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February 1, 2003Columbia Downby Trent Telenko at February 1, 2003 3:34 PM
The Space Shuttle Columbia broke up at mach 18 and 200,000 feet over north central Texas at ~ 8:00 AM CST this morning. There is virtually no hope that any of the seven person crew, including Israeli's first astronaut, have survived. Early reports from local Texas news stations report debris impact near Palestine, Texas. NASA is advising locals to stay away from the debris due to the extremely toxic, poisonous and flamable nature of the Hydrazine thruster fuel. Update: NASA has reported "shuttle debris sighted in north and central Texas" and they have lowered the flag to half staff at their facilities. There will be a NASA news conference at 10:30 AM CST. President Bush is returning from Camp David to the White House by motorcade due to weather keeping Marine One grounded. Update 2: Local houston weather radar (channel 11 KHOU) replays are showing the Columbia's debris trail extending over south east Texas. Since the radar picks up only small particles, the only conclusion is that the Columbia has mostly vaporized. We may not have any bodies to bury. Update 3: There are three crew remaining on the international space station. They have a Soyuz attached and there is a Progress resupply tanker that has just been launched. They are in no danger. Update 4 -- 10:28AM CST: There are now multiple reports of debris from small Texas communities north of Houston. They are talking about small pieces of aluminium, ceramic tiles etc. Nothing that is large or heavy. This follows as the larger heavier pieces will follow a ballistic trajectory down range. Louisianna will be the likely landing place for those larger pieces. Tyler, Lufkin, Jasper, Corsicana, and Nacogdoches, Texas are all reporting debris. There is also a report of an apartment complex in Plano, Texas is burning from apparent shuttle debris impact. Local fire fighters are on the job and are laying foam on it. Update 5 -- 11:01 AM CST NBC reports FEMA has been designated as the lead Federal agency for the clean up of Shuttle debris. The US Military's Northern Command has been tapped to provide support for the effort. Update 6 -- 11:25 AM CST The local Houston TV stations are now playing call ins from eye witnesses and people who have found debris. There are reports (from NBC at the Pentagon) that a US Military defense support program satellite spotted a "heat spike" from the shuttle. Dallas TV stations (KTTV via my local Houston stations) are showing helicopter views of burning fields that have shuttle debris. The Houston Channel 13 station just had a call in from someone who has Shuttle debris hit his house! Rural Texas emergency management and law enforcement numbers are jammed with calls. People are calling houston TV stations via cell phones to get information on debris out to the public. Update 7 -- 11:35am CST Local Texans are waking up, turning on their news and calling anyone and everyone. Local emergency services lines and now some of the media lines are jammed. Anyone on the blogosphere who reads this, please post on your sites the usual disaster warnings to stay off the phone lines unless you are involved in a emergency so vital communications can get through. Update 8 -- 11:45 AM CST Here is the NASA statement on the disaster: A Space Shuttle contingency has been declared in Mission Control, Houston, as a result of the loss of communication with the Space Shuttle Columbia at approximately 9 a.m. EST Saturday as it descended toward a landing at the Kennedy Space Center, Fla. It was scheduled to touchdown at 9:16 a.m. EST.Communication and tracking of the shuttle was lost at 9 a.m. EST at an altitude of about 203,000 feet in the area above north central Texas. At the time communications were lost. The shuttle was traveling approximately 12,500 miles per hour (Mach 18). No communication and tracking information were received in Mission Control after that time. Search and rescue teams in the Dallas-Fort Worth and in portions of East Texas have been alerted. Any debris that is located in the area that may be related to the Space Shuttle contingency should be avoided and may be hazardous as a result of toxic propellants used aboard the shuttle. The location of any possible debris should immediately be reported to local authorities. Flight controllers in Mission Control have secured all information, notes and data pertinent to today's entry and landing by Space Shuttle Columbia and continue to methodically proceed through contingency plans. More information will be released as it becomes available. The Houston media is reporting that NASA is in "Media lockdown" with reporters being put in waiting rooms with no contact with anyone but NASA P.R. officials. Hat tip to spaceflightnow.com Update 9 -- 12:03 PM CST Raw home video from all over south east Texas is now showing up on the local Houston TV stations. One video from Nacogdoches, Texas shows the nozzle from a Shuttle OMS thruster sitting on a road. Local Texas National Guardsmen have reported in and are providing security in many areas for Shuttle debris. No one in the environmental HazMat suits have been shown on any of the video I have seen yet. We will find out in a couple of days, when people start dying, whether any of these pieces have the toxic rocket fuel residue on them. There is also an unconfirmed report of human remains with shuttle debris in Jasper Texas. Update 10 -- 11:20 AM CST The latest unconfirmed reports are that the "possible human remains" are in San Augustine, Texas. These could be astronaut remains, some poor unfortunate murder victim or just called in pranks. Update 11 -- 12:53 PM CST The O'Keefe news conference is over. They restated the obvious. The crew is almost certainly dead. There will be a technical briefing at 3:00 pm. FEMA is the point agency for the clean up. The Department of Homeland Security is getting its first work out with this disaster trying to work with emergency 1st responders in Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas. We have confirmation from Texas DPS of Shuttle related human remains in San Augustine. "Two body parts were found." There was no further elaboration. Update 12 -- 1:14 PM CST Bush made it official in his address to the nation. The Columbia crew is dead. There are reports over on the Free Republic that MSNBC is playing the last communications from the Columbia. Apparently there was a 57% bank to the left. The tire pressure sensor went off and then you hear the sounds of the break up. Update 13 -- 1:37 PM CST The recovery efforts by the Federal government now involved helicopters from Ft. Hood and various Texas National Guard aviation units seconded to FEMA. Many are now staging through Ellington Field in the Houston area to conduct grid searches of the Columbia debris field. Local Houston TV stations are showing many Texas locals rubber necking the Columbia debris. There are also now showing human interest interviews of people in the Clear Lake area surrounding the Johnson Space Center. Flowers and notes of condolence are being laid at the gate of JSC. Businesses are putting out messages of condolence on their signs. I am reminded of the memorial that sprang up in the field in Pennsylvania around the Flight 94 impact site. Update 14 -- 2:25 PM CST There is conformation of Shuttle associated human body parts in Jasper, Texas as well. There are going to be closed casket funerals. Local Houston TV stations are reporting a California astronomer saying that the Shuttle Columbia was trailing debris, and there were flashes of light, as it passed over head. This would be consistent with the Shuttle shedding TPS tiles during reentry. Update 15 -- 3:02 PM CST I'm listening to the NASA news conference right now. Numerous heat sensors in the wing started dying at 7:53 AM with no heat temperture associated with the failure. (In so many words, it was as if the wires to the sensors were cut.) Then the langing gear tire pressure sensor went off at 7:58 AM. The crew was asked about it from ground control. The crew reponded and was cut off in mid word. Telemetry then indicated a 57 degree bank and sounds of static similar to the break up of Challenger were heard. Then nothing. To my ear, it sounds like the techical description given is consistent with a TPS failure on the left wing. The bank was caused when the wing landing gear tire overheated in the wing and exploded. This destroyed the structural integrity of the left wing. The Columbia then went into a fatal roll and broke up in flight. The Q&A is going on, but I think we are not going to get much more form this. TV and Newspaper reporters are too technically ignorant to ask relevant questions. Update 16 -- 3:18 PM CST One of the reporters surprised me. NASA was asked about the CalTech astronomer report I mentioned earlier. This ellicited a response that the Columbia was going through "maximum thermal load" at the point telemetry was lost. I won't call this a "smoking gun" for the TPS failure theory, but it is very suggestive. Update 17 -- 3:37 PM CST Here is an AP report on the Shuttle investigation and Federal recovery efforts. Here is an AP report on the CalTech astronomer mentioned earlier. Here is a report on possible failure modes. Update 18 -- 3:54 PM CST The local Houston TV reporters are now saying that the 57 degree bank was one of a series done to slow down the Shuttle during reentry. So this was normal and was not caused by the TPS failure. However, by putting the left wing into maximum thermal load, it may have caused it. Peggy Noonan has better words than I do about this disaster. Update 19 -- 4:30 PM CST This is the wrap up. We had a Mach 20.9 break up of a Shuttle over a moderately populated area of South Central Texas. The total death count on the ground as of this time is zero. While there is property damage, it is less than that caused by a single line of heavy thunderstorms or a single tornado. The Commerce Department and FAA regulations on the safety and insurance requirements of commerical space operations are going to have to be revised in light of this "flaming datum." While much is going to be said about the need for more Shuttles or a replacement for the Shuttle fleet. We already have a manned space transportation back up. It is called the Soyuz. The Cold War is over and the Russians will sell America as any as we are willing to buy. If we want "assured human access to space" that is for American national security. Then that calls for a small, reusable, high flight rate military space plane and a seperate military space service to use it. The USAF has made clear that it would rob money from a military space plane to fund the F/A-22 and you can't launch a space plane from a Nimitz class carrier. If you want assured civilian human access to space, then putting out launch service bid to private launch service providers is the way to go. Lock-Mart or Boeing are fully capable of putting crewed capsules or space planes on their Atlas and Delta rockets respectively. Orbital Sciences has made similar proposals for NASA's orbital rescue vehicle. Whatever we do, we need to retire the huge standing army associated with the NASA shuttle. We can no longer afford to allow NASA to have a monopoly on manned space flight. NASA is a Cold War Space Agency. The Cold War is over and the centralized government bureaucracy paradigm has been shown to be a under performing failure. It is time to demobilize NASA and move on to opening the space frontier. There are other government entities that can do the job of exploration, the military for one, National Science Foundation for another, and universities for yet another. And the private sector awaits if the regulatory and tax environment can be made attractive enough. It is time that we used them all in the traditions of late 19th and early 20th century America. Go check out these links: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2003-02-01-space-shuttle_x.htm http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/833930/posts
http://www.instapundit.com/archives/007196.php#007196
http://www.interglobal.org/weblog/archives/002063.html#002063 NOAA's weather radar image of the Columbia break up http://weather.noaa.gov/radar/latest/DS.p19r0/si.kshv.shtml
http://www.khou.com/topstories/khou030201_ds_ShuttleDebris.10bac482.html This is a list of live video streams from the Free Republic: BBC World: http://202.174.129.100/bbc300k
Tracked: February 2, 2003 4:38 AM
Hail Columbia! from Sgt. Stryker's Daily Briefing
Excerpt: I took Darling Daughter#2 on our monthly Daddy Daughter date this afternoon, shortly after the President's speech I mentioned below. It was good to get out, and a lot of people were out enjoying the 70°F weather outside. But those I talked to seemed a
Comments
#1 from Tom Roberts at 3:55 pm on Feb 01, 2003
This is going to result in a certain cessation of manned space flight missions by NASA for an extended period of time. Years probably. It will indirectly put a huge pressure on Space and Missiles Center's launch office (http://www.losangeles.af.mil/SMC/CL/) to come up with a way to get military loads up into space on a more frequent basis. Up to now they were piggy backing on NASA for short term experimental projects.
#2 from steve at 4:01 pm on Feb 01, 2003
i don't believe that this tradgedy was an act of terrorism, but it suprised me to find out that the isreali on board was one of the pilots that bombed the iraqi nuclear plant in the early '80s. wasn't this asking for a least an attempt on this mission? Judging by the events of the last few years, any mission is a target because it contains Americans. Any Israeli astronaut does represent a slightly increased security risk, but most of that risk centers around the launch window and is therefore controllable. On re-entry, the shuttle is moving too fast to be a missile target until the very last stages, at which point it's a glider and so not really a heat source. If this is a terrorist incident, it would have to be a damn brilliant one. Apparently a piece of insulation detached during liftoff and hit one of the wings. According to comments from various engineers that I have read, it is possible that even mild damage to the wing would result in a high-g spin during re-entry. It appears that this tragedy is likely to be the result of simple mechanical failure. (Due to the shuttle design, once the booster rockets are lit the takeoff cannot be aborted.)
#5 from rc at 10:25 pm on Feb 01, 2003
I think it's interesting to note something that I was just reminded of during the NASA news conference. Basically, any damage to the shuttle during take-off, especially any tile damage, is not repairable at any point during the flight. Thus, as much as we have grown used to seeing mission after successful mission (the Challenger notwithstanding), these missions always have a considerable risk factor. It is entirely possible that some tile damage occurred during lift-off, but the method of determining that is imprecise at best, and even if an accurate damage assessment could be made, there is virtually nothing that could be done about it. Basically, there is no way of knowing whether tile damage is catastophic until the shuttle re-enters the atmosphere. Very sobering thought and a reminder of the inherent risks and tremendous bravery of the crews.
#6 from G. Haubold at 10:41 pm on Feb 01, 2003
You can be sure it's not a terrorist event. The shuttle was over 200,000 feet and moving at Mach 18. Maybe SDI could have hit it on a good day, but nothing else could have. Note: the top altitude on the SR-71 is about 100,000 feet and the U2 tops out around 75,000 feet. All the NASA "experts" are saying that the foam insulation that came off the liquid fuel tank during the ascent and hit the orbiter left wing was unlikely to do damage - except, "why did it come off in the first place?" Maybe because it was coated with a thick layer of heavy ICE? The orbiter was close to peak thermal load when it started to come apart . . . . . Instapundit's "zipper" theory doesn't ring as true to me as there being lots of tile damage (maybe just many loosened tiles) on the left wing from insulation & ice contact @ launch. It doesn't sound as if anyone could see the left wing to inspect it in orbit - and the NASA experts decided it was OK based on informed guesswork(or WAGS) and because there was no way to make repairs anyway. So, enough tiles were off heat sensitive areas on the left wing (leading edge & underside) to allow burn through to start a disaster cascade - more tiles coming off, structural failure, hydraulics, whatever. Maybe the wing panel even came off (in the best video of the initial break-up, a white and rectangular piece comes loose - either a wing panel, vertical stabilizer or SOMETHING). It doesn't matter whether tiles were knocked off on the ascent, or whether just loosened enough to fall off early-on in the descent, the result would have been the same. Question of the day: if you were the pilot, would you have wanted to know the wing was severely damaged in advance? I sure would have, and if NASA suspected something but didn't act on it because there was no solution anyway, I think they have an incredibly big problem on their hands.
#7 from G. Haubold at 10:46 pm on Feb 01, 2003
One other thing. NASA used to estimate that about 1 in a hundred missions would fail due to the complexity of the orbiter and rocket motors. I heard they recently changed the statistical estimate to about 1 in 500. Now, when he was alive, Richard Feynman said the missions were getting riskier rather than safer over time (leading up to the Challenger disaster). I think he based his estimate on the number of serious anomalies reported on each mission. My question is: has the serious anomaly rate per mission been increasing, decreasing or constant over the past year or two? For the record, this was Columbia's 28th mission, and approximately the 130th shuttle mission since inception.
#8 from G. McMinds at 11:42 pm on Feb 01, 2003
I find it hard to accept that an orbital EVA inspection wasn't done when it was known that the shuttle was impacted during lift-off.
#9 from rc at 12:06 am on Feb 02, 2003
It certainly wasn't my intent to imply that anyone at NASA knew there was a problem. In fact, I have to take them at their word at this point, when they say they looked at the tile/foam/ice that came off during launch and determined that it was not a problem. I was just trying to point out that, even though everything may have been done that is possible, there is a certain risk matrix fundamentally built into the design parameters of the shuttle that dates back to the late 60's/early 70's, that many people probably aren't aware of. Space travel is still a very dangerous business, and over the years, the perception has grown in the media/public at large that it's the equivalent of a ride in an airliner. NASA may be partially to blame for this, since they keep recruiting ordinary citizens, like teachers, to fly, when the risks are still enormous. I say, as long as passengers realize the risks, there's no ethical issue there at all, but it may confuse the public. If I were given a chance today, knowing what I know, I would still jump at a chance to fly in the shuttle, right now. And if something happened, I would accept that I took a huge risk for a once in a lifetime experience. Well, this turned into a rambling statement, but I'm just struck at how I had forgotten over the years how much risk there has always been with shuttle flight and had taken it all for granted. Let's hope that the problem is found, corrected, and manned space flight stays a priority in this country.
#10 from Tom Holsinger at 12:41 am on Feb 02, 2003
Given the tenacity with which failed federal bureaucracies hang onto their missions, no matter how many Americans they kill, we should consider swapping them instead. I suggest we have NASA and the FBI swap managment. I've wanted to send FBI Director Mueller to Mars for 16 months now. Each agency's management could hardly do worse in their new roles than the existing management. Trent, absolutely great work today. My sincere thanks.
#12 from Eric at 3:33 am on Feb 02, 2003
Regarding an EVA: we're not talking about walking around your car to see if a tire is flat. An unplanned EVA has many risks involved with it, would basically burn the mission timeline to the ground, and may not have been possible in any case. The majority of NASA spacewalks are confined to the cargo bay of the Orbiter, or are assisted by the Manipulator Arm. Columbia wasn't carrying the Arm this time around. Safety tethers long enough to leave the bay, go underneath the shuttle, and cover the entire left wing may not (I'll venture to say "were not") carried on this flight. At worst, we could have lost an astronaut trying it. At best, we could have confirmed that there was a problem, and MAYBE been able to get the Orbiter to the ISS until another shuttle could get there. Certainly, in hindsight, an EVA may have been the right thing to do, but at the cost of the rest of the mission when prior experience has shown us that it would have been a waste of time. Objects smack into the Orbiter all the time on takeoff. Ice, insulation, birds, and lightning have all been catalogued at one time or another. In the past, these haven't been enough to damage the heat tiles, and right now we don't have enough information to assume that that's what happened this time. We have circumstantial evidence only. We don't even know exactly where the falling insulation struck the Orbiter, except that it was somewhere on the left wing. Logic would indicate that it was probably forward on the wing, but the sensors that stopped working were on the trailing edge (elevons) then the middle (wheel well), not the front. Yes, initial guesses are that the insulation damaged some tiles, and that may have been enough to cause a burnthrough on the wing. It's also possible that something else entirely caused this disaster. We just don't know enough right now to guess. There are just so many ways that a landing can go wrong that pointing at one thing at this point and saying "AHA! THAT'S WHAT CAUSED IT" is the last thing you want to do.
#13 from Eric at 3:38 am on Feb 02, 2003
Oh, re: possible terrorist causes... If something was shot at the shuttle when it was moving at Mach 16+, at 200,000 feet, without anybody noticing, I want the name of the company that created the weapon. Sounds like a helluva investment opportunity.
#14 from G. Haubold at 4:01 am on Feb 02, 2003
Eric: Points well taken on the uncertainty of the exact cause, which won't be known for weeks or months . . . . . . informed speculation IS part of the learning process for us non-professionals, however. My understanding is that even if there was a problem with the tiles or the structure, any kind of EVA could NOT have effected repairs, and the shuttle didn't have enough fuel to make the orbital changes necessary to get to the ISS AND without docking capability there wouldn't be a method to get people out of the Columbia and into the ISS. In short, even if the left wing was known to be severely compromised, there wouldn't have been ANYTHING to try other than a standard reentry . . . . . . makes me wonder if those circumstances colored any experts' judgement about the likelihood of the wing being damaged? From early on, the shuttle has been an economic and scientific dodo. IF it had the orbital capability to get up to geosynchronous altitude where all the communications satellites are, maybe, just maybe the economics might justify the extremely high risk of failure, but as it is, the shuttle should have been shut down long, long ago. And yes, I thought that before Columbia and before Challenger, even. So did most other halfway knowledgeable people who didn't have a hand in the NASA cookie jar . . . . .
#15 from Bill Peterson at 4:03 am on Feb 02, 2003
The U.S. Space Program will emerge from this tragedy stronger and more determined to push forward the frontiers of human exploration. God Bless the crew STS-107/Columbia...God Bless the USA...we will NEVER forget.
#16 from Tim at 4:35 am on Feb 02, 2003
Feynman's report of the Challenger disaster included the engineering estimate of probability of failure at 1 in 100, while NASA management estimated 1 in 100,000. Feynman's last comment was especially to the point: "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled."
#17 from Eric at 6:45 am on Feb 02, 2003
G. Haubold... By the way, I'm no expert on the Orbiter, either. The only thing I'm an expert on is rubber duck collecting, and I'm just a guy who grew up a Shuttle Geek. All I've said on various weblogs today is stuff that's available online, from the news conferences, and run thru my personal knowledge base. I surely don't want to get into a discussion about whether the whole Space Shuttle program is valuable or not in equality to its actual cost... I just don't think it's appropriate today. When it comes to an incident like this, remember that my opinion is, at best, as good as yours, and quite possibly not as good.
#18 from John at 7:44 pm on Feb 07, 2003
Anything with the energy and intelligence that can create crop circles (pictograms) on the ground can probably degrade the integrity of a few shuttle tiles. I wouldn't care to speculate on the motive though. So you're suggesting that a couple of drunk Britons downed the shuttle?? A.L.
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