On February 1, 2003, excitement from onlookers turned to horror as debris from the Space Shuttle Columbia was spotted plummeting back to Earth. Of the seven astronauts on board, there were no survivors.
Just an hour and a half after the disaster occurred, the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) was formed to thoroughly investigate the cause of the accident. Frequent press releases from the CAIB documented their findings, as increased transparency was one of the main goals of the board. Recovery of debris was an arduous task, as pieces of the shuttle were found from Texas all the way to Louisiana. After examination of the recovered components, it was concluded that damage to the left wing was the cause of the disaster. Around 81 seconds after Columbia’s liftoff, a piece of foam used to insulate the external fuel tank broke off and struck the shuttle’s left wing.
The impact was strong enough to punch a hole in the thermal soaking protective layer, meant to protect the shuttle from the extreme heat due to atmospheric reentry. Upon reentry, the left wing’s internal structure became unstable, likely melting from the heat. This caused the shuttle to spin uncontrollably despite automatic and manual correction attempts, break apart, and mostly disintegrate.
NASA engineers
discovered the impact on the left wing on the second day of the mission, after
routine footage review of the launch. A debris assessment team requested
imaging be done on the wing to assess the damage but were denied multiple times
by mission managers. Their reasoning for denial was fundamentally flawed: foam
breaking off had happened before and caused no issues up until this point. In
fact, foam breaking off from the external fuel tank was extremely common,
occurring more frequently than not. Management alleged that even if there was
significant damage, the astronauts on board did not have the necessary
materials to repair the damage. The CAIB found this to be true and concluded
that the best course of action would have been to send a rescue mission to
retrieve all crew members from the shuttle.
Safety
concerns presented by engineers after the foam impact was discovered were downplayed
and almost entirely ignored by mission managers. Unfortunately, this was not
the first Space Shuttle disaster that was caused by management ignoring safety
concerns. The Challenger Space Shuttle disaster in 1986, was caused by similar
structural damage, which was ignored by the mission managers. Time pressure to
complete the International Space Station likely contributed to this disaster,
since a deadline was deemed more important than the safety of several
astronauts. NASA’s investigations into the Columbia disaster were thorough and
resulted in increased transparency and a more horizontal command structure.
This transparency is evidenced by the enormous quantity of press releases and
reports published by NASA. Pam Melroy, NASA’s deputy administrator, and an investigator
in the aftermath of the Columbia disaster, emphasizes that seven people died
for the organization to learn these lessons. Their deaths were not in vain, as safety
concerns are treated with much greater scrutiny than they previously were. She
explains that organizational silence was the key contributor to this disaster,
and that concerns at any level should be treated with the utmost importance. The
lessons NASA learned were paid for in blood and will not be forgotten.
Citations
· Primary Sources
“Space_Shuttle_Columbia_disaster_ET208_camera.Gif (640×480).” Accessed October 30, 2024. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0d/Space_Shuttle_Columbia_disaster_ET208_camera.gif.
“Space_Shuttle_Columbia_launching.Jpg (6084×6084).” Accessed October 30,
2024. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/41/Space_Shuttle_Columbia_launching.jpg.
“STS-107_crew_in_orbit.Jpg (4096×4096).” Accessed October 30, 2024. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5d/STS-107_crew_in_orbit.jpg.
Gehman, Harold W., et al. “Columbia Accident Investigation Board
Report.” Ntrs.nasa.gov, 1 Aug. 2003,
ntrs.nasa.gov/citations/20030066167.
· Secondary
Sources
“Columbia Disaster | History & Crew | Britannica,” October 21, 2024. https://www.britannica.com/event/Columbia-disaster.
“Columbia NASA Press Releases - NASA,” January 12, 2004. https://www.nasa.gov/history/columbia-nasa-press-releases/.
Howell, Elizabeth, and Daisy Dobrijevic. “Columbia Disaster: What
Happened, What NASA Learned.” Space.com, Space.com, 14 Nov. 2017,
www.space.com/19436-columbia-disaster.html.
“Twenty Years after the Columbia Disaster, a NASA Official Reflects on
Lessons Learned.” Morning Edition. NPR, February 1, 2023. https://www.npr.org/2023/02/01/1153150931/columbia-space-shuttle-disaster-20th-anniversary.



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