“Obviously a
Major Malfunction” – 25th Anniversary
Sunday Jan 27,2013
By Andrea Shea
King
“I
saw a single rocket spiral outward, unattached from the mother ship.
Firework-like smoke and streamers burst forth from the center, ghastly tendrils
turned a sickly orange color as gravity pulled them earthward. We were
witnessing a catastrophe… I didn’t breathe. I knew that we were watching the
awful death of seven of our own.”
I
wrote this several years ago on my previous blog site at Blogger. I’m reposting
it in observance of the day 27 years ago when we lost the Space Shuttle
Challenger and all seven astronaut crew members on board.
Tuesday,
January 29, 2008
It
was seventy-three seconds after lift-off on January 28, 1986 that the Space
Shuttle Challenger exploded, killing its entire seven member crew, which
included a high school teacher, the first private citizen to fly aboard the
craft.
I
was working with NASA as a public information officer attached to the press
site at Kennedy Space Center. My job that morning was to deliver pre-launch
commentary at the communication console inside the Launch Control Center at the
Cape.
I
began my shift at the microphone at about 3am, about the time the tanking
operations got underway when millions of pounds of pressurized hypergolic fuels
were being pumped into the behemoth at Launch Pad 39-B as the seven astronauts
breakfasted before suiting up for the big event.
I
would continue commenting on the launch prep until the astronauts were driven
to the launch pad. Launch commentary emanated from Kennedy Space Center
until the shuttle lifted off and cleared the tower. From then on, the launch
became a “mission”, thus the commentary from that point would be undertaken by
mission
control in Houston.
It
was cold in the pre-dawn hours. It was still dark when I left my home bundled
in a winter coat. I could see my breath — unusual for Florida.
When
I arrived at the LCC (Launch Control Center), my supervisor, NASA Public
Affairs news chief Hugh Harris, was already seated at his communications
console, headset on. I slid into the adjacent chair and opened a 3-ring binder
that contained the launch sequence and milestones that I would be talking to,
explaining to the public — the taxpayers — in simple language exactly what was
taking place.
“No
anomalies” Harris advised me in NASA-speak, meaning everything was proceeding
normally. I took over the mic, offering comments as the launch team hit
significant milestones in the countdown sequence. And so it went as the clock
ticked forward smoothly toward an 11:38 a.m. liftoff.
The
seven suited-up astronauts began their departure from crew quarters in the
Operations and Checkout “O and C” building, located about three miles away.
NASA cameras, along with national and international TV media, were trained at
the exit way where they would do the “walk-out”, waving at those cameras and at
an assemblage of cheering NASA and contracted workers as the silver-suited
astronauts made their way into the silver Airstream “Astrovan” for the ride to
the launch pad.
As
they strode toward the TV cameras and the van, I keyed the mic to describe
their walkout. Little did I know those words would be heard thousands of
times in the aftermath of the shuttle explosion, as TV news programs replayed
the last moments we saw the Challenger Seven alive.
Last Moments of
Space Shuttle Challenger and Crew
During
all of this time, there was great concern among the Launch Control engineers
about the cold temperatures at the launch pad. Some advised against a launch,
arguing that the rocket boosters’ O-rings had not been tested for such a cold
environment, and it was not certain they would perform within design
parameters. But others in more senior engineering positions prevailed for a
lift-off. Many believed they felt pressured to launch lest they be the
cause of a delay that would cost NASA millions of dollars. And besides,
everyone in the world was tuned in to see Christa McAuliffe become the first
Teacher in Space.
Throughout
the pre-dawn morning a team was sent with long broom-like stick handles to
break up the ice that had built-up under the shuttle. An infrared camera
focused on right-hand solid rocket booster aft field joint revealed the ambient
temperature at a mere 8°F. Discussion on temperature concerns continued
throughout the morning, albeit outside of our comm loop. Ultimately, after much
haggling among several key engineers, the
fateful decision was made to proceed, and the clock ran steadily for
launch.
Finally,
we hit the T-minus ten second mark.
“Ten…nine…eight…seven…six…
we have main engine start”. The excitement was
palpable. America’s first Teacher in Space was about to make history! “Four,
three…two…one…and lift-off! Lift-off of the 25th Space Shuttle mission and it
has cleared the tower!”
At
this point, our commentary was done. I swiveled around to face the glass
floor-to-ceiling window behind me and watched Challenger rise away from the
pad. As she climbed, a gorgeous billowy white column rose underneath her, the
twin solid rockets and three main engines glowing brilliantly like blinding
sunlight against a cold and deep blue sky.
At
68 seconds, the CAPCOM (Capsule
Communicator) gave the order to the crew to “Go at throttle up.”
Commander Dick Scobee confirmed the call. “Roger, go at
throttle up.”
Those
were the last words we ever heard from Challenger.
About
73 seconds into the climb, at 48,000 feet over the steely blue Atlantic, the
O-ring failed to seat, allowing a blow torch of super hot solid propellant to
set a chain of events in motion that caused the Challenger to break apart. The
gorgeous contrail split into a Y shape, my first clue that something had gone
awry.
Instantly,
I saw a single rocket spiral outward, unattached from the mother ship.
Firework-like smoke and streamers burst forth from the center, ghastly tendrils
turned a sickly orange color as gravity pulled them earthward. We were
witnessing a catastrophe.
I
didn’t breathe. I knew that we were watching the awful death of seven of our
own. The room went silent except as systems managers stared at frozen computer
screens. All data flow from the shuttle had ceased.
“Flight
controllers here looking very carefully at the situation,”
reported public affairs officer Steve Nesbitt in Houston. “Obviously a major
malfunction. We have no downlink.” After a pause, Nesbitt said, “We have
a report from the Flight Dynamics Officer that the vehicle has exploded.”
At every
console, stunned engineers’ heads dropped in shock and sorrow. Yet within
moments, the launch control team regained its composure and snapped into
action, beginning the drill for which they had practiced and rehearsed for just
such a moment, one they prayed before every launch that they would never have
to use. Having worked with the astronaut team for months, they felt it
personally.
Contingency
procedures went immediately into effect at both Launch Control at Kennedy and
Mission Control in Houston, running through emergency rescue operations, in a
vain attempt to somehow save the crew. But after a few minutes, we all knew the
crew was gone. Gone…
Part of the
process included locking doors, shutting down telephone communication with the
outside world, and carefully running through checklists that would ensure that
relevant data was correctly recorded and preserved. All materials, including my
three-ring binder and my purse, were embargoed. Nothing would be carried out
until it had been thoroughly examined.
Hugh
Harris hurriedly stepped away from his console to consult with NASA’s Public
Affairs director, political appointee Shirley Green who had made the trip from
Washington DC to be there for the big event, and was now watching the
catastrophe in stunned bewilderment.
My console
headset crackled. Keying the closed loop button, I answered the call. It was
the White House. “The President would like to speak to the nation,” said
the voice at the other end. “We’d like some assistance in crafting a
statement.”
President
Ronald Reagan and his staff reacted to the news as they watched it on a
television in the Oval Office Dining room. In this room, the president might
occasionally have casual meals alone or with his staff and catch the news on
television or discuss White House policy. Because this room is usually
furnished with a small television, it is often here that the president first
sees news events being reported from around the world.
A
short time later, President Reagan appeared on TV monitors worldwide,
offering words of condolence and comfort to the nation.
In his address, President Reagan stated:“Today is a day for mourning…a national loss…The members of the Challenger crew were pioneers…
The future doesn’t belong to the fainthearted; it belongs to the brave. The Challenger crew was pulling us into the future…
“There’s a coincidence today. On this day 390 years ago, the great explorer Sir Francis Drake died aboard ship off the coast of Panama. In his lifetime the great frontiers were the oceans, and a historian later said,
‘He lived by the sea, died on it, and was buried in it.’
“Well, today we can say of the Challenger crew: Their dedication was, like Drake’s, complete.”
Challenger: President Reagan's Challenger Disaster Speech - 1/28/86
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Qa7icmqgsow
The days and weeks that followed after the accident went by in a blur of media frenzy and ocean salvage operations. Eventually, I was invited to work with the official presidential investigation team — The Rogers Commission. My job was to document the entire investigation and author a narrative of it, which was subsequently published in a book titled “The Historical Summary of the 51-L Data and Design Analysis Task Force.”
The position afforded me open-door access and a bird’s eye view of every meeting held with key NASA engineers and astronauts assembled to sift through every piece of data. I worked out of Bob Crippen’s office with the famed astronaut and his staff.
One of my first duties was to visit the temporary hangar that had been erected at nearby Canaveral Air Force Station to house the salvaged pieces of the Challenger as they were retrieved from the ocean floor. When I arrived there, much of the orbiter had been salvaged and laid out in accident investigation fashion, like piecing together a huge puzzle. The crew cockpit and mid-deck were twisted and shattered, a haunting reminder of the crew’s last moments as they slammed into the ocean at some god awful speed. The hangar was to many, a holy place, where one spoke in hushed voices, as they viewed the craft re-assembled as best it could be, the charred surfaces visible where the solid rockets had burned through the shuttle’s tiled wings and fuselage. Burned bits and pieces was all that was left of the once-proud Challenger.
Later, at the memorial service for the seven, President Ronald Reagan said this:
“The crew of the space shuttle Challenger honored us by the manner in which they lived their lives. We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for their journey and waved good-bye and ‘slipped the surly bonds of earth’ to ‘touch the face of God.’“
______________________________________________________________
Comment:
I too have an indelible memory of that day when the Challenger exploded after launch.
I was a TWA pilot based at JFK. I was scheduled to travel from JFK to St Louis on January 29, 1986 in order to attend scheduled training at the TWA Training Center in St. Louis. I was given a seat in first class on the B-767 flight to STL. Upon boarding the aircraft, I realized that the video screen in the first class compartment had been lowered to permit the seated passengers to monitor a live TV news broadcast. It was apparent that everyone who could see the screen was transfixed by what they were seeing. I turned to look at the screen and was immediately confronted with the unforgettable image of the exploding Challenger launch vehicle. I was stunned by what I was seeing on the screen.
Shortly thereafter, the screen was stowed and the aircraft departed the gate. All of the passengers were virtually silent for the entire trip. We could not get the awesome implications of what we had seen out of our minds, nor could we stop thinking about what those Challenger crew members had just experienced, and the impact it would have on their families and on the U.S. space program.
David F. LaRocque
2 comments:
It is my theory that the Challenger disaster was a manifestation of - first rule - assassinate the assassin. I would bet that some of the people on the shuttle when it blew up were also involved with the so called ' repair ' for the Hubble space telescope. The concept that a billions of dollar telescope could somehow get into space and really be ' defective ' is ludicrous. The premise that the main mirror was screwed up was an agenda for the Cabal. WE DON'T KNOW WHAT THEY ACTUALLY DID UP THERE OR WHAT THEY PUT ON IT DURING THE ' REPAIR.' I could easily be wrong, but I don't think so. Only a few people know what really went on up there. If those people were taken out, no one knows now. What was it ? TYJM frj
The REAL reason WHY that shuttle was "Terminated" was because it had an ultra secret mission (Discised to look like a science mission) to detonate a nuclear weapon on the moons surface, and was hit by a particle beam fired from a alien craft shaped like a ball...even saw someones films of the action taken by an amiture photo buff on line.
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