STS-107 - The Columbia Accident

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2013
  • Please read this description:
    STS-107 - This video starts about 12 minutes before the de-orbit burn and runs through until just after the "Close the Doors" instruction by Leroy Cain. The film is made up of MCC video broacast on the day (audio is in right channel), Flight Directors Loop (in the left channel), the recovered film taken onboard Columbia (audio is in the left channel along with the FD Loop), simulator footage of the de-orbit burn and some of the re-entry, photos from the flight that were either recovered or transmitted to the ground during the mission, some photos taken of Columbia during the flight by long range ground cameras and footage of the destruction taken by amateur video operators and an Apache helicopter crew (footage taken from Chris Valentines excellent video timeline of the events).
    I have tried to synch the video and audio from the three NASA sources and would guesstimate that I have gotten it as close as possible to real time, which, I felt, was very important for this video.
    I would highly recommend listening to the audio with headphones or on well spaced apart speakers.
    The video is dedicated to the crew of STS-107.
    Thanks for reading this description - LM5
    All photos/video/audio courtesy NASA unless stated otherwise.
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Комментарии • 380

  • @AnahataMaryjane
    @AnahataMaryjane Год назад +72

    i remember being on a forum and someone said 'i just saw columbia go by but it was a bunch of light streaks, what is going on?'. still gives me goosebumps.

    • @olig7336
      @olig7336 11 месяцев назад +7

      That’s a wild and sad memory

    • @patrickpirzer4080
      @patrickpirzer4080 12 дней назад

      @@olig7336 I remember when my dad told me "The shuttle exploded while landing." I couldn't believe it. I thought "How can that be possible?".

  • @richardcochrane1966
    @richardcochrane1966 Год назад +32

    1:05:32 "Columbia...Houston...Com check...!" followed by silence - chills me to the bone even now...

    • @herrington292
      @herrington292 Год назад +5

      Me too. Everytime there's silence after "Houston, com check", I get chills.

  • @ryancraig9352
    @ryancraig9352 5 лет назад +79

    "We haven't forgotten about you." ❤️

  • @franklinwaddell5945
    @franklinwaddell5945 4 года назад +35

    It was Saturday morning in Tyler, Texas and My house shook and I heard three sonic booms like "boom.... Boom boom"....very loud. For some reason I thought... "was that a missile attack or something" and I looked out the front and back of my house to see if any mushroom clouds were visible and was glad I didn't see any! I went back to my Saturday morning routine... Coffee... Breakfast... And just figured the military guys were just up there testing stuff. About 45 minutes later a neighbor stopped by and said that the shuttle had disentergrated right above us and then the booms all made sense. I'll never forget that morning. God bless the crew of Columbia.

    • @pat91-xn8lx4vx4j
      @pat91-xn8lx4vx4j Месяц назад

      vous les americains entre le 11 septembre , les drames de challenger et columbia. vous etes un peuple qui a pris sa dose de malheurs

    • @pat91-xn8lx4vx4j
      @pat91-xn8lx4vx4j Месяц назад

      you Americans between September 11, challenger dramas and columbia. you are a people who have taken their dose of misfortunes

  • @rhydean693
    @rhydean693 5 месяцев назад +13

    It's so sad and eerie to hear nothing but silence after their several attempts at a comm check, knowing those brave souls were already gone.

  • @juliemc8460
    @juliemc8460 Год назад +48

    It’s scary to think they were doomed at lift off.

    • @TomKappeln
      @TomKappeln Год назад +6

      As we are when born ... sad but true.

    • @emily-clark
      @emily-clark 11 месяцев назад +5

      Had they taken photographs of the space shuttle itself, we would've known there was a hole on the left wing and we could've found some solutions to bring them back home safely. I truly believe in that. If you have a negative attitude from the start, you'll lose them...

    • @kevinmcgovern5110
      @kevinmcgovern5110 11 месяцев назад +4

      Well more like 81 seconds after liftoff…

    • @josephrobinson5452
      @josephrobinson5452 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@emily-clarkthats why it's never a good idea to put your life in someone else's hands if you can avoid it as we all know we only get one life. We don't know for sure what happened and why

    • @jackkenefick2696
      @jackkenefick2696 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@emily-clarkDid they want to know?

  • @TrickyClaw
    @TrickyClaw 2 года назад +22

    "UHF Comms check" over and over... the silence is haunting to this day.

  • @wookiedog
    @wookiedog 6 лет назад +41

    Thank you for this. There is something that fascinates me yet horrifies me in equal measures.

  • @taylorwollerton6970
    @taylorwollerton6970 2 года назад +84

    Nineteen years ago today. Still very sad. The cockpit video is possibly one of the saddest aspects to this video because it shows the crew minutes before they died. And they seem calm and happy. It must have been horrible for the flight control team also. Such a tragic loss. RIP the crew of the space shuttle Columbia. Seven heros.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 2 года назад +7

      No one told them about the foam strike.

    • @Paul1958R
      @Paul1958R 2 года назад

      @@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 Actually they were told:
      On January 23, flight director Steve Stich sent an e-mail to Husband and McCool to tell them about the foam strike and inform them there was no cause for concern about damage to the TPS, as foam strikes has occurred on previous flights:
      _During ascent at approximately 80 seconds, photo analysis shows that some debris from the area of the -Y ET Bipod Attach Point came loose and subsequently impacted the orbiter left wing, in the area of transition from Chine to Main Wing, creating a shower of smaller particles. The impact appears to be totally on the lower surface and no particles are seen to traverse over the upper surface of the wing. Experts have reviewed the high speed photography and there is no concern for RCC or tile damage. We have seen this same phenomenon on several other flights and there is absolutely no concern for entry._

    • @crazyshortstime9317
      @crazyshortstime9317 2 года назад +12

      Actually, a reviewer of the film, by the name of Steve, did radio up to Rick Husband sometime during the mission to notify the crew of the foam strike. He said it was nothing to note other than to make sure that none of the crew were surprised by it in a question from a reporter after they made their return to Earth. Of course, we all know now that it should've been a far more serious cause for concern, but due to several factors surrounding NASA at the time, the overall seriousness of the issue did not occur to them until disaster struck. Rick Husband would go on to tell the rest of the crew about the strike and the same "no cause for concern" thing that Steve had told him. So they did know about the foam strike for some, if not most, of the mission.

    • @rthelionheart
      @rthelionheart 2 года назад +3

      That is an awful way to go though; vaporized long before landing.

    • @nickmcdunhill1074
      @nickmcdunhill1074 2 года назад +9

      @@rthelionheart They believed that the depressurisation of the cockpit probably incapacitated the crew so quickly it would of almost been a instant-death for most, if not all of them

  • @steverasch2891
    @steverasch2891 Год назад +10

    20 years ago today...Will never forget waking up that morning in college and seeing the news that there was a shuttle catastrophe...at first, I was confused and thought that it was a remembrance of the Challenger disaster from 1986. Took me a minute to realize that this was a new disaster.

  • @jerrytravelstead1075
    @jerrytravelstead1075 2 месяца назад +4

    The moment when the person reported 4 sensors going out - I’ll bet at least one engineer knew right then what was happening

  • @jose.asdrubalquiros8255
    @jose.asdrubalquiros8255 6 лет назад +64

    At 1:01:51 the last communication with Columbia is cut off; at 1:02:26 it is already observed disintegrating. At 1:03:25, NASA stops transmitting its trajectory, by which time it was already clear that the ship had disintegrated.

    • @MrXminus1
      @MrXminus1 3 года назад +10

      They were already showing it breaking apart with multiple contrails on TV. Huston needs to have a regular tv display.

    • @AlonsoRules
      @AlonsoRules 2 года назад +11

      pieces started falling off at the California coast

    • @invernessity
      @invernessity Год назад

      @@MrXminus1 NASA really never believed that they would (or even could) lose an orbiter on landing. So they never considered a simple TV to be essential equipment for Mission Control. They did have contingency plans in place for an accident, though, which they drafted after the Challenger disaster. When Challenger happened, they didn't even have any disaster plans in place because then management believed that the chances of losing a shuttle were extremely remote and this wouldn't happen. After Challenger,I do not believe that NASA management ever really accepted that the shuttle was experimental and the odds of losing a flight, according to its own engineers, was only 1 in 100.

  • @xero925
    @xero925 4 года назад +23

    I remember this. It's really erie that the crew have no idea that they will die in a few minutes. RIP STS 107 Crew! We still hurt for you 17 years later!

  • @americianflyer72
    @americianflyer72 9 лет назад +35

    In the book "Columbia: Her Missions and Crews" it was a off duty controller who was outside to watch Columbia fly overhead that called one of the on duty flight controllers and via that controller informed the Flight Director that Columbia was gone

  • @notthefather3919
    @notthefather3919 4 года назад +28

    Barbara Morgan was scheduled to be on the next Columbia flight.
    She was also the replacement for the Teacher in Space for Challenger.
    I wonder if she plays the lottery.

    • @noecarrier5035
      @noecarrier5035 2 года назад +4

      She did an angel a favour once, a reeeeeally big favour.

    • @noecarrier5035
      @noecarrier5035 2 года назад +6

      Also, she wasn't Christa's replacement. She trained alongside her but then became MS after the cancellation and was selected to fly before the Educator Astronauts were even conceived of. She was picked for a mission in 1998 but ended up having to wait until 2007 to actually fly. She's arguably one of NASA's finest.

    • @chrisstanley8053
      @chrisstanley8053 2 года назад +4

      There is video of her watching the Challenger disaster.

    • @MrBigrobmjca3
      @MrBigrobmjca3 3 месяца назад

      My freshman English teacher was in the top 2 candidates for the state of Tennessee. Mrs. Bonnie Fakes. Lebanon High School Lebanon, Tennessee

    • @albernererhelge
      @albernererhelge 2 месяца назад +2

      Do you have to play lottery when you've already won the biggest price in life?

  • @averystipp7552
    @averystipp7552 8 лет назад +46

    This is a very well-done video. I really appreciate you putting this together. The way you sync'd all of these different sources of A/V was really nice. Thanks.

  • @returnofthemac325
    @returnofthemac325 Год назад +5

    50:15 the dude saying how the shuttle passing over head Will provide a spectacular view for those in that area. Sheesh. Haunting statement giving what unfolded. RIP 😢

  • @OmegaSimPilot
    @OmegaSimPilot 10 месяцев назад +2

    As always, well done and thank you for sharing! I was a senior in high school when this happened and even at that age was devastated. I have their mission patch along with Apollo 1 and Challengers on the wall at my desk. We will never forget, and their spirit will carry us higher!

  • @karami8844
    @karami8844 Год назад +63

    I woke up early to record the landing on VHS. I never knew I was going to watch another NASA tragedy unfold before my eyes. RIP to all of the Astronauts. 😔 1:01:06 “Feeling the heat...” still haunts me.

    • @Matthew-gn5yi
      @Matthew-gn5yi Год назад +7

      I had to replay a couple times but I heard "feeling the heat" & the voice is so haunting but I thought I heard the voice say another word or two & then nothing,

    • @alinbate4580
      @alinbate4580 Год назад +5

      they were burned to death i think :(

    • @DaveyHearn
      @DaveyHearn Год назад +9

      @@alinbate4580 Happy to say I can offer you some comfort here. I read the Columbia Crew Survival Investigation Report, which makes clear that the crew lost consciousness within seconds once the shuttle started to break up. All the crew's helmets were found, and all the visors were in the "up" position. They were so taken by surprise that they didn't even have time to put their visors down. The report also concluded that there were no thermal injuries to the astronauts while they were still conscious. The crew's loss remains a tragedy, but I hope it will comfort you to know that the end was very quick.

    • @josephrobinson5452
      @josephrobinson5452 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@DaveyHearnif they found a hand on the ground as they reported finding, there surely were very bad injurys and everything wasn't even found. The best thing is don't put your life in someone else's hands.

    • @blaksu
      @blaksu 8 месяцев назад +1

      If he said that, I'm not so sure that's indicative of a problem. At that point the orbiter was still intact, I believe, and any increased heat would be a normal effect of reentry

  • @TheAschwittek
    @TheAschwittek 3 года назад +12

    Excellent job! I can tell you put your heart and soul into this and all your other videos. Thank you for showing the triumphs and the disasters in our space program.

  • @melaD333
    @melaD333 4 года назад +7

    Thank you for your hard work in compiling this. I still remember that morning and being glued to the TV and the sadness and shock of it all.

    • @TralfazConstruction
      @TralfazConstruction 4 года назад +1

      I'd just started a five hour Saturday workday at 8 AM ET. No one in our facility had a clue until I received a text message from my fiancee at 11:40 AM or so. That's my best recollection. My sweetheart picked me up after work had concluded at just after 1 PM. She filled me in as to what was known up until that point. I was shocked where my fiancée had had a few hours to glean what she could from the blanket news coverage. We went to my parent's home around 2 PM and watched the news until well into the evening. That day, February 1, 2003 is fixed in memory. You are quite correct in categorizing the event by writing the "sadness and shock of it all." Next Saturday, February 1, 2020 will be 17 years to the actual day and reflecting on this tragedy has given me pause. Best wishes.

  • @gregv79
    @gregv79 Месяц назад +2

    This is one of those dramatic moments captured live I always seem to go back to as i go to bed. Theres another 2-1/2 hr upload that starts an hour earlier in re entry but ive watched this one more..a hundred times at least id bet.

  • @hartford8596
    @hartford8596 11 месяцев назад +4

    Dave Brown and I communicate a lot when I was in high school in 2002. My teacher sister and him was good friends and she introduced us. Great guy. I attended his funeral in Arlington cemetery. His parents invited me. It was a honor to have met his father and mother as well as family and friends. We was supposed to meet but unfortunately that could not happen. When I found out I really crushed me as well as a few of my classmates.

  • @MicrowavedAlastair5390
    @MicrowavedAlastair5390 Год назад +4

    This was the first national tragedy that I have memories of experiencing. I'm just barely too young to remember 9/11. We'd gone to a pizza place for dinner, little less than a month before my fourth birthday, and all the patrons and workers were glued to the TVs, which were all showing the breakup. I knew what had happened, even then.

  • @Tmccreight25Gaming
    @Tmccreight25Gaming 4 месяца назад +10

    "When your just 16 minutes from home
    Know with us you are never alone
    We will always remember the ones
    Lost just 16 minutes from home"
    RIP the crew of Space Shuttle Columbia STS-107
    2003-2024

  • @pateva2003
    @pateva2003 10 лет назад +41

    I'm a Houston resident. I was standing out on my patio to see the reentry path about a 150 miles to the north. I saw basically what was shown on television, multiple contrails and the orbiter breaking up while watching NASA tv.It took about 20 minutes for the networks to catch on to what happened.Very sad.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 2 года назад +2

      Could you tell immediately that something had gone wrong?

    • @denisecampbell6736
      @denisecampbell6736 Год назад

      @@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 I was at my Sister’s & we were watching CNN because I knew Columbia was coming home & wanted to watch the Landing. When they showed that footage from above Dallas? You could tell right away she was breaking up. I remember Miles O’Brien saying it looked just like Mir did when she was deorbited into the Pacific (IIRC). One big piece & con trail, then suddenly several pieces & con trails. I actually knew when I heard over Comm they’d lost Data w/the Vehicle. I knew what that meant & started praying. 😔😪

    • @herrington292
      @herrington292 Год назад +1

      Could mission control Houston not see it happening while it happened?

  • @GumballAstronaut7206
    @GumballAstronaut7206 Год назад +6

    20 Years Ago Today…..R.I.P. crew of STS-107 Space Shuttle Columbia

  • @Maltsky3773
    @Maltsky3773 2 года назад +20

    I remember tuning in to CNN to see the landing. When they showed the shuttle clearly breaking apart it was absolutely heartbreaking. May they Rest In Peace.

  • @BD12
    @BD12 8 лет назад +42

    Out of context, there's something oddly touching about CAPCOM saying "we haven't forgotten about you"

    • @GigaG11
      @GigaG11 5 лет назад +1

      BarryDennen12 when is this in the video

    • @Rintintin115
      @Rintintin115 5 лет назад +5

      @@GigaG11 About 8:00

  • @tatteredquilt
    @tatteredquilt 2 месяца назад +1

    I remember when this happened very clearly. I'd lived in Texas for many years, and had seen one of the shuttles re-enter the earth's atmosphere one night, and it was an incredible sight. A couple of months after moving to Texas, Challenger blew up. A couple of months after returning to my home state, Columbia was lost. I remember the feeling of disbelief that another crew was lost, and couldn't imagine what the family of the lost crews, and crews of all shuttles must have felt.

  • @patriciaadams3010
    @patriciaadams3010 Месяц назад +1

    This is a tremendous effort on your behalf, and a job very well done. May the crew rest in peace, and may their families, the Mission Control personnel, and all those involved find some level of peace as well.

  • @quitsevensix
    @quitsevensix Год назад +11

    Mr Cain has nerves of absolute steel wow he did not flinch once during his realisation that STS 107 was lost

  • @bruce92106
    @bruce92106 3 года назад +14

    Hearing her all happy Chatty-Cathy away taking video of the decent and plasma is kinda creepy and sad too. Ugh. Those poor astronauts and what those last minutes must have been like. However I don't think they felt it too long because once it broke apart, at that altitude, at that speed, etc, I believe they'd have passed out almost immediately. But, even so. RIP!

    • @dlw1221
      @dlw1221 Год назад +3

      I really felt the same way. Although, I likened her non-stop Chatty-Cathy to nervous energy. I believe they all knew, this was a possibility.

  • @skyprop
    @skyprop 10 лет назад +23

    yo the author who put this together...GREAT JOB the mix could have been a little better but a good job in putting this together.

  • @melindanelson7111
    @melindanelson7111 4 года назад +62

    I know his heart was hurt and broken but LeRoy Cain did an excellent job considering his heart had just dropped to his feet. God bless u LeRoy and all at Mission Control.

    • @DominicciSkycam
      @DominicciSkycam 3 года назад +8

      "The SSP was asked directly if they had any interest/desire in requesting resources outside of NASA
      to view the Orbiter (ref. the wing leading edge debris concern).
      They said, No." - he knew about the problems and didn't do anything about it. Disgusting - he deserves no praise.

    • @nicklindsley7866
      @nicklindsley7866 3 года назад +6

      I bet he regrets dismissing the calls to use hi res cameras to check possible damage to Columbia's left wing. Two weeks previously..

    • @AlonsoRules
      @AlonsoRules 3 года назад +8

      @@nicklindsley7866 even if they were able to see the damage, there was nothing that could have been done

    • @kmlonidier
      @kmlonidier 3 года назад +8

      @@AlonsoRules nothing could be done? Officials from NASA are on record saying they would have done something if they knew Columbia would disintegrate. NASA once again failed to take proper care of the astronauts.

    • @JackieSwisher619
      @JackieSwisher619 2 года назад +5

      @@kmlonidier you didn’t answer the question. Please provide a source. What exactly could he have done? Sent a rescue mission? Tell the crew they would die on re-entry?

  • @jacklandaupresents
    @jacklandaupresents Год назад +9

    You did quite an amazing job piecing and synchronizing everything together. Great job and thank you✨

  • @bozotheclown935
    @bozotheclown935 8 дней назад

    Brings me to tears every time I listen to this. I don't know why I do it..

  • @steveneppler5301
    @steveneppler5301 9 лет назад +15

    A well constructed and classy tribute to the crew of STS-107.... We can always count on you to produce quality pieces like this one, LM5... Thanks again...

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 лет назад +4

      Steven Eppler well, I have always thought that if you set out to do a job, do it to the best quality and with imagination - I guess I got it right for this one - would have been very disapointed, considering the subject matter, if I hadnt - cheers LM5

    • @steveneppler5301
      @steveneppler5301 9 лет назад +3

      Yes, you definitely got it right. Let the words and pictures speak for themselves... Keep up the good work.

    • @americianflyer72
      @americianflyer72 9 лет назад

      Steven Eppler I agree with you here Steven..... Most definatly got it right

  • @aaaht3810
    @aaaht3810 5 лет назад +19

    Very informative presentation. It really helps you understand the chronology of events. RIP Columbia crew.

  • @dl7281
    @dl7281 2 месяца назад

    This is so well done. Thanks for the composite - an ode to those lost and those who tried to just do their jobs/save them.

  • @ardesyvonne9406
    @ardesyvonne9406 2 года назад +3

    The three voices talking at once is crazy making!!!

  • @Tibs_Budapest
    @Tibs_Budapest 2 года назад +5

    "Roger, uh buh (CUTOFF)"
    Phonetically, sounded like first syllable of "before" or possibly "both;" he may have been responding to the BFS fault messages for both left-side main landing gear tires.

  • @Zoomer30
    @Zoomer30 8 лет назад +15

    When that recovered tape was first played (remember :they had no idea what it was or if was related to the shuttle, it could have been a graduation tape for all they knew) their jaws must have dropped.

  • @toddcushing2764
    @toddcushing2764 9 лет назад +9

    Nicely done. I will watch more of your videos.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 лет назад +2

      todd cushing thanks todd - welcome aboard the Space Centre!

  • @jdoggg1119
    @jdoggg1119 11 месяцев назад +3

    Feb 1st 2003 was tragic locally for me. I lost a classmate in a car crash that morning.

  • @lancehurley9743
    @lancehurley9743 Год назад +3

    It’s a damn miracle somebody wasn’t killed on the ground also...

  • @c7042
    @c7042 6 месяцев назад +7

    At 74 now, I remember that morning and how sad I was. But as I am about to soon join them in death, I envy the crew of Columbia and the marvelous adventure they had in space. How satisfied they must have been with their life at the end. Their loss impacted us but not them.❤❤

  • @rumpleforeskin6915
    @rumpleforeskin6915 8 лет назад +29

    I was working security at the johnson space center when this happened,...it was a very sad day.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  8 лет назад +8

      +Dustin Davis I cant imagine what the day was like there - thanks for the comment

  • @modeltrainman
    @modeltrainman 9 лет назад +15

    A sad but real part of our history.

  • @mrkeogh
    @mrkeogh Год назад +22

    57:15 the controller knows something is seriously wrong if they lost 4 temperature sensors with no commonality (i.e. can be taken out by one or two systems failing, like an electrical fault, etc.)
    That they were lost over 4-5 seconds tells us the rate at which the plasma entered and destroyed systems inside the wing structure. The nature of how they failed probably told the controller they had a very serious problem.

    • @doddyvanstraaten2774
      @doddyvanstraaten2774 Год назад

      No commonality - How about the fact that all the sensors were on a lateral line back from the foam impact location?

    • @mailtrap22
      @mailtrap22 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yup. The commonality was the wing itself. It was being destroyed from the plasma entering the hole and eating the wing from the inside.

  • @kendambrosio3714
    @kendambrosio3714 8 лет назад +24

    Wow. I just want to thank you for putting this together. As sad as it was for the country, it must have been so much worse for those working the return flight -- that hope to turn negative data into a flight with damaged communications, or... something. And the growing realization that it simply wasn't to be.

    • @melinda5777
      @melinda5777 2 года назад +2

      I would like to thank all the non-proffessional photographers/ video-ograhers on the ground filming what was suppose to be a happy occasion and presented their videos to NASA to help in their investigation.
      Sadder is: they saw the heat shields being torn off during the lift off and could have aborted the mission before they reached outer space. Then q6 days in space, seems to me they should or could have figured out a way foe these souls not to burn to death upon re-entry!! I remember this day so clearly. I was watching it under on TV. Had just got to work before clock in. GOD BLESS Their families!

    • @invernessity
      @invernessity Год назад +3

      @@melinda5777 Unfortunately, shuttle missions could not be aborted once the solid rocket boosters were ignited, and until after they fully burned their fuel loads which took about two minutes. Also, the foam responsible for this tragedy struck the leading edge of the left wing at 81.7 seconds after lift-off when the orbiter was already traveling 2300 fps (almost 1600 mph) at an altitude of 65,900 feet (about 12.5 miles). There was nothing NASA could do at this time; however, it is theoretically possible that a mission could have later been launched to recover the crew before they exhausted their oxygen and other supplies.

  • @jobling9
    @jobling9 15 дней назад

    Watching the tragic Challenger live on TV as a kid still haunts me, then years later my kids witnessed this 😔 RIP to all. Xxxxxxxxxxxxxx

  • @donaldshaw8710
    @donaldshaw8710 5 лет назад +13

    1:01:43 Mission Control's last communication with Space Shuttle Columbia before its disintegration.

  • @robbhahn8897
    @robbhahn8897 2 года назад +13

    Feel kind of sorry for Leroy Cain the flight director. When the anonymous readings from the left wing began coming in he must have been thinking back to the meetings and emails flying around NASA for the past week about the foam strike on the orbiter left wings after launch. Considering that he was one of the people who said there was no need for additional imagery of the damage while they were still in orbit, he must have felt like being gut-punched when to breakup images came in.

    • @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017
      @stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 2 года назад +4

      Oh really? I didn't know he was one of the nay-sayers. I thought it was Linda Ham that made that call all by herself.

    • @Notoriouskid28
      @Notoriouskid28 Год назад +6

      @@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 it was indeed Linda Hamm. As i understand it, the flight control team did not know if the potential damage. The crew did and were talked to by someone on the ground and everyone (crew included) thought nothing of it. Which is the tragic part here because the navy (I believe) told them they could position one of their satellites to have a look and were declined by the nasa higher ups.

    • @karami8844
      @karami8844 Год назад +6

      @@Notoriouskid28 I read on her Wikipedia page that she was only demoted from her position and continued her career at NASA. She should have been fired for not even trying to orchestrate a rescue mission or at least taking the engineers’ concerns seriously.

    • @maddymurnane5670
      @maddymurnane5670 2 месяца назад

      ​@@karami8844I agree

  • @Zach121k
    @Zach121k 10 лет назад +2

    I Love the work you put in here,

  • @EdWeibe
    @EdWeibe 5 лет назад +13

    yeah thanks for putting this together. I was one who went on to man the downlink monitoring on future takeoffs to catch debris live as it happened and get it to flight analysts after orbit was established. (aka the tank shot).

    • @yxeaviationphotog
      @yxeaviationphotog 4 года назад +2

      Did you also monitor downlinks from the SRB cameras as well, or was that assigned to someone else?

  • @mishie618
    @mishie618 Год назад +3

    Its hard to imagine they weren't watching in yhe sky and didn't see it in real time. So sad every time it just gets more heartbreaking.

  • @JD-eq4dp
    @JD-eq4dp Год назад +5

    Those at NASA were full of crap. They can skirt round the issue all they want. They damn well knew the shuttle would be in trouble after the strike against the wing.

    • @KubanKevin
      @KubanKevin Месяц назад

      Not really. The foam strikes happened often. They had no definitive way of knowing the damage without seeing it. The crew had no way of seeing it either. Sending a second shuttle was a possibility but it had never been attempted.. it’s hard to manage 1 shuttle in orbit at a time, now imagine two of them simultaneously. I’ll give you that they royally screwed up with Challenger but I do believe they did not know the full extent of the damage and their best guess they believed it wouldn’t be an issue as it had never been a problem in the past. Trust me the last thing they wanted was another disaster after challenger.

  • @Killraven1967
    @Killraven1967 11 лет назад +3

    Nice work LM5 - a fitting tribute.

  • @incargeek
    @incargeek 2 года назад +3

    The flashing out the overhead windows around 47:37 is the APU exhaust.

  • @SiymX
    @SiymX 10 лет назад +6

    Oh My God! I remember that they died. I was so heartbroken. How did they die. But Ya! God Bless Them! And you who send this video. Please send More. And keep up the good work.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  10 лет назад +2

      Thanks Sayeem - appreciate the comment

  • @paulanderson6481
    @paulanderson6481 8 лет назад +26

    Columbia was the most beautiful of all the orbiters

    • @rzk8302
      @rzk8302 5 лет назад +2

      Paul Anderson why?

    • @crystalwings4520
      @crystalwings4520 4 года назад +1

      @@rzk8302 Because she was the first? (sorry, Enterprise..)

  • @blairtrot5
    @blairtrot5 11 лет назад +3

    You've done good work here.

  • @markwilliamson4628
    @markwilliamson4628 4 месяца назад +2

    And the realization in Charlie's voice at 1:09:27...

  • @faktisletztenendes
    @faktisletztenendes Год назад +2

    To me it’s still remarkable that engineers didn’t calculate with the possibility that a piece of foam hitting the orbiter at a certain point of acceleration could cause serious damage to the tiles. Tests made after the disaster even had to be repeated several times before the result was matching with what really happened at launch. So it’s not that surprising NASA noticed the impact (what they thought to be just a so to say graze shot) but never considered it to be a serious problem. It’s so easy to say the losses of lives and material could’ve been prevented given the knowledge of today, that’s what I’d like to tell everyone who’s written mostly stupid things here.

  • @veror5516
    @veror5516 2 месяца назад +1

    In looking at the video lower left, the debris count starts over California but the last communication was over Texas. So the crew was still alive when the shuttle began to break apart? Oh my God.

    • @jmr5125
      @jmr5125 Месяц назад

      To clarify, the crew was alive *and unaware* of any problems up to the lost of communication.
      The time between "The crew knew something is wrong" and the crews death was very short -- 30-90 seconds if I remember correctly.

  • @nolancain8792
    @nolancain8792 3 года назад +13

    Approximate timing from CAIB and telemetry compilations. Edited 2/1/23. We really are hearing her breaking apart.
    1:01:50 RCS fires to keep Columbia on course
    1:01:52 Loss of Signal
    1:02:01 Columbia loses control, aero forces overcome all attempts to regain control
    1:02:08 Left OMS pod breaks off, Columbia is essentially flying straight vertical then backwards
    1:02:24 Left wing separated and begins disintegrating
    1:02:32 Crew Module and rest of Columbia breaks apart

    • @noecarrier5035
      @noecarrier5035 3 года назад +8

      I've read the detailed reports on the breakup sequence dozens and dozens of times, but every time I see the actual elapsed time, beginning to end, it really brings home how rapidly Columbia fell apart. And my heart always hurts when I see Leroy Cain holding in the emotion that comes with the sudden realisation of what has just happened to seven of his close friends and colleagues. The NASA flight directors and other missile men have no better paragon.

  • @cornerofthemoon
    @cornerofthemoon Год назад +6

    I don't buy that just the portion of the onboard videotape that recorded the crew's demise was destroyed when the vehicle broke up. I totally get why the footage wasn't released but somebody at NASA saw it.

    • @yesitssarahbby17
      @yesitssarahbby17 Год назад

      The camera couldn't survive the intense heat and cabin pressure. Recording the crew's demise wouldn't have been possible

    • @cornerofthemoon
      @cornerofthemoon Год назад +1

      @@yesitssarahbby17 The tape survived but apparently only the portion that recorded the astronauts deaths was destroyed after break up. I suppose that's technically possible but I don't believe it though I understand the reason for NASA sticking to that story.

  • @crazyshortstime9317
    @crazyshortstime9317 2 года назад +4

    One thing worth noting about this terrible event is that the crew was unaware of the danger until the very end, which may have been for the better, as in, it was probably for the best that they did not die knowing what was going to happen to them, but rather, death and destruction caught them by surprise, and so they probably had no idea what was happening when they all inevitably passed out and died shortly thereafter. This also ties in with the fact that it was probably for the better that controllers in Mission Control Houston had this happen whilst not knowing about the hole in the wing because if they had known all along, but had this happen because they failed to act in time, this would have been far worse, but since they didn't know all along, and consequently were not able to act in time, it was less harsh than it could've been.

    • @MrGrace
      @MrGrace Год назад +6

      They DID know about the hole in the wing. They simply ignored it.

    • @rekunta
      @rekunta Год назад +6

      They were informed about the foam strike by video conference, yet told there was no reason for concern.
      I doubt their end was a surprise out of nowhere. Undoubtedly the shuttle lost more and more stability as more alarms were going bonkers. They probably had ample time to understand they were goners.

    • @herrington292
      @herrington292 Год назад +2

      I agree with you Crazy Shorts Time. They died happy, at least for the most part.

  • @andretempler
    @andretempler Год назад +1

    So the last words were "Roger, but.." or is something audible here 1:02:05 ??? It seems like the squelch of the radio activated transmission because of the noise but nothing was said, or can you make out any word?
    What do the mean by c-band? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_band
    Is it infrared tracking, radio or some c-band radar, cause they say radar?

  • @markwilliamson4628
    @markwilliamson4628 4 месяца назад +1

    Wow, that look Hobaugh and Cain exchange at 1:06:45...

  • @dave36464736
    @dave36464736 2 года назад +5

    The realization at 1:15:18 is awful. They know something catastrophic has just happened. How horrifying.

    • @nolancain8792
      @nolancain8792 Год назад

      Whenever you hear lock the doors it’s never good.

  • @Rintintin115
    @Rintintin115 7 лет назад +1

    Where can I download the FD Loop from? I mean the audio version, not the transcripts?

    • @yxeaviationphotog
      @yxeaviationphotog 4 года назад

      Just search STS-107 flight loop on here. You can find about a 20 minute video, that picks up just prior to Columbia's last transmission.

  • @BD12
    @BD12 9 лет назад +5

    If there were people on the ground who knew about the foam strike and knew it could be a fatal outcome, how many of the people in MCC knew that much? Would've been nerve-wracking, waiting for the landing to happen with that knowledge.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 лет назад +8

      ***** There were a lot of people in the MOCR that day who had been privy to the analysis and conversations ref the debris strike on launch - including the Flight Director Leroy Cain - I can recommend the book Comm Check which details the detail

    • @nutsackmania
      @nutsackmania 8 лет назад +1

      +lunarmodule5 Good info thanks.

    • @ziggy8013
      @ziggy8013 4 года назад

      Looking back now some 16yrs ago and watching and putting together the videos NASA knew before hand that there was going to be a problem but they had no other choice then to take the chance of reentry for Columbia.

    • @junkdriver42
      @junkdriver42 Год назад +5

      @@ziggy8013 That’s not exactly true. The CAIB report details a few options had management done their job. The options include reducing the stress on the left wing by changing the turns, cold soaking the wing, stuffing it with debris, and even a potential rescue mission. None of them were guaranteed, but they could have improved their odds.
      This video is sad, but it also makes me angry.

  • @jimbo16720
    @jimbo16720 6 лет назад +21

    You do realize all 3 accidents were because they were in a hurry and didn't take the precautions before launching. A simple request for a military photograph would have told them there was a hole in the wing. Challenger was from not listening to a engineer about the O-rings in cold weather and Apollo was from not having wiring covered and pure oxygen in the capsule. All could have been prevented.

    • @Aeronaut1975
      @Aeronaut1975 6 лет назад +8

      Nothing could have been done, even if NASA were aware of the hole in the wing. Due to SpaceHab being carried in the cargo bay, Columbia didn't have any spacesuits on board, nor was there an airlock module installed.

    • @mistiandamelia
      @mistiandamelia 6 лет назад +1

      jimbo16720
      Out of all of the accidents Apollo 13 was the most successful on the astronauts surviving, their accident happened in space and despite all odds they survived unfortunately unlike all these other accidents. RIP!

    • @almostfm
      @almostfm 5 лет назад +2

      And 13 was incredibly lucky in one respect-had the accident happened a few hours earlier, they wouldn't have had the electrical power to get home. A few hours later, and the LM descent stage wouldn't have had enough thrust to get them back to a free-return trajectory

    • @mscheese000
      @mscheese000 5 лет назад +1

      I'm pretty sure jimbo16720 was referring to the Apollo 1 accident, not Apollo 13.

    • @srinitaaigaura
      @srinitaaigaura 5 лет назад

      Apollo and Challenger were preventable with a bit of foresight. Not sure what they could have done about Columbia because it took them a whole day to process the video and find out. Unfortunately the shuttle was not in the same plane as the ISS, or else they might have been saved by docking.
      When you look back, it's almost bizarre how everything unfolded - like it was predestined. The transmission cut just seconds before the shuttle lost the left wing and so on - it was almost like a discretion shot.

  • @1peter1180
    @1peter1180 9 лет назад +3

    every time i see videos of Columbia i always look to see if i could see the hole

  • @stonewall01
    @stonewall01 9 лет назад +3

    *****
    First I love your channel. You do an excellent job with these videos in particular the Apollo Era!! My favorite period, the Saturn V was absolutely amazing.
    Anyway, I know it isn't your video but on the bottom left video at 59:35 do you think that is the way the shuttle actually looked (the left wing) or is image simply distorted from being so far away, in low resolution, and being banked?
    I know the breakup started on the left wing (the first four sensors going out) and we were able to see debris from the spacecraft before. I have never seen that image before and was just wondering.

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 лет назад

      stonewall01 Thanks stonewall - I appreciate the comments. As for the photo - It was taken at
      about 8:57. The
      image was taken at Starfire Optical Range at Kirtland Air Force Base. Whether it is "too far away" to be positively identified as debris on the left wing, I would argue that the right side wing looks fairly uniform, so possibly and probably, yes it is showing the wing damage - however, these things are always up for conjecture and I would welcxome others thoughts. Hope that helps. regards LM5

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  9 лет назад

      stonewall01 see this iss.jaxa.jp/shuttle/flight/sts107/sts_accident/pict/pb-20030318-2.gif

  • @zzzdogutube
    @zzzdogutube 11 лет назад

    thanks

  • @wdavis6814
    @wdavis6814 10 лет назад +4

    Was it after this event when it became standard for crews to use the Canadarm to survey the orbiter 100% of launch damage once in orbit?

    • @lunarmodule5
      @lunarmodule5  10 лет назад +5

      yep, starting with STS-114

    • @yxeaviationphotog
      @yxeaviationphotog 4 года назад +2

      Should also be noted that an orbital inspection boom was attached to the Canadarm, in order to facilitate the inspection.

    • @charlessnider883
      @charlessnider883 2 года назад

      After

  • @JK-dv3qe
    @JK-dv3qe 7 лет назад +4

    :( Rest In Peace Brave Souls

  • @infinitecanadian
    @infinitecanadian 11 месяцев назад

    The thermal image was eerie. She was burning up.

  • @ginodelgobbo9237
    @ginodelgobbo9237 Год назад

    I literally cry everytime.

  • @danglokrueger
    @danglokrueger 4 месяца назад +1

    Never Forget....

  • @TerraVeritas
    @TerraVeritas 7 месяцев назад

    I still think about these souls and the courage they all demonstrated. I also think about all the NASA professionals that watched and could do nothing to save them. Especially Mr Cain.

  • @mortalkarl.1392
    @mortalkarl.1392 3 года назад +3

    Its like final destination in a way how the foam that hit the right wing of the shuttle doomed them to there fate. R.i.p

  • @tracymiller1149
    @tracymiller1149 9 месяцев назад +1

    What did that lady mean when she said, right as the orbiter was starting to break up "We're taking some hits here, we're right on top of the tail. Not too bad"?

    • @rainerzufall6245
      @rainerzufall6245 7 месяцев назад +1

      Sensor data readings or communication connection? Something like that. But who knows how sensors react during a vehicle breakup.

  • @entertainme7523
    @entertainme7523 2 года назад +3

    R.I.P.

  • @flowers0fpeace
    @flowers0fpeace 3 года назад +4

    1:08:10 - I can hear the concern in his voice.

  • @uggggggghhhhh
    @uggggggghhhhh 11 месяцев назад +1

    So sad to see all the photos of them happy in outer space knowing they were doomed from the start ): I just hope it was quick and all they knew was that they'd be home soon

  • @WilliamTBooth
    @WilliamTBooth Год назад +4

    I'm wondering if any recognized body parts of the Columbia shuttle crew were found amongst the debris...

  • @sskkuuddrraa
    @sskkuuddrraa 2 года назад +3

    subscribed!

  • @MrXminus1
    @MrXminus1 3 года назад +2

    They need to put a regular TV in and on in Mission control. They would of been able to see the shuttle breaking up and falling on TV.

  • @Bluefrog757
    @Bluefrog757 Год назад +1

    It’s hard to believe it’s been almost 19 years

  • @guylawes
    @guylawes 11 месяцев назад

    I think personally there was more video to the "Home Movie" they shot but we'll never see it..... Thank God...... R. I. P. Columbia Crew.....

  • @CptMikeTango1
    @CptMikeTango1 7 лет назад +2

    Where is the PAO talks from?

    • @yxeaviationphotog
      @yxeaviationphotog 4 года назад +1

      He's in Mission Control, listening to the flight controller loop.

  • @charlessnider883
    @charlessnider883 2 года назад +2

    Watching this makes you want to be able to warn them of the impending disaster.
    Only if we could

  • @cherylb2008
    @cherylb2008 Год назад +3

    I am interested in anything you put together about Columbia and it’s crew. I’m fascinated with Columbia

  • @futuretroglodyte4231
    @futuretroglodyte4231 10 лет назад +11

    may god keep their souls close, i can only imagine what they had to go through those last few seconds of the decent.

    • @AureliusR
      @AureliusR 4 года назад +4

      Thankfully, they basically had to go through nothing. They would have known there were problems, some sensor malfunctions, and then suddenly the cabin would have depressurized, instantly killing or rendering them all unconscious within about half a second or so. Basically the only good thing was that they died quickly, and didn't have to suffer at all. And became part of the stardust.

  • @luistpuig
    @luistpuig Год назад

    Begining at 1:02:32 you can see at the bottom left screen video the shuttle breaking up...

  • @CentralFloridaHipHop
    @CentralFloridaHipHop 8 лет назад +1

    Was the simulator footage from Orbitor 2010?