I was a boy who had been building spacecraft with Legos since I was 4. I was never a normal boy. I always did things like build airlocks into my spacecraft. It just seemed obvious. From the time I was 4 my mother has been terrified that I would get my feet off the ground.

    On February 1, 2003 I had given up my first career as a software developer and had returned to school at the University of Central Florida to study Aerospace Engineering. I was early in my second semester and I was sitting in the Engineering atrium between Engineering Buildings 1 and 2. I was studying Calculus (calc 2 specifically) and I looked up at the flat screen monitors hanging from the walkway. I was sitting there staring at the screens watching the multiple pieces of debris streaking across the Texas sky. I sat and paused but I didn't cry. Challenger had hardened that in me. I thought for a moment and went back to my text book.

    On May 6, 2006 I graduated UCF with a Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Engineering. Two weeks later I had moved to Seattle and began working at Boeing on the 787 as a Systems Engineer. I spent my senior year mastering orbital mechanics and satellite design.

    Am I there yet? No. But my own history has taught me two things: the road is long and others will be lost. Morbid? possibly.. But I never gave up a dream and I never will. Someday my career will take me there, to insure that I will do what I need to do.

    For some people it is natural to dream and then move on. For others, that dream never quite dies.

Almost anything derogatory you could say about today's software design would be accurate. -- K.E. Iverson

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