Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster Pt 2: Final Descent | BBC Studios

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 29 июл 2010
  • Discover key moments from history and stories about fascinating people on the Official BBC Documentary channel: bit.ly/BBCDocs_RUclips_Channel
    Part two of six. This clip begins with the astronauts on board preparing for the shuttle's descent to earth and ends with the haunting scenes at NASA's Mission Control at the moment disaster struck. Moving footage from the BBC Horizon programme The Last Flight of the Columbia. Watch more high quality videos on the new BBC Worldwide RUclips channel here: / bbcworldwide
    This is a channel from BBC Studios who help fund new BBC programmes. Service information and feedback: www.bbcstudios.com/contact/co...

Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @lonewolffisherman7092
    @lonewolffisherman7092 4 года назад +11012

    Can't imagine being the guy doing the com check and not getting a response.

    • @dontgetmadgetwise4271
      @dontgetmadgetwise4271 4 года назад +432

      A professional doing his job well.

    • @sergiodiaz1365
      @sergiodiaz1365 4 года назад +26

      Are we not entertained? True

    • @jordistrybos3438
      @jordistrybos3438 4 года назад +434

      The most eerie com check ever, just the silence and hope for a response...

    • @footballfever7242
      @footballfever7242 3 года назад +111

      better than being the responder..

    • @glennchamberlain1737
      @glennchamberlain1737 3 года назад +69

      @@jordistrybos3438 The first couple likely didn't raise any alarm. Sometimes you just lose comms which is why the "Comm check" is such a repeated phrase throughout film.

  • @HighrockTendales
    @HighrockTendales 10 лет назад +14286

    I can't even imagine how that must have felt in mission control. Just a sickening disgusting cold feeling.

    • @undersounds7775
      @undersounds7775 6 лет назад +79

      Vibhor BIST go watch your childish videos and get out of these ones where we actually take things seriously

    • @mfuji02
      @mfuji02 6 лет назад +53

      2:58 O God

    • @sarbikdas3230
      @sarbikdas3230 5 лет назад +13

      Hollow from the inside...

    • @jackmehoff4429
      @jackmehoff4429 5 лет назад +87

      Mission control knew this shuttle won't Land on earth in 1 peace and they decided not to tell the crew.

    • @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043
      @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043 5 лет назад +31

      Nicholas Johnson • You are exactly right, and to say anything negative or untrue about this tragedy is what’s really despicable.

  • @emilyvogt66
    @emilyvogt66 3 года назад +1184

    2:54 - The grief (and tears) on the flight director's face...absolutely heartbreaking. RIP to the brave Columbia astronauts.

    • @lifewithsy7950
      @lifewithsy7950 2 года назад +33

      Jesus Christ died on the Cross for our sins, was buried, and then rose again 3 days later, and through Him we can have eternal life.

    • @nestesaippua
      @nestesaippua 2 года назад +72

      @@lifewithsy7950 theres no god.

    • @cynthcorcor126
      @cynthcorcor126 2 года назад +4

      Columbia ❤️ 😇

    • @xaviersavedra711
      @xaviersavedra711 Год назад

      @@lifewithsy7950 No one asked for your religious spam. Bible thumpers are annoying.

    • @porkyminch5131
      @porkyminch5131 Год назад +36

      @@nestesaippua Let the man believe, he is not hurting anyone.

  • @greggd2027
    @greggd2027 8 месяцев назад +72

    I've seen the whole video a few times but didn't notice the flight director crying until now. He still kept it together and did his job. They all did. What a tragic day 😢

    • @iloveEngland16
      @iloveEngland16 13 дней назад +3

      I literally just noticed the same thing after watching the footage so many times, that one tear rolling down his left cheek. Makes the emotions and panic he must have been feeling so much more visible. Honestly I can never imagine what must have been going through his head.

  • @TheNightWatcher1385
    @TheNightWatcher1385 3 года назад +7949

    As a work safety instructor once told me:
    “Safety regulations are written in blood.”

    • @moto6ixmoto83
      @moto6ixmoto83 3 года назад +234

      Especially when it comes to something as complex and precise as rocket science.

    • @jamirimaj6880
      @jamirimaj6880 3 года назад +221

      Hard to say this, but if they somehow survived, someone else would suffer their fate after. No other humans died in space after this (so far), therefore their sacrifice was not in vain.

    • @DJOfRadioGallifrey
      @DJOfRadioGallifrey 3 года назад +33

      you gave me chills.

    • @AnaVerona_
      @AnaVerona_ 3 года назад +127

      @@jamirimaj6880 therefore their sacrifice is a precious, priceless apport that we all honor and respect.

    • @gauravbhardwaj2939
      @gauravbhardwaj2939 3 года назад +18

      This is deep man.

  • @thebaldingsparrow5392
    @thebaldingsparrow5392 4 года назад +5155

    The sound of silence truly is deafening.

  • @Bootmahoy88
    @Bootmahoy88 Год назад +540

    The controller was obviously very upset, as all of them were, but he kept his composure and directed his crew through all the emergency protocols necessary for such a mishap. In the long version of this you can watch him as he issues his orders very calmly & directly to everyone, quite obviously holding himself steady throughout a storm of emotions. That's command stuff.

    • @linanicolia1363
      @linanicolia1363 Год назад +10

      Well, yeah, they knew, they had disintegrated and were coming down over North Texas. The finding of debris in the woods, was gruesome. Bits and pieces...... instant death and instant "cremation"....No suffering, just a brutal death that is too fast to really identify.

    • @tescheurich
      @tescheurich Год назад +1

      @@linanicolia1363 I wouldn't count on it.

    • @mikedineen7857
      @mikedineen7857 Год назад

      He knew it was gonna happen. Mission Control knew about the damage to the left wing during the launch. They we’re praying it wouldn’t happen but not surprised when it did.

    • @ZiddersRooFurry
      @ZiddersRooFurry Год назад +2

      @@tescheurich It's in the report.

    • @FrankGina2016
      @FrankGina2016 Год назад

      I'd totally agree Dan.

  • @rickeymitchell8620
    @rickeymitchell8620 2 года назад +239

    This is just heart-rending to watch. They have been gone for years but when I watch this, the emotions come flooding back. RIP Columbia astronauts. We won't forget the sacrifice you made.

    • @mightypen369
      @mightypen369 2 месяца назад

      And many of the crew members had their families watching😢

  • @dhruveshpatel1109
    @dhruveshpatel1109 4 года назад +4900

    That dreadful silence between the comm checks was terrifying.

    • @infinitejack2115
      @infinitejack2115 4 года назад +23

      not really, they r acting

    • @nestty8cv
      @nestty8cv 4 года назад +243

      @@infinitejack2115 fuck you

    • @CharlotteWeb100
      @CharlotteWeb100 4 года назад +95

      You know after the second or third one he's repeating to feel like he's doing something even though he and everyone else knows it's hopeless. Whilst he's continuing to try getting a response there's no definite outcome until it's called by the flight director. Horrific.

    • @CharlotteWeb100
      @CharlotteWeb100 4 года назад +33

      I'm assuming it's normal to have cameras in there for all launches and whatnot but the zooming in on individual people I guess is part and parcel of the crew's own realisation things have gone horribly wrong. Bearing in mind this is an edited clip there will have been a sudden definitive moment where everyone suddenly goes “Shit...” and that probably hung in the air briefly before they started trying to get a response.

    • @CharlotteWeb100
      @CharlotteWeb100 4 года назад +5

      You're welcome and I can see how on the face it seems odd. Similar thing with the Challenger and the world watched in horror as it exploded and bits rained back down to Earth but the narrator was still talking through the schedule in front of him not even realising what had happened.
      Eerie as hell made worse because as he was reading on oblivious to it all the cameras switched to live footage of parents watching their daughter die.

  • @davejohnsen8540
    @davejohnsen8540 4 года назад +4065

    I remember driving through the middle of Texas on my way to South Dakota and seeing that in the sky not knowing what it was.

    • @ubaidkhan1246
      @ubaidkhan1246 4 года назад +87

      For real

    • @jaimegermanotta8831
      @jaimegermanotta8831 4 года назад +124

      Holy shit

    • @texasred2702
      @texasred2702 4 года назад +263

      @Jett Philips well actually we do care, Jett, because we're watching this video. True, some of us are just here to satisfy some ghoulish death porn kink and get off on watching 7 people die, but some of us are here because of an interest in the space program, or even a personal connection, such as a family member who worked for NASA, or a ranching relative who had debris from the spacecraft on their land.
      Carry on, Dave.

    • @_soups
      @_soups 4 года назад +69

      @Jett Philips What a genuine piece of shit comment. Stop projecting your lonely insecurities and lack of attention on other people.

    • @r2g
      @r2g 4 года назад +3

      Texas Red hmmm that was very particular about the kink think Texas red . Sounds like you may have the ghoulish death kink

  • @jeffreyknight3884
    @jeffreyknight3884 3 года назад +219

    This is the risk each astronaut knows when you explore the unknown in space. Rest in peace you brave heroes.

    • @linanicolia1363
      @linanicolia1363 Год назад +11

      They always know but hope for the best. They also know, their survival depends on a lot of people, who have to do their work with diligence. Overlook nothing and never take chances......

    • @LouSassoleSledgecock
      @LouSassoleSledgecock 4 месяца назад

      All fake; don’t worry here

    • @paradoxical_taco
      @paradoxical_taco 2 месяца назад +7

      Except like the Challenger crew before them, the Columbia astronauts trusted NASA to do everything necessary to put safety first, to mitigate the risks. Space travel is dangerous even with that, and that’s what they sign up knowing. But these two catastrophes shouldn’t have happened.
      With Challenger, the press had been mocking NASA regarding repeated delays of the missions, including the last one. I just watched a video of CNN covering Challenger live, and the CNN anchor started to say that the Challenger mission was finally underway after so many delays (something like “more delays than they’d like us to mention”) when Challenger exploded, cutting the CNN anchor’s sentence short as he went silent; clearly he was trying, like everyone else, to figure out what he’d just seen. It was these press reports about the Shuttle not flying with the regularity that had originally been the Shuttle designers’ intent that led NASA to disregard the engineers’ warning that it was too cold to launch on Jan 28, 1986.
      With Columbia, it was a larger-than-usual chunk of foam hitting in perhaps the worst spot it could have. A known issue that was manageable *if* they’d created some routine procedures both before and after launches. Procedures that were put into place after Columbia was lost. On the days after Columbia’s launch, requests were made by some NASA employees to get some telescope time that would let them see the underbelly of the Shuttle in orbit, to check for damage. The woman at NASA, whose name I’ve forgotten, who was in the position to approve or deny the request they wanted to use turned down the request, said no because, “if there is damage to the heat shield on the wing, there’s nothing we can do do about it.”
      The damage to Apollo 13 from that explosion was huge, it was when all the computers aboard the lunar module & capsule had about as much capacity as a scientific calculator used in the 90s by people studying mathematics in college, and the accident occurred much farther from the safety of Earth than Columbia was (obviously). Yet Gene Kranz said, “failure is not an option” when it came to getting those three astronauts back alive, and he and his team did so. So the idea that some astronauts in Low Earth Orbit couldn’t be saved if Columbia had a “fatal wound” was utter bs. It wouldn’t have been easy, but it was possible.

    • @lauren578
      @lauren578 Месяц назад

      ​@@paradoxical_tacoMonday morning quarter back...ok.

  • @dianealbrecht496
    @dianealbrecht496 2 месяца назад +15

    My late husband was a quality control engineer @ NASA. I'm so glad he wasn't here to see this. I was crushed by this disaster. RIP.

  • @gavh6789
    @gavh6789 4 года назад +10353

    RUclips recommends part 2..... will wait another 10 years for part 1 to be recommended
    Edit: was not expecting this to get nearly 10k likes.... I hope it cheered you up after watching such a sad video ☹️RIP to those brave astronauts x

    • @Witchygirl22
      @Witchygirl22 4 года назад +56

      I can't find any other part but this part of whatever series this is. Lol I want to see more and this is the only one. 😂😂

    • @Witchygirl22
      @Witchygirl22 4 года назад +37

      @Donald Trump Because it's accurate.

    • @basharalsharif3099
      @basharalsharif3099 4 года назад +2

      Same

    • @ShadowStrum42
      @ShadowStrum42 4 года назад +4

      To be fair, the ending is the most interesting part

    • @b52_vishwajeetpatil99
      @b52_vishwajeetpatil99 4 года назад +8

      @@Witchygirl22 ANYWAY BY WATCHING THIS VIDEO WE ALL WILL GET EMOTIONAL💯❤🤞

  • @havesomecoffeeand6085
    @havesomecoffeeand6085 4 года назад +6207

    They were not just 7 people - they were seven ingenious minds, that we get from millions of people; they were not just seven people, they were billions of hopeful hearts too.

    • @lizzylu4660
      @lizzylu4660 4 года назад +53

      Poetry & Prose. What??

    • @ophirbaclig2771
      @ophirbaclig2771 4 года назад +8

      Who video'ed the burning and explosions and why do they have twins (all of them)

    • @tom2314
      @tom2314 4 года назад +65

      Poetry & Prose. No, they were just 7 people.

    • @harshavardhan6675
      @harshavardhan6675 4 года назад +12

      There was even an Indian in that

    • @filippoc6666
      @filippoc6666 4 года назад +85

      Yes they were seven masterminds among millions, but still seven people and their life wasn't more important than mine, yours or the billions outside.

  • @ForensicsOnTheScene
    @ForensicsOnTheScene Год назад +103

    This is the first time I see the tears on the flight directors face. I could never see it in the grainy videos posted online. Soooo sad.

  • @chewar7537
    @chewar7537 2 года назад +129

    Heartbreaking...RIP to the Astronauts, and my heart goes out to Mission Control and the families.

    • @lindaoneil5085
      @lindaoneil5085 Год назад +1

      A red rose for every astronaut and everybody in Mission Control. 🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹😢

  • @yaboi7914
    @yaboi7914 4 года назад +4212

    This is so heartbreaking. Seeing their last moments, everyone was sweating and anxious. They tried to get a response, but they were gone. That man crying in the end, and seeing the remains disintegrating in the sky... this is extremely sad.

    • @MrEnvirocat
      @MrEnvirocat 4 года назад +61

      Whatever. NASA refused to even let another satellite look at the Shuttle to survey possible damage during liftoff. The crew was dead after takeoff thanks to institutional willing blindness after liftoff.

    • @ferrallezz5246
      @ferrallezz5246 4 года назад

      Isla D'GIACOMA ,

    • @ishworshrestha3559
      @ishworshrestha3559 4 года назад

      Ok

    • @HonzzaDoll
      @HonzzaDoll 4 года назад +68

      @@MrEnvirocat It was confirmed that the destruction was caused during the transition from stratosphere to orbit. If I recall correctly, a piece of insulation of the size of a suitcase fell out of the hull of the shuttle and hit one of the wings, creating a small hole in the wing. During re-entry, the heat and pressure increased the dimensions of the hole, from which the disintegration followed to the main body of the shuttle.
      I might be wrong with some details, it has been some time since I researched it so feel free to correct me.

    • @raffaeledivora9517
      @raffaeledivora9517 4 года назад +55

      @@HonzzaDoll You're right. There is a full report available that I found two years ago because I wanted to know if the astronauts were concious something was going horribly wrong and how they had died; and it turns out there's still a minute of flight after the comms interrupted and the astronauts were conscious it was happening. Thankfully they were all killed quickly when the cabin was torn apart by the aerodynamic forces, breaking their necks and spines almost instantly. A worse fate bad happened to the ones in Challenger. There at least 3 were alive up until the 300 kmh crash against the ocean, since they were found to have activated oxygen support and the commands dir the spacecraft had been switched to manual. Probably the other 4 were alive as well but unconscious. Nothing to be done anyway since the command capsule had no parachutes 🙁

  • @midgarw6775
    @midgarw6775 4 года назад +3475

    The atmosphere in that room is paralysing, can't even imagine whats going through their minds. Being the only safety net those guys had.

    • @dudeinthesea
      @dudeinthesea 4 года назад +135

      and many staff in this vid would have probably know the astronauts personally too. totally gut wrenching moment.

    • @greer8288
      @greer8288 3 года назад +15

      You worried about the people in the room. What about the astronauts

    • @dudeinthesea
      @dudeinthesea 3 года назад +58

      @@greer8288 uh... because they're already dead. Nothing more you can do. Lol.

    • @DocMicrowave
      @DocMicrowave 3 года назад +24

      @Bounze That minute was probably horrifying. Alarms going off, power failing, shuttle violently shaking. NASA not responding on comms as you try to report what's happening.
      I imagine the shuttle not instantly exploding, but breaking up slowly over the course of several seconds.

    • @jamesbrittain5659
      @jamesbrittain5659 3 года назад +7

      I get emotional thinking about it, and especially watching the people in flight control as their demeanor changed once the knew what they lost the shuttle.

  • @dee4435
    @dee4435 2 года назад +25

    I live in Central Florida and we could see each launch from our front yard. That morning when Columbia was flying back in, I was listening to the "live" commentary from our local TV station when a veteran reporter who covered all the launches came on to say: "Uh, oh no..." I could hear it in his voice. Instantly made me sick to my stomach. I knew he knew, even before they announced it. Much respect for the folks who fly into space.

  • @ProductofNZ
    @ProductofNZ 2 года назад +119

    It's heartbreaking that pioneers sometimes pay the ultimate price. We acknowledge their sacrifice and we are inspired by their bravery.

    • @quentinlahaye3957
      @quentinlahaye3957 2 года назад +3

      we are now so used to see rockets or shuttle going into space (well no shuttle anymore) that we forget sometimes that they are taking off by igniting something like a bomb and they come back in a bubble surrounded by something like liquid fire.

  • @thatdude4965
    @thatdude4965 4 года назад +1864

    omg that silence between the com check was so depressing
    RIP legends!

    • @haych5491
      @haych5491 4 года назад +17

      What else could they do? live in space forever on a shuttle with depleting fuel and no food or water to conserve them for long times? They were also travelling at 18 times the speed of sound and were around 207 thousand kilometres above the ground.

    • @haych5491
      @haych5491 4 года назад +10

      @Frank Castle sadly they didn't know there was an issue until they were already descending to earth.

    • @haych5491
      @haych5491 4 года назад +10

      @Frank Castle bro they were already entering the orbit and high temperatures started damaging the shuttle through the hole. They couldn't just pull up while going thousands of miles per hour downwards through the atmosphere.

    • @massimo4683
      @massimo4683 4 года назад

      @@haych5491 207 km*

    • @haych5491
      @haych5491 4 года назад

      @@massimo4683 exaggeration

  • @billyn07
    @billyn07 4 года назад +8080

    And here we are, year 2020 dealing with flat brainers. Im sure they'll call this cgi or the astronauts who died in this video are paid actors. What a mess.

    • @Tim-K.
      @Tim-K. 4 года назад +448

      The most disappointing thing about a lot of humans, is that they see opinions as facts and they don’t fully understand what a fact exactly is. E.g. the climate crisis, there is so much data, that indicates that we’re influencing the climate in a very negative way, however an huge amount of people still aren’t convinced and totally not motivated to act. I’m sorry to comment this, but some people are just to unintelligent to have power, because due to the democracy the majority has a lot of power and if the majority makes decisions purely based on emotions and there opinions and ignores all the facts, than it’s a very horrible thing.
      Nevertheless I do believe, that democracy is the best ideology at the moment, because communism and other ideologies give to much power to the government or to one (with a monarchy e.g.).

    • @grigorecosmin
      @grigorecosmin 4 года назад +252

      @@tylert7945 Lol

    • @tylert7945
      @tylert7945 4 года назад +2

      Cosmin Grigore too real? Or...

    • @Tim-K.
      @Tim-K. 4 года назад +297

      Tyler T The evidence against e.g. Neil Armstrong walking on the moon is very weak, but still you are convinced and act like there is dense prove... To paraphrase another famous Neil: “It is easier to actually go to the moon, than to fake all of this.” An easy rule is that a lie can’t survive when there’re a lot of people involved (who know the truth). There will always be people who can’t handle the guilt or have enough integrity and that ruins such a big scale lie. Even when they’re pressured.

    • @Tim-K.
      @Tim-K. 4 года назад +179

      Tyler T And seriously, Wikipedia? That only weakens your statement (as everyone can write something over there).

  • @shivinunitholi2493
    @shivinunitholi2493 3 года назад +36

    18 yrs.... those memories ingrained.
    Salute to this brave crew. RIP

  • @esuohdica
    @esuohdica 3 года назад +13

    I've seen parts of this video many times before but I never noticed the Flight Director wiping a tear from his cheek before now. Imagine how he must have felt right then.

    • @jamesrobert4106
      @jamesrobert4106 3 месяца назад

      Is it the face of a man who knew the military had offered free access to imaging technology which could have clearly assessed the damage to the wing, allowing a rescue plan to be formulated?
      Given the gross arrogance of NASA displayed in the Challenger disaster, it wouldn't surprise me.

  • @tiagomichel
    @tiagomichel 4 года назад +5909

    They should be here, with us, watching the SpaceX demo

    • @pantsu-sama8311
      @pantsu-sama8311 4 года назад +302

      @120starter astronauts really love what they do and would support the demo

    • @tiagomichel
      @tiagomichel 4 года назад +52

      @@pantsu-sama8311 Exactly

    • @tryhardheavy
      @tryhardheavy 4 года назад +43

      They are from heaven watching

    • @KlausBentes
      @KlausBentes 4 года назад +49

      @Dwells Rivals? This isn't the Cold War.

    • @redluckog7008
      @redluckog7008 4 года назад +22

      Dwells u live under a rock?

  • @amar.mohamed
    @amar.mohamed 3 года назад +2205

    The tears streaming down his face really hit me...what a horrible horrible accident to witness...I pray that we will never ever have to witness something like this again...

    • @RandomDeathChild
      @RandomDeathChild 3 года назад +3

      tears of joy

    • @brette6854
      @brette6854 3 года назад +6

      like cops killing black people?

    • @RandomDeathChild
      @RandomDeathChild 3 года назад +3

      @@dustywtr6843 who knows. do u know him ?

    • @42much1
      @42much1 3 года назад +6

      It was a disaster for all mankind.

    • @ssgrimard4660
      @ssgrimard4660 3 года назад +45

      @@brette6854 what a stupid comment. 🤦‍♂️

  • @AnonymousAV
    @AnonymousAV 3 года назад +75

    Just can't imagine the the moment for team in shuttle, people waiting on earth to celebrate, teams sitting in control room waiting for a bloody response 😣😶
    Huge respect to all souls from 🇮🇳

    • @dahabizizy
      @dahabizizy 2 года назад

      one the crew was Indian

    • @saksham1040
      @saksham1040 Год назад

      @@dahabizizy yaa Kalpana Chawala. Inspiration for million women to dream and achieve ❤

  • @randomcrap4230
    @randomcrap4230 8 лет назад +2155

    Dear God....that is the most devestating silence I have ever heard in my life. Literally made me cry.

    • @Navindla9
      @Navindla9 6 лет назад +6

      They(nasa) already know abt this dissaster!

    • @Kazi4fun
      @Kazi4fun 5 лет назад

      RandomCrap . yep

    • @vrxcld5014
      @vrxcld5014 5 лет назад +3

      RandomCrap the flight director should be in prison

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 5 лет назад +3

      @@vrxcld5014 The FD was only the FD on duty at the time. And NASA reviewed the risks, they knew there was a distinct possibility that the chunk of insulation had blown through the port wing, they gave the FD the go-ahead to bring them down. There was no possibility of launching a rescue mission. They could die in space when their O2 supply ran out, or they could die attempting to return home. NASA, as an agency, decided to bring them down without telling them there could be a problem. They were dead if they stayed in space, but there was a slim chance they could land safely. The FD on duty was in touch with then-NASA Administrator Charles O'Keefe all morning before the de-orbit burn.

    • @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043
      @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043 5 лет назад

      RandomCrap • Same here..same here.😢

  • @faqts2846
    @faqts2846 5 лет назад +1457

    Tears rolled down flight director's cheeks...
    This explains how huge and painful that loss was

    • @rraahhuulliiyyaa
      @rraahhuulliiyyaa 4 года назад +47

      They lost the shuttle.they lost the crew
      They lost much that day

    • @bharatbshetty
      @bharatbshetty 4 года назад +9

      Very tragic

    • @emceehamma3693
      @emceehamma3693 4 года назад +13

      I bet you two are the biggest vajayjays, and probably have been bitched out multiple times by bullies in real life... how’s it feel? 😉

    • @theskinman1948
      @theskinman1948 4 года назад +16

      Richard Rykard Yes because only pussies would weep at the loss of human life.

    • @theskinman1948
      @theskinman1948 4 года назад +7

      Richard Rykard Have a heart man.

  • @NorceCodine
    @NorceCodine 3 года назад +143

    My mom said that "two died, one is still alive", meaning Challenger, Columbia, and Discovery. It struck me silent that she referred to them like living creatures. My mom passed away this Christmas, and I still hear it.

    • @physiciantech566
      @physiciantech566 3 года назад +7

      Don't know what to say ........................hurts

    • @stewartholden2890
      @stewartholden2890 2 года назад +8

      Atlantis, Discovery and Endeavour all survived their missions (and the prototype Enterprise too).

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 2 года назад +7

      BLESS HER-IN HEAVEN WITH HER LOVED ONES

    • @TheStepmonkey
      @TheStepmonkey 8 месяцев назад +1

      Im sorry for your loss, she is now in a better place watching over you 🕊️

    • @thelittlelovemaid
      @thelittlelovemaid 17 дней назад

      As a Floridian & a lifelong Space Coast girl, I can tell you that your mom had it right, really, speaking of the shuttles as though they were living creatures. I think that's how many of us who watched their missions all our lives thought of them, too. Challenger & Columbia's losses were, are, devastating & it's comforting to know that our beautiful Discovery, Endeavor, and Atlantis are still with us. All five are deeply loved here on the Space Coast.

  • @cynthiaahern9081
    @cynthiaahern9081 3 года назад +8

    I remember having a coffee out side and seeing the debris plume and feeling what happened. Started crying. RIP out astronaut heros.

  • @ashstolley
    @ashstolley 4 года назад +1901

    “Columbia, Houston, UHF com check,” these words seemingly echo.

    • @dkchen
      @dkchen 3 года назад +12

      No acting necessary.... you knew it.

    • @nicholas1310
      @nicholas1310 3 года назад

      dkchen yeah..

    • @LthiagoR
      @LthiagoR 3 года назад +7

      Can you explain me what those words mean? please

    • @LthiagoR
      @LthiagoR 3 года назад

      @@thanhho8737 and what do they mean by Ultra High Frequency Com

    • @DandyDerisetiyaHairawan
      @DandyDerisetiyaHairawan 3 года назад +7

      @@LthiagoR they use UHF channel radio communication

  • @renekenshin6573
    @renekenshin6573 8 лет назад +2985

    Damn, that is just so sad, after watching them smiling and everything. Excitement of finally landing and going home turned to tragedy. RIP to all the crew :(

    • @vikram_Bhu
      @vikram_Bhu 6 лет назад +27

      rene kenshin and there was my sis kalpana chawala

    • @seyalcops
      @seyalcops 5 лет назад +2

      Vikram Dan Barath she was your sister? I’m so sorry for your loss.

    • @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043
      @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043 5 лет назад +14

      They were just moments from landing. I watched the whole thing unfold on TV that cold Saturday morning in February and it was such a weird feeling when you slowly realized what may have been happening. Then when you see the video of the three “pieces” lighting up the sky, the cold realization hit home, that they were not coming home.

    • @amerhuzairy100
      @amerhuzairy100 5 лет назад +5

      @@gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043 they are coming home after all..afterlife that is

    • @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043
      @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043 5 лет назад +9

      amerhuzairy100 • That’s right, that’s my belief. As long as they knew Jesus.

  • @westyraviz
    @westyraviz 3 года назад +1

    Poor souls. So close to home but then never getting there. Thank you for your service and sacrifice.

  • @Bharat22158
    @Bharat22158 8 месяцев назад +10

    I still remember watching this video 13 years back when I was so highly interested in knowing about space shuttles. This still saddens me because so many astronauts passed away in this space shuttle. Remembered as the most disastrous event ever.

  • @eric131313
    @eric131313 4 года назад +3200

    RUclips algorithm : let's see what can we recommend before demo flight ..........

    • @jimhalpert9803
      @jimhalpert9803 4 года назад +20

      It went well!!!

    • @north6660
      @north6660 4 года назад +13

      wraithM17 hopefully docking and atmospheric re-entry goes well also 🙏

    • @aras4031
      @aras4031 4 года назад +7

      Did spaceX's flight go well? I missed the stream😭

    • @user-je2jw9ew7l
      @user-je2jw9ew7l 4 года назад +4

      @@aras4031 yep

    • @BenDunlop
      @BenDunlop 4 года назад +5

      @@aras4031 flawlessly

  • @extiflyy
    @extiflyy 4 года назад +1743

    Bruh imagine being mission control. Damn how can you sleep after that.

    • @carahughes257
      @carahughes257 4 года назад +98

      I think it’s scarier being in the space shuttle, knowing you’re going to die

    • @eleoVAL
      @eleoVAL 4 года назад +111

      @@carahughes257 Can't have feelings once your dead

    • @Rachie-nj3oi
      @Rachie-nj3oi 4 года назад +2

      Where was they coming back from?

    • @simo6639
      @simo6639 4 года назад +13

      @@Rachie-nj3oi the ISS, international space station I guess

    • @Rachie-nj3oi
      @Rachie-nj3oi 4 года назад +1

      @@simo6639 OK thanks 👍

  • @RUSH2112RUSH
    @RUSH2112RUSH 2 года назад +34

    So tragic seven brave people and one beautiful ship lost but never to be forgotten.
    Robert L Crippen "...she flew all her missions exceptionally well. She was a proud old bird. I know she did her best to bring her crew home safely, just as she had done twenty seven times before. However, her mortal wound was just too great."

    • @lufasumafalu5069
      @lufasumafalu5069 Год назад +1

      columbia is old and an antique , it is not space worthy but US forced to use it since US have no other manned launch

  • @rajarambehera666
    @rajarambehera666 3 года назад +3

    Heart wrenching!! Emotions were pouring! They were at a better place now😇

  • @kandiking2218
    @kandiking2218 4 года назад +2684

    Thank you Kalpana Mam . You made us proud. Always my ideal

    • @hypnoticmusicsp
      @hypnoticmusicsp 4 года назад +63

      It's "idol" u dumbass

    • @tiger1995grvr
      @tiger1995grvr 4 года назад +164

      @@hypnoticmusicsp so you cant genuinely correct him ??

    • @hypnoticmusicsp
      @hypnoticmusicsp 4 года назад +12

      @@tiger1995grvr nope.

    • @tejasmohite2651
      @tejasmohite2651 4 года назад +117

      @@hypnoticmusicsp stfu look at your punctuations first ,dumbass.

    • @rask5035
      @rask5035 4 года назад +51

      @@hypnoticmusicsp "Nope" is usually used in spoken answers and how come you are not aware of it?

  • @MatiasNahuelBozzano
    @MatiasNahuelBozzano 4 года назад +5170

    Who is here after the successful launch of SpaceX in 2020?

  • @realname5332
    @realname5332 Год назад +3

    I was watching this on TV in school when it happened. It was tough to watch, I can’t even imagine what the people in mission control were feeling. That shot of the flight director burying his face in his hands is heartbreaking.

  • @jenm358
    @jenm358 3 года назад +3

    I remember hearing about this. and Challenger. I still cry. It was so sad that so many lives were lost

  • @Sarah.Riedel
    @Sarah.Riedel 9 лет назад +4798

    The Flight Director...that poor man. It was not his fault.

    • @jrockett73
      @jrockett73 9 лет назад +175

      Peter Hutchinson He knew all about it. It happened on launch two weeks earlier.

    • @jrockett73
      @jrockett73 9 лет назад +128

      Peter Hutchinson Its up to the mission manager. He is the flight director for the orbiter.

    • @denniss9620
      @denniss9620 9 лет назад +223

      Peter Hutchinson The astronauts were not equipped for performing a space walk on this flight.

    • @jrockett73
      @jrockett73 9 лет назад +18

      Dennis S Each mission carried a minumum of two suits. Two crewman are trained for EVA every flight for other reasons including payload bay doors not closing, ET doors under the orbiter not closing and not being able to stow the KU-Band antenna. On top of that an EVA tool kit flies in the payload bay every flight as well. Many of the stainless steel EVA tools were recovered after the accident.

    • @denniss9620
      @denniss9620 9 лет назад +26

      jrockett73
      I guess what I was trying to imply was based on Story Musgrave's suggested procedure where they could hook one astronaut to a tether attached to a hook in the cargo bay then the tethered astronaut could have swung the other spacewalker over the edge of the left wing from the left side of the cargo bay also tethered for the inspection of the wing
      However former astronaut Richard Mullane claimed It would be impossible to do a walk and maneuver yourself underneath the belly of the space shuttle to do any type of inspection or repair,”
      Nasa engineers were concerned further damage could be done by an astronaut colliding with the wing because the astronaut had no way to maneuver himself
      I took that to mean that the astronauts were not equipped to leave the shuttle cargo bay area for any excursions but for cargo bay work or issues and could not perform a spacewalk totally free from the shuttle and maneuver because they were not equipped with a fully self contained MMU unit
      Their procedure is explained here
      www.nbcnews.com/id/3077560/ns/technology_and_science-space/t/columbia-spacewalk-plan-debated/

  • @anushkasingh3014
    @anushkasingh3014 3 года назад +3140

    RIP Kalpana Chawla: The first woman of Indian origin to go into space. She has inspired tons of Indians. Massive Respect.
    Edit: The reply section of this comment gave me a seizure istg

    • @adwaitab.3622
      @adwaitab.3622 3 года назад +13

      @@Aryan_Kashyap you're very cruel

    • @almasandiegofernando3538
      @almasandiegofernando3538 3 года назад +33

      @@adwaitab.3622 how is that cruel?

    • @anushkasingh3014
      @anushkasingh3014 3 года назад +280

      Amelie Lopez OMFGGG...The entire comment section is mourning for their loss...I pointed out a specific woman because she was of very much importance to my country and really Made space travel seem like a possible thing for many of us...That’s what I’m saying. Not everyone must be knowing her here that’s why i said. Chill dude

    • @joyhatake4054
      @joyhatake4054 3 года назад +260

      @@KristenHammerback-pk5wy Your reply escalated from 'What about the other astronauts' to the stupid ol' 'Go back to your country' real quick. Also remember, if you live in America and ain't a native, you yourself don't belong to that country so you have not right to tell another dude to not immigrate. Also, she said she respects Kalpana Chawala because she has inspired many Indians and that's true, if somebody with the same race/origin as another person does something amazing, the other person would feel proud and inspired. And just because she said she respects Kalpana Chawala doesn't mean she doesn't respect the others who died that day. Stop being offended by everything. Also, 'if you hate us so much', that's what you are saying? It looks like you are the one hating.

    • @franciskashyap405
      @franciskashyap405 3 года назад +36

      @@KristenHammerback-pk5wy lol you are sickk

  • @clover1az49
    @clover1az49 2 года назад +8

    I was getting ready for work and had been listening to the broadcast. The announcers kept waiting for word that the shuttle entered the earth’s atmosphere safe and sound. There was nothing. I remember saying to myself “they didn’t make it”. My heart sank. When I watched the Challenger explosion, I really didn’t understand what just happened before my eyes, as a third grader. The Columbia disaster literally took my breath away. I had to call in sick from work and grieve with the families. Since 9/11, I just was in a state of shock and grief. For some reason, it all hit me at the moment and I was inconsolable. 🕊

  • @spencerwilson3298
    @spencerwilson3298 Год назад +14

    It's heartbreaking to see mission control's reactions. Especially the woman's expression, because you can see it clearly on her face that she's realizing that the astronauts, people she knew & worked with, are probably and most likely dead. 😭

  • @AJeazy
    @AJeazy 4 года назад +804

    Such a sad event. They were almost home :(

    • @bernaddarko4778
      @bernaddarko4778 3 года назад +4

      Yea,very sad

    • @bernaddarko4778
      @bernaddarko4778 3 года назад +10

      This is very scary n yet they still go

    • @davidb4192
      @davidb4192 3 года назад +24

      Unfortunately, with space travel being so hazardous, no astronout is "nearly home" until their feet are firmly back on Mother Earth.

    • @angelajackson4248
      @angelajackson4248 3 года назад +9

      that goes to show Space is Very Dangerous it's nothing to play with 😢

    • @marty7357
      @marty7357 3 года назад +6

      @@angelajackson4248 it wasn't space.. Its the speed these shuttles endure on re entry .. There was a hole in the left wing heat shield that caused this to happen.

  • @rikardkarlsson2729
    @rikardkarlsson2729 4 года назад +709

    They died doing what they loved.. Her smile before the explosion is very heartbreaking :(

    • @aktarzaman4013
      @aktarzaman4013 4 года назад +4

      what smile?

    • @aktarzaman4013
      @aktarzaman4013 4 года назад +1

      @@madhumalarilamaran4730 thnx

    • @yowaddup5649
      @yowaddup5649 4 года назад +6

      @@aktarzaman4013 K.C's smile...while waving at the camera

    • @ronnieg1341
      @ronnieg1341 4 года назад +1

      Right .. 😊😊😊🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿

    • @KinkssNCoilss
      @KinkssNCoilss 4 года назад +10

      There was no explosion the way BBC is dramatizing the disaster. The shuttle broke apart after it lost control due to the left wing either being severely damaged by that point or coming off completely. After the shuttle began tumbling through the air, it began to separate and break apart. It didn’t explode like this clip claims.

  • @10RRASK
    @10RRASK Год назад +1

    I have a very vivid memory of this day, I was 2 weeks from turning 11 years old. I remember watching the news coverage afterwards on my little portable Sony TV in the back seat of my dad’s pickup on the hour drive down to my uncle’s house to see my cousins.

  • @alfaman4113
    @alfaman4113 Год назад +5

    The way he (commission control)was rubbing his face and nose prior to losing communication, he knew there was going to be trouble

    • @letitsnow8518
      @letitsnow8518 Год назад

      Exactly, i was about to make the same comment. It shows NASA knew what the problem was, they knew if something would go wrong, it would be that!

  • @jacksonspexarth1655
    @jacksonspexarth1655 3 года назад +120

    My father worked at NASA. He told me that during takeoff a small piece of the ablative heat shield fell off shuttle Columbia, which caused the shuttle to overheat and eventually explode in reentry. The rupture of the black ablative heat shield had happened many times in previous shuttle launches, and even though it is very unsafe, NASA chose to go along with the reentry process every time. This time however it proved fatal. Just because something has worked before even when it is dangerous, does not mean it will work every time. RIP Columbia crew.

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 6 месяцев назад +1

      Could they have done anything to save the shuttle, knowing what had happened on take-off?

    • @hugolafhugolaf
      @hugolafhugolaf 5 месяцев назад

      @@ajs41Yes, there was a plan. Costly, but possible. Engineers knew how to do it, but top brass preferred to play the blame game and refused to implement it.

    • @Impedance_Z
      @Impedance_Z 5 месяцев назад +2

      Actually a foam hit the shuttle at 700-800 Km/hr speed that created a hole which on rentry became bigger and during the descent it turned into pieces...

    • @sdsmt99
      @sdsmt99 29 дней назад

      Really? Your father works at NASA? He told you that, or you just read it on numerous reports?

  • @RehabProjectSRCB
    @RehabProjectSRCB 4 года назад +145

    You can even see the flight director crying at 2:54, he looks completely devastated already.

    • @hippymama100
      @hippymama100 4 года назад +25

      He knew, and was friends with, all of the crew in the mission. It was a personal loss for him.

    • @optimisticallycynical.814
      @optimisticallycynical.814 3 года назад

      He lost a bet

  • @tamanna4697
    @tamanna4697 2 года назад +12

    RIP to all the astronauts on that rocket. And this incident always brings me to tear cz Kalpana Chawla was my hero and she is the reason I gained a lot of interest in space and now I'm just amazed by this space world, I too wanna contribute in this field. Once again may all these astronauts RIP😭🙏💐

  • @matthewadair4507
    @matthewadair4507 Год назад +4

    Today marks 20 years since the disaster. RIP to the crew of Columbia. Godspeed.

  • @sarahgardiner1649
    @sarahgardiner1649 4 года назад +1702

    “Lock the doors”.
    So sad.

    • @chrisnoy1
      @chrisnoy1 4 года назад +26

      why did he said that

    • @silviaspampinato1432
      @silviaspampinato1432 4 года назад +17

      It is explained in part 3

    • @nathanleveille3108
      @nathanleveille3108 4 года назад +236

      I might be wrong but I think they say lock the doors to keep everyone in so that if one of the mission control workers did make the fatal mistake it makes it extremely hard to cover up

    • @ZigSputnik
      @ZigSputnik 4 года назад +18

      Sarah Gardiner
      : Press.

    • @ZigSputnik
      @ZigSputnik 4 года назад +21

      @@nathanleveille3108 You are wrong. NASA don't do cover-ups.

  • @pratikmogal9705
    @pratikmogal9705 7 лет назад +2144

    we always love you kalpana ..you are inspiration for all over the world,and most INDIA,you are great..

  • @K.J.734
    @K.J.734 Год назад +6

    If that doesn't hit you hard in the feels, nothing will. 💔

  • @andrewmarsman3294
    @andrewmarsman3294 2 года назад +2

    I remember this like yesterday and where I was at. I know people saying the challenger was awful (and it was) but I was tired of people saying that in such a way that it came off to diminish this Columbia loss. RIP and prayers.

  • @chupacabra9357
    @chupacabra9357 4 года назад +1865

    Interesting sense of humor you have algorithm, recommending this just a day before a semi-historic manned NASA rocket launch...

    • @Hiosho
      @Hiosho 4 года назад +16

      this is cause ppl were looking for it

    • @psboxgamesbrasil7427
      @psboxgamesbrasil7427 4 года назад +9

      And now it's got postponed...

    • @loserqt3480
      @loserqt3480 4 года назад +15

      they postponed it to Saturday because of bad weather conditions, i'm glad they did because this could've been like the Challenger 2.0

    • @adrianjagielak
      @adrianjagielak 4 года назад +1

      @@loserqt3480 could have not

    • @ardenorcrush649
      @ardenorcrush649 4 года назад +3

      Because its the reason USA's space launchs were cancelled, until now.

  • @__boo
    @__boo 4 года назад +541

    That silence.... my goodness. Absolutely chilling. Thats terrible.

    • @DrLoverLover
      @DrLoverLover 4 года назад

      Can't hear it over the sound of burning flesh

    • @CyberEJ
      @CyberEJ 4 года назад

      It's horrible. What a horrible way to die. But at the very least, it was over for those poor souls. I doubt any of those guys in mission control ever really got over it

  • @paulya1269
    @paulya1269 8 месяцев назад +6

    They knew about the tile damage. The look on their faces as soon as those temp sensors failed, they knew it was over. Heartbreaking.

    • @davidmathewson1088
      @davidmathewson1088 8 месяцев назад

      Yep, I think the commander aboard the shuttle was concerned too. These people are all trained to remain calm at all times.

  • @leelydston1225
    @leelydston1225 Год назад

    I was on a solo skiing excursion at Eldora Ski Resort in Colorado when this accident occurred. It definitely shook me up as I had memories of the Challenger Accident were still fresh in my head.
    So tragic.

  • @jaybriggs2718
    @jaybriggs2718 8 лет назад +1601

    When i see a grown man cry... I get speechless 💔

    • @captaincolumbo7860
      @captaincolumbo7860 8 лет назад +146

      +Jay Briggs Grown men do cry. its a sign of a real man

    • @KennnnnnyTucky
      @KennnnnnyTucky 8 лет назад +84

      +Jay Briggs Yeah the sight of LeRoy Cain in tears is powerful and moving. His upset was probably worse given he will have known there was a good chance he would be sending the crew to their deaths when he directed them for home. But he had no choice. It was either that or they slowly suffocate and die in terror unable to fly home. You can only imagine the inner torment he must have gone through knowing that. Yet he stayed at his post and remained professional to the end. In my eyes he is another hero of that tragic flight.

    • @kwisseman5981
      @kwisseman5981 8 лет назад +1

      +KennnnnnyTucky Amen!

    • @chandansoren8002
      @chandansoren8002 7 лет назад +1

      😂😂😂

    • @antrikashmittal2956
      @antrikashmittal2956 7 лет назад +3

      Jay Briggs ya some time if a man cannot do something for his family in that situation can makes cry

  • @mickeyagrawal2001
    @mickeyagrawal2001 4 года назад +1597

    I still remember that day. I was extremely sad as I considered Kalpana Chawla a role model for us Indians and to lose her in this manner was very sickening.

    • @mickeyagrawal2001
      @mickeyagrawal2001 4 года назад +98

      @Just Dab Indians did. She was a national celebrity

    • @shantanu4455
      @shantanu4455 4 года назад +19

      @Just Dab If Indians leave NASA, it will stop working. Period

    • @singhdeep744
      @singhdeep744 4 года назад +76

      @@shantanu4455 no dumbass. Stop this bullshit. You're making us Indians look idiot.

    • @shantanu4455
      @shantanu4455 4 года назад +4

      @@singhdeep744 stfu bitch! That means ur a idiot!!

    • @mickeyagrawal2001
      @mickeyagrawal2001 4 года назад +13

      @Joel Fernandes you didn't go to school ?

  • @rangavembar
    @rangavembar 2 года назад +4

    7 promising and wonderful lives lost in a matter of seconds. Truly heartbreaking.

  • @austrarobust8993
    @austrarobust8993 5 дней назад

    I went to avondale elementry school in AZ in the late 90s early 2000s, I think I was in 2nd grade at the time. I remember we all signed a poster for the astraunant to take into space because Michael Anderson had gone to our school when he was in 3rd grade. When the shuttle crashed in 2003 the school was renamed Michael Anderson school., with the symbol of the rocket ship.
    and 21 years later I shed tears down memory lane. I am honored to have gone to his school where his name is alive!!!!

  • @pulkitsharma6648
    @pulkitsharma6648 3 года назад +537

    “Lock the doors” that really hits me

    • @chrisprivat4341
      @chrisprivat4341 3 года назад +10

      Me too!

    • @melissamccrary8282
      @melissamccrary8282 3 года назад +19

      what was he talking about though? i didn't understand that

    • @KittyKatt69
      @KittyKatt69 3 года назад +302

      @@melissamccrary8282 whenever an incident happens they have to shut down everything because it's now under investigation and evidence. That is the protocol. Nobody leaves the room and nobody enters. all doors have to be locked, nobody can touch the computers, get on phones, etc... Evidence evidence evidence

    • @LL-fn2jt
      @LL-fn2jt 3 года назад +42

      @@KittyKatt69 Thank you for explaining, I also had no idea what was that meant to mean

    • @bhagyashreedhawale8709
      @bhagyashreedhawale8709 3 года назад +3

      @@KittyKatt69thank you for explaination

  • @michaelahutto6795
    @michaelahutto6795 4 года назад +472

    Could you imagine their families? so excited to see them, and hear about their experience, only for them to have an accident 22 minutes before arriving home. I can’t imagine.

    • @lizkinnear8570
      @lizkinnear8570 Год назад +6

      I really feel so upset that the astronauts never made it 😞...their's family looking forward to see them...and that happened 😢....

    • @douglasgriffiths3534
      @douglasgriffiths3534 Год назад +12

      Same as with the Challenger disaster in 1986. They were lost at 73 seconds after liftoff. I was watching when this happened with Columbia too. (Jan Griffiths).

    • @mirandapanda8228
      @mirandapanda8228 Год назад +11

      I read Rick Husband’s wife’s book about her husband’s career. Her and their children posed for a photo by the countdown clock without knowing the disaster had already happened. I can’t imagine the pain when they found out. The book is fascinating but heartbreaking. It’s called High Calling.

    • @nabaninandi4140
      @nabaninandi4140 Год назад +2

      Kalpana chawla will always remain alive...the girl who had shown...a woman knows to cook and also knows to fly ..

    • @mt_gox
      @mt_gox Год назад

      @@lizkinnear8570 you never know... maybe they were all very difficult, egotistical people and their families were actually glad they all died in horrible agony? i dunno.... just thinking out loud

  • @party4keeps28
    @party4keeps28 Год назад +3

    This was such a tragedy but it's an absolute miracle no one on the ground died.

  • @indikameegahawatte3953
    @indikameegahawatte3953 3 месяца назад +1

    May you all have peace in your next life and never have such tragic deaths.
    Your effort will one day help humanity save this planet.

  • @my2009Babies1
    @my2009Babies1 3 года назад +391

    They were minutes from being back home, devastating

    • @Gonken88
      @Gonken88 2 года назад +1

      They were never eveb close to home. Fucked from the very beginning.

    • @475girish
      @475girish 2 года назад +1

      Even if they Reached the Ground a single minute is enough for an Explosion and get killed before they walk out.

    • @countalucard3405
      @countalucard3405 2 года назад +1

      @@Gonken88 The "fucked" happened when they were launching

  • @lonespartanz3222
    @lonespartanz3222 4 года назад +2690

    Those astronauts weren't paid actor's they where paid heroes.

    • @tymccormick2512
      @tymccormick2512 4 года назад +111

      Those fricking flat earthers think they died for nothing because the shuttle is fake

    • @danielmconnolly7
      @danielmconnolly7 4 года назад +9

      @@tymccormick2512
      Nobody died because nobody was on a "space shuttle". And yes, the Earth is still Flat.

    • @lonespartanz3222
      @lonespartanz3222 4 года назад +110

      @@danielmconnolly7 Please to god tell me your joking

    • @raymondaninipot2994
      @raymondaninipot2994 4 года назад +51

      @@danielmconnolly7 pure claims zero evidence. Typical flat earther

    • @danielmconnolly7
      @danielmconnolly7 4 года назад +3

      @@raymondaninipot2994
      Hi Ray,
      There is tons of evidence if you would take the time to look into it. I'll give you a head start.
      Link here: 👇
      ruclips.net/p/PLMupjmxFKflM4BB33CEklx4SrsOBL1KqG

  • @joeyreamer1431
    @joeyreamer1431 2 года назад +2

    RIP to the brave astronauts. God bless them.

  • @1gerger1
    @1gerger1 3 года назад +1

    the tear on his cheek, at 2:54 is sooo sad, God bless them all..

  • @cynicaltexan9639
    @cynicaltexan9639 4 года назад +889

    The flight director was shaking in his boots you could see it.

    • @paulyflyer8154
      @paulyflyer8154 4 года назад +33

      Yes he knew what was in store long before it happened. You can see that.

    • @SamClarkschannel
      @SamClarkschannel 3 года назад +1

      Texass

    • @kirkanos771
      @kirkanos771 3 года назад +62

      If you look closely, he is crying. But no, he didnt know before they went radio silent.

    • @scerpalman
      @scerpalman 3 года назад +3

      @@paulyflyer8154 er... what are you talking about? How would they have known that before it happened?

    • @hereisshirl
      @hereisshirl 3 года назад +25

      @@scerpalman because they knew the wing had been damaged by the debri during take off

  • @evelynwills3641
    @evelynwills3641 8 лет назад +598

    "Columbia, Houston, UHF Comm, Check"
    This is heartbreaking!

    • @mattroberts2941
      @mattroberts2941 5 лет назад +13

      After the second no reply, they all knew the crew were dead.

    • @abhijeetpatil7407
      @abhijeetpatil7407 5 лет назад +3

      Who was saying 'UHF comm check'?

    • @prerna724
      @prerna724 5 лет назад +3

      Abhijeet Patil ...The man wearing grey shirt....sitting at the ryt syd of the flight director..

    • @abhijeetpatil7407
      @abhijeetpatil7407 5 лет назад

      @@prerna724 got it 😊 thanks

    • @omarshuaibi9936
      @omarshuaibi9936 5 лет назад

      😭

  • @beelzebabe4441
    @beelzebabe4441 2 месяца назад

    The flight director’s face, then the tears, then everyone else’s expressions and the deafening silence.. heartbreaking

  • @mercuryfalconog
    @mercuryfalconog Год назад +1

    2:37 that expression says it all. loosing friends that were like family. just broken inside

  • @trish8321
    @trish8321 3 года назад +437

    "Lock the doors"....
    You never want to hear that. That's protocol for when the worst happens.😥

    • @IM26C4UU
      @IM26C4UU 3 года назад

      time stamp?

    • @BurkeSchneider
      @BurkeSchneider 3 года назад

      @@IM26C4UU 3:11

    • @notsokomal3146
      @notsokomal3146 3 года назад +2

      what does it means? what doors??

    • @BurkeSchneider
      @BurkeSchneider 3 года назад +55

      @@notsokomal3146 It just means the doors to the mission control room. That way no one is allowed in or out.

    • @johnblank249
      @johnblank249 3 года назад +136

      @@notsokomal3146 It meant to preserve the evidence, everyone in the room is a witness, It is basically a crime scene now.

  • @RSTI191
    @RSTI191 3 года назад +181

    "Lock the doors"
    NASA's worst nightmare just realized..

    • @dark_shadow_wolf5048
      @dark_shadow_wolf5048 3 года назад +2

      what do they mean by lock the doors?

    • @RSTI191
      @RSTI191 3 года назад +22

      @@dark_shadow_wolf5048 That means the fit hit the shan..
      All communication to remain inside the room.
      No communication with the outside world.
      Document all action prior and up to LOS
      Record everything.
      Secure backup data..
      Say a few prayers..

    •  3 года назад +5

      @@babyshakya3707 How incredibly disrespectful of you.

    • @mr.racooniep3326
      @mr.racooniep3326 3 года назад +1

      @@babyshakya3707 you and your kind are weird but fascinating creatures of this world

    • @nrgnnvn6109
      @nrgnnvn6109 2 года назад +1

      @@babyshakya3707 this is disgusting.

  • @Saucyakld
    @Saucyakld Год назад

    Remember staring at the sky hoping to see them come down! RIP brave crew! Will always be remembered for your bravery

  • @thefpvlife7785
    @thefpvlife7785 3 месяца назад

    As a teen getting ready for my deli midday work I was watching this live on TV, as always, and remember it as clear as day even today some almost 4 decades later.

  • @kushpatel7204
    @kushpatel7204 4 года назад +596

    Cant imagine what went through the flight director's mind after this. Surely a part of his soul died that day.

    • @BeeBumper
      @BeeBumper 3 года назад +12

      We should have taken warnings about the heat shield more seriously qould be my guess

    • @crystald3346
      @crystald3346 3 года назад +4

      Lord have mercy on us

    • @JackieG717
      @JackieG717 3 года назад +5

      6 horcruxes to go then

    • @tibozino1671
      @tibozino1671 3 года назад +11

      I'll bet he knew immediately

    • @yourworstnightmare1332
      @yourworstnightmare1332 2 года назад +4

      nope. there was none to lived till then to have died. all that were mere reflexes in light of the monstrosity he and the powers that be had to carry everyday with the knowledge of knowing he was gambling with lives every time he sent the columbia spacecraft on an mission.

  • @jay-24
    @jay-24 5 лет назад +254

    Today 15 years competed but when I watch this I have still tears 😭 in my eyes

  • @ycul21
    @ycul21 2 года назад

    Heart stopping and heartbreaking.

  • @spencerboaz2385
    @spencerboaz2385 3 года назад +4

    I saw and heard it fall . We had many parts fall on our land . I was one of the only two to have to go to the hospital
    to be checked out after finding a fuel cell . Locals still find small pieces from time to time . RIP Columbia Crew .

  • @VeganSpaceScientist
    @VeganSpaceScientist 4 года назад +180

    Something about watching flight and space disasters always brings me to tears. A tragic loss of human life.

    • @optimisticallycynical.814
      @optimisticallycynical.814 3 года назад +2

      Too bad we didn't send soy protein instead ehh

    • @remo687
      @remo687 3 года назад +2

      Maybe because when the disasters happen, the people are so, so far away, and so isolated and alone.

    • @babyshakya3707
      @babyshakya3707 3 года назад

      Hi she rebirth now in Sri Lanka as a little boy, he just 3 years old, he said he was astronaut had an accident, also he can speak English, and Hindi, no one can speak English or Hindi in his family.. Please see this video ruclips.net/video/y3K5oOFv-sM/видео.html

    • @hadhamalnam
      @hadhamalnam 3 года назад

      @@remo687 Yeah I think thats the reason as ships sinking in the deep ocean invoke the same emotions and the main factor they share is the total isolation and helplessness of the victims as their fate is out of their control.

    • @petelancaster6715
      @petelancaster6715 2 года назад +1

      Dear God, you are a beautiful man.

  • @randomami8176
    @randomami8176 3 года назад +29

    “lock the doors”, three simple words, yet so devastatingly powerful. I remember that day, as I remember the Challenger back in 1986. No words, just shock with sadness.

    • @theHoax100
      @theHoax100 3 года назад

      sorry for the dumb question, but what did they mean by ‘lock the doors’?

    • @crazykev6491
      @crazykev6491 2 года назад +10

      @@theHoax100 it’s government protocol.. no one is allowed in or out while they investigate records. No cell phone calls In or out either.

    • @mop714
      @mop714 2 месяца назад

      I remember the man on the moon expedition in 1969 which was exciting, also to see both Space shuttle disasters was extremely powerful viewing. RIP

  • @pablopeter3564
    @pablopeter3564 Год назад +1

    . My depest dondolence to the families of these brave men and women who gave their lives for the space exploration.

  • @subramaniyamroobini8823
    @subramaniyamroobini8823 2 года назад

    No more words..still they alive in our heart❤❤they found safe place 🙇🙇

  • @Wolfie54545
    @Wolfie54545 4 года назад +1859

    And people in my school, even teachers, don’t know what this is.

    • @ian_b
      @ian_b 4 года назад +48

      Really? Wow, that is sad.

    • @ericwofford1896
      @ericwofford1896 4 года назад +75

      Geez. That's public school for ya these days! Propaganda & brainwashing factories that leave young people having to actively educate themselves on their own.

    • @ziyaaddhorat
      @ziyaaddhorat 4 года назад +2

      Meh it’s not really that important

    • @foreverbooked2964
      @foreverbooked2964 4 года назад +43

      @@ziyaaddhorat not really that important huh? 7 brilliant people with 7 ingenious minds perishing in such a fatal accident is a simple meh!?

    • @ziyaaddhorat
      @ziyaaddhorat 4 года назад +8

      Tejas Sabnis exactly, it’s just 7. There are much more important things going on in the world that this mission.

  • @humindians4486
    @humindians4486 4 года назад +703

    They sacrificed dere life for the future of humanity..Salute to them always..Rip😞

    • @DeepakKamat
      @DeepakKamat 4 года назад +40

      Sorry but they did not, they did not even know they were going to sacrifice anything, they did awesome work and it is sorry to know that they couldn't make it, but don't divert the incident in this way.

    • @bigmart932
      @bigmart932 4 года назад +1

      I mean, at the time they were preparing rescue missions for if the panels broke. So, plausibly, they could have saved the shuttle, or the crew at least. Why they didn't remains a mystery.

    • @DigvijayPatil
      @DigvijayPatil 4 года назад

      Avi Kaushik kuch bhi matlab

    • @paul-gilbertrivers8075
      @paul-gilbertrivers8075 4 года назад

      awesome guy exactly man. Bad choice disregarding the call for repairs.

    • @DrLoverLover
      @DrLoverLover 4 года назад

      @Video_Sense you can procreate on the moon

  • @crunchycrocodile756
    @crunchycrocodile756 8 месяцев назад +1

    This is tearing me up seeing the space shuttle blast like anything and that dead bodies and the broken parts fall down. RIP to all astronauts 😢😢😭

  • @maheshmurali2697
    @maheshmurali2697 3 года назад +2

    I still remember the newspaper next morning after the disaster.
    The front half of it actually showed a picture of the crew waving so I was like "great they are back", and when I opened the other half there was a picture of the burning shuttle and the title saying "All crew perished during the re-entry".☹️

  • @gianluigiribezzo9138
    @gianluigiribezzo9138 4 года назад +294

    I felt a painful feeling of emptiness just by watching at their faces when they didn't get answers from the Shuttle. I think we can barely imagine what it meant to them and to everyone in that office to lose all of those people, it must have been the worst feeling one can experience...

    • @dayana8409
      @dayana8409 2 года назад

      Io penso agli astronauti se si sono accorti che stavano morendo

    • @lufasumafalu5069
      @lufasumafalu5069 Год назад

      painful feeling ? you obviously have no real life tragedy if a snippet of youtube bring you down mentally

    • @richardtibbitts3841
      @richardtibbitts3841 7 месяцев назад

      No, the worst feeling was the one the astronauts had just before their bodies were ripped apart.

  • @vishy2511979
    @vishy2511979 4 года назад +819

    Heartbreaking to see. Felt so much pain when we lost Vikram lander, can't imagine the pain they went through when they lost 7 astronauts :(

    • @AS_2222
      @AS_2222 4 года назад +19

      Including kalpana chawla

    • @rmcd
      @rmcd 4 года назад +51

      We felt your pain in America and were cheering for you! We are all in this together.

    • @aprajita2818
      @aprajita2818 4 года назад +61

      @Atif Idrees ISRO holds records which even NASA doesn't hold. Launching the maximum number of satelites in one go, Mars mission successful in first attempt itself. So it's a mutual respect. But you know what, madarsa literates won't get it.

    • @crazymaniac7474
      @crazymaniac7474 4 года назад +6

      @@aprajita2818 if NASA wants they can also make such record. But it will be waste of time and resources. Anyway ISRO can do it cheaper as most things in India so it was better suited for them.

    • @kshitijtiwari3426
      @kshitijtiwari3426 4 года назад +13

      @Atif Idrees oink oink!!🐷🐷

  • @Whatisright
    @Whatisright 2 года назад +1

    I never noticed before that the flight director was crying. Tears streaming down his face.

  • @syzygy21055
    @syzygy21055 3 года назад +11

    1:57 he already knows it's over.

  • @halehdamirchi146
    @halehdamirchi146 4 года назад +151

    Oh my God, I cried watching this. the shock on their face.

    • @gskmth
      @gskmth 3 года назад +3

      Do we have same feeling when we kill animals for food and fun????

    • @leyvi393
      @leyvi393 3 года назад +2

      @@gskmth no we dont, why should we

    • @babyshakya3707
      @babyshakya3707 3 года назад

      Hi she rebirth now in Sri Lanka as a little boy, he just 3 year's old, he said he was astronaut had an accident, also he can speak English, and Hindi, no one can speak English or Hindi his family.. Please see this video ruclips.net/video/y3K5oOFv-sM/видео.html