SPACE SHUTTLE COLUMBIA - How and why the tragic accident happened.
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
SPACE SHUTTLE COLUMBIA - How and why the tragic accident happened.
This is why and how it happened:
When Columbia started into Orbit, the Shuttle lost part of the isolation of one of its fuel tanks.
This piece of isolation hit the left wing of Columbia.
NASA said last Friday it believed this damage to be "insignificant".
"It should not cause problems at re-entry of the Shuttle", they said.
They were wrong.
God were they wrong.
When Columbia started into Orbit, the Shuttle lost part of the isolation of one of its fuel tanks.
This piece of isolation hit the left wing of Columbia.
NASA said last Friday it believed this damage to be "insignificant".
"It should not cause problems at re-entry of the Shuttle", they said.
They were wrong.
God were they wrong.
#3
Platinum Member
Platinum Member
That piece of debris that came apart and impacted the wing upon launch may have damaged part of the heat shield system. Of course, without that protection, the 3000 degrees of heat generated during re-entry may have caused the disintegration of the shuttle.
#4
Platinum Member
Platinum Member
Originally posted by gdfatha
A reasonable question: Why NO EVA to verify no damage when they were docked with the ISS??
A reasonable question: Why NO EVA to verify no damage when they were docked with the ISS??
#5
Platinum Member
Platinum Member
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Beautiful Fort Lauderdale www.cheetahcat.com
Posts: 10,833
Likes: 0
Received 6 Likes
on
6 Posts
I heard it was Ice but the fact of the matter is there was no EVA Inspection or even a visual done of the damage the Tile Insulation system is fragile!
They had time in space to check the wing.
on the early shuttles the Insulation was Balsa wood (fuel tank)now I do not know what they use!
They had time in space to check the wing.
on the early shuttles the Insulation was Balsa wood (fuel tank)now I do not know what they use!
#6
Registered
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Edison, NJ, USA
Posts: 6,337
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I think while your report is true about a piece of insulation breaking off on liftoff and hitting the leading edge of the wing, you are a bit premature about the cause of this tragety. unless you are affiliated with NASA and know more than the rest of us, Speculation is not advised.
#10
Guest
Posts: n/a
Originally posted by gdfatha:
A reasonable question: Why NO EVA to verify no damage
when they were docked with the ISS??
gdfatha: They were NOT docked with the ISS!
All Shuttles before did dock with ISS.
Columbia was the only one which did not dock - they just did their 80 experiments on their own.
A reasonable question: Why NO EVA to verify no damage
when they were docked with the ISS??
gdfatha: They were NOT docked with the ISS!
All Shuttles before did dock with ISS.
Columbia was the only one which did not dock - they just did their 80 experiments on their own.