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Air Force imagery confirms Columbia wing damaged
Spaceflightnow.com ^ | 02/07/03 | CRAIG COVAULT

Posted on 02/07/2003 4:30:37 AM PST by The Magical Mischief Tour

Air Force imagery confirms Columbia wing damaged BY CRAIG COVAULT AVIATION WEEK & SPACE TECHNOLOGY/aviationnow.com PUBLISHED HERE WITH PERMISSION Posted: February 7, 2003

High-resolution images taken from a ground-based Air Force tracking camera in southwestern U.S. show serious structural damage to the inboard leading edge of Columbia's left wing, as the crippled orbiter flew overhead about 60 sec. before the vehicle broke up over Texas killing the seven astronauts on board Feb. 1.

According to sources close to the investigation, the images, under analysis at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, show a jagged edge on the left inboard wing structure near where the wing begins to intersect the fuselage. They also show the orbiter's right aft yaw thrusters firing, trying to correct the vehicle's attitude that was being adversely affected by the left wing damage. Columbia's fuselage and right wing appear normal. Unlike the damaged and jagged left wing section, the right wing appears smooth along its entire length. The imagery is consistent with telemetry.

The ragged edge on the left leading edge, indicates that either a small structural breach -- such as a crack -- occurred, allowing the 2,500F reentry heating to erode additional structure there, or that a small portion of the leading edge fell off at that location.

Either way, the damage affected the vehicle's flying qualities as well as allowed hot gases to flow into critical wing structure -- a fatal combination.

It is possible, but yet not confirmed, that the impact of foam debris from the shuttle's external tank during launch could have played a role in damage to the wing leading edge, where the deformity appears in USAF imagery.

If that is confirmed by the independent investigation team, it would mean that, contrary to initial shuttle program analysis, the tank debris event at launch played a key role in the root cause of the accident.

Another key factor is that the leading edge of the shuttle wing where the jagged shape was photographed transitions from black thermal protection tiles to a much different mechanical system made of reinforced carbon-carbon material that is bolted on, rather than glued on as the tiles are.

This means that in addition to the possible failure of black tile at the point where the wing joins the fuselage, a failure involving the attachment mechanisms for the leading edge sections could also be a factor, either related or not to the debris impact. The actual front structure of a shuttle wing is flat. To provide aerodynamic shape and heat protection, each wing is fitted with 22 U-shaped reinforced carbon-carbon (RCC) leading-edge structures. The carbon material in the leading edge, as well as the orbiter nose cap, is designed to protect the shuttle from temperatures above 2,300F during reentry. Any breach of this leading-edge material would have catastrophic consequences.

The U-shaped RCC sections are attached to the wing "with a series of floating joints to reduce loading on the panels due to wing deflections," according to Boeing data on the attachment mechanism.

"The [critical heat protection] seal between each wing leading-edge panel is referred to as a 'tee' seal," according to Boeing, and are also made of a carbon material.

The tee seals allow lateral motion and thermal expansion differences between the carbon sections and sections of the orbiter wing that remain much cooler during reentry.

In addition to debris impact issues, investigators will likely examine whether any structural bending between the cooler wing structure and the more-than-2,000F leading edge sections could have played a role in the accident. There is insulation packed between the cooler wing structure and the bowl-shaped cavity formed by the carbon leading-edge sections.

The RCC leading-edge structures are bolted to the wing using Inconel fittings that attach to aluminum flanges on the front of the wing.

The initial NASA Mission Management Team (MMT) assessment of the debris impact made Jan. 18, two days after launch, noted "The strike appears to have occurred on or relatively close to the "wing glove" near the orbiter fuselage.

The term "wing glove" generally refers to the area where the RCC bolt-on material is closest to the fuselage. This is also the general area where USAF imagery shows structural damage.

The second MMT summary analyzing the debris hit was made on Jan. 20 and had no mention of the leading-edge wing glove area. That report was more focused on orbiter black tiles on the vehicle's belly. The third and final summary issued on Jan. 27 discusses the black tiles again, but also specifically says "Damage to the RCC [wing leading edge] should be limited to [its] coating only and have no mission impact." Investigators in Houston are trying to match the location of the debris impact with the jagged edge shown in the Air Force imagery.

Columbia reentry accident investigators are also trying to determine if, as in the case of the case of Challenger's accident 17 years ago, an undesirable materials characteristic noted on previous flights -- in this case the STS-112 separation of external tank insulation foam debris -- was misjudged by engineers as to its potential for harm, possibly by using analytical tools and information inadequate to truly identify and quantify the threat to the shuttle. As of late last week, NASA strongly asserted this was not the case, but intense analysis on that possibility continues.

The shuttle is now grounded indefinitely and the impact on major crew resupply and assembly flights to the International Space Station remain under intense review.

Killed in the accident were STS-107 Mission Commander USAF Col. Rick Husband; copilot Navy Cdr. William McCool; flight engineer, Kalpana Chawla; payload commander, USAF Lt. Col. Michael Anderson; mission specialist physician astronauts Navy Capt. Laurel Clark and Navy Capt. David Brown and Israeli Air Force Col. Ilan Ramon.

"We continue to recover crew remains and we are handling that process with the utmost care, the utmost respect and dignity," said Ronald Dittemore, shuttle program manager.

No matter what the investigations show, there are no apparent credible crew survival options for the failure Columbia experienced. With the ISS out of reach in a far different orbit, there were no credible rescue options if even if wing damage had been apparent before reentry -- which it was not.

If, in the midst of its 16-day flight, wing damage had been found to be dire, the only potential -- but still unlikely -- option would have been the formulation over several days by Mission Control of a profile that could have, perhaps, reduced heating on the damaged wing at the expense of the other wing for an unguided reentry, with scant hope the vehicle would remain controllable to about 40,000 ft., allowing for crew bailout over an ocean.

Reentry is a starkly unforgiving environment where three out of the four fatal manned space flight accidents over the last 35 years have occurred.

These include the Soyuz 1 reentry accident that killed cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov in 1967 and the 1971 Soyuz 11 reentry accident that killed three cosmonauts returning after the first long-duration stay on the Salyut 1 space station.

The only fatal launch accident has been Challenger in 1986, although Apollo astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee were killed when fire developed in their spacecraft during a launch pad test not involving launch.

No other accident in aviation history has been seen by so many eyewitnesses than the loss of Columbia -- visible in five states.

Telemetry and photographic analysis indicate the breakup of the historic orbiter took place as she slowed from Mach 20-to-18 across California, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico with the loss of structural integrity 205,000 ft. over north central Texas where most of the debris fell.

The science-driven STS-107 crew was completing 16 days of complex work in their Spacehab Research Double module and were 16 min. from landing at Kennedy when lost. Landing was scheduled for 8:16 a.m. CST.

Abnormal telemetry events in the reentry began at 7:52 a.m. CST as the vehicle was crossing the coast north of San Francisco at 43 mi. alt., about Mach 20.

The orbiter at this time was in a 43-deg. right bank completing its initial bank maneuver to the south for initial energy dissipation and ranging toward the Kennedy runway still nearly 3,000 mi. away.

That initial bank had been as steep as about 80 deg. between Hawaii and the California coast, a normal flight path angle for the early part of the reentry. The abnormal events seen on orbiter telemetry in Houston indicate a slow penetration of reentry heat into the orbiter and damage on the wing, overpowering the flight control system. Key events were:

* 7:52 a.m. CST: Three left main landing gear brakeline temperatures show an unusual rise. "This was the first occurrence of a significant thermal event in the left wheel well," Dittemore said. Engineers do not believe the left wheel well was breached, but rather that hot gasses were somehow finding a flow path within the wing to reach the wheel well.

* 7:53 a.m. CST: A fourth left brakeline strut temperature measurement rose significantly -- about 30-40 deg. in 5 min.

* 7:54 a.m. CST: With the orbiter over eastern California and western Nevada, the mid-fuselage mold line where the left wing meets the fuselage showed an unusual temperature rise. The 60F rise over 5 min. was not dramatic, but showed that something was heating the wing fuselage interface area at this time. Wing leading edge and belly temperatures were over 2,000F. While the outside fuselage wall was heating, the inside wall remained cool as normal.

* 7:55 a.m. CST: A fifth left main gear temperature sensor showed an unusual rise.

* 7:57 a.m. CST: As Columbia was passing over Arizona and New Mexico, the orbiter's upper and lower left wing temperature sensors failed, probably indicating their lines had been cut. The orbiter was also rolling back to the left into about a 75-deg. left bank angle, again to dissipate energy and for navigation and guidance toward Runway 33 at Kennedy, then about 1,800 mi. away.

* 7:58 a.m. CST: Still over New Mexico, the elevons began to move to adjust orbiter roll axis trim, indicating an increase in drag on the left side of the vehicle. That could be indicative of "rough tile or missing tile but we are not sure," Dittemore said. At the same time, the elevons were reacting to increased drag on the left side of the vehicle, the left main landing gear tire pressures and wheel temperature measurements failed. This was indicative of a loss of the sensor, not the explosion or failure of the left main gear tires, Dittemore believes. The sensors were lost in a staggered fashion.

* 7:59 a.m. CST: Additional elevon motion is commanded by the flight control system to counteract right side drag. The drag was trying to roll the vehicle to the left, while the flight control system was commanding the elevons to roll it back to the right.

But the rate of left roll was beginning to overpower the elevons, so the control system fired two 870-lb. thrust right yaw thrusters to help maintain the proper flight path angle. The firing lasted 1.5 sec. and, along with the tire pressure data and elevon data, would have been noted by the pilots.

At about this time, the pilots made a short transmission that was clipped and essentially unintelligible

In Mission Control, astronaut Marine Lt. Col. Charles Hobaugh, the spacecraft communicator on reentry flight director Leroy Cain's team, radioed "Columbia we see your tire pressure [telemetry[ messages and we did not copy your last transmission."

One of the pilots then radioed "Roger," but appeared to be cut off in mid transmission by static. For a moment there was additional static and sounds similar to an open microphone on Columbia but no transmissions from the crew.

All data from the orbiter then stopped and the position plot display in Mission Control froze over Texas, although an additional 30 sec. of poor data may have been captured.

Controllers in Mission Control thought they were experiencing an unusual but non-critical data drop out. But they had also taken notice of the unusual buildup of sensor telemetry in the preceding few minutes.

About 3 min. after all data flow stopped, Hobaugh in mission control began transmitting in the blind to Columbia on the UHF backup radio system. "Columbia, Houston, UHF comm. check" he repeated every 15-30 sec., but to no avail. In central Texas, thousands of people at that moment were observing the orbiter break up at Mach 18.3 and 207,000 ft.

Milt Heflin, Chief of the Flight Director's office said he looked at the frozen data plots. "I and others stared at that for a long time because the tracking ended over Texas. It just stopped. It was was then that I reflected back on what I saw [in Mission Control] with Challenger."

The loss of Challenger occurred 17 years and four days before the loss of Columbia.

"Our landscape has changed," Heflin said. "The space flight business today is going to be much different than yesterday.

"It was different after the Apollo fire, it was different after Challenger."

Columbia, the first winged reusable manned spacecraft first launched in April 1981, was lost on her 28th mission on the 113th shuttle flight.


TOPICS: Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: classicthread; hugh
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To: TheJollyRoger
All your series hugh BLUNDER are belong to us!
161 posted on 02/07/2003 9:18:47 AM PST by Semaphore Heathcliffe
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To: Mo1
Ok, thanks for clearing that up

That was not an answer...merely a possible answer. I know that there are a lot of things that we have done in the past that we can't do today...not without rebuilding an infrastructure we no longer need.

162 posted on 02/07/2003 9:20:49 AM PST by lepton
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To: bvw
Practically the shuttle is not only lousy for science, not only "jams the channel" for space-enterprise both public and private, but would be a ultra-lousy military platform too.

This was the first "science mission" in over two years.

163 posted on 02/07/2003 9:22:12 AM PST by lepton
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To: lepton
That was not an answer...merely a possible answer

I underdstand your point and it makes sense

164 posted on 02/07/2003 9:23:20 AM PST by Mo1 (I Hate The Party of Bill Clinton)
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To: CCWoody
The Air Force picture showing damage to the leading edge of the left wing is being described as of poor quality by Kostelnik in the 11:30a NASA briefing. He goes on to state that there will be more detailed information in the 4:30pm briefing today.
165 posted on 02/07/2003 9:23:35 AM PST by Truth29
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To: ContemptofCourt
Kinda thinking of it as making a left and trying to straighten out, but was going to fast and "additionally" stepped on the gas at the same time....

Were the small engines set to go off "too late" AND ignoring the force of continuous firing which caused a further misalignment of the ship and making other portions of the ship vulnerable to the heat???

Or was the auto-firing of the small engines at "the most crtical possible point"??

Had to put this in my own dumb terms...hardly a rocket scientist!!!

166 posted on 02/07/2003 9:27:46 AM PST by Sacajaweau
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To: wirestripper
I considered that, but I was not sure a window angled back for a view.

Rumor is one of the crew emailed someone about the damage they could see.

167 posted on 02/07/2003 9:28:25 AM PST by isthisnickcool
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To: lepton
I'm for a NASA total takedown. Yet there are some really good folks and ideas there that should be salvaged -- like the group that put together the Mars missions, with that fantastic bouncing ball landing and the rover.
168 posted on 02/07/2003 9:30:00 AM PST by bvw
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To: Truth29
I get the feeling the open pipeline of meaningful technical information from NASA is about to be closed.
169 posted on 02/07/2003 9:30:05 AM PST by DonnerT
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To: SMEDLEYBUTLER
To: DoughtyOne

There were two EVA suits onboard. I have read that there is a disagreement as to whether an EVA could have been performed through the hatch in the tunnel
leading to the SpaceHab. Maybe it could.

You're asking questions.  I like that.  There are no stupid questions.  Well, okay there are "some" stupid questions.  I dont' think yours are.  The crew had to be able to access the payload bay.  The payload bay doors sometimes hava a problem closing.  The crew MUST be able to facilitate this function manually if needed.  I don't pretend to propose the crew could have inspected the underside of the wing.  We are now hearing the leading edge was jagged, and that could have been viewed IMO.  I addressed that process a number of responses before this one.

Docking with the ISS is sometimes prevented by non-similar orbits.  I'd be surprised if this isn't a problem most of the time.  Out of 360 degrees, I'd be surprised if the shuttle were to be within 20 degrees plus or minus most of the time, on non-docking missions.  I believe that it may be true that the shuttle seldom achieves an orbit much more than 90 degrees off that of the space station.  That being said, non-similar trajectory is still a problem.  Then there's the issue of Columbia being too heavy to reach the ISS.  I believe that to be the case.  But then that could have been a reason to retire it, if it weren't for the problem of non-similar trajectory which would make that problem mute.

I think it's reasonable to mention limiting crew size.  I just don't think it's the right idea.  Losing 4 vs 7 is a no-win fix in my mind.  Fix the problem.  Lauch as many crew as you need or want to.

I'm not convinced a high-speed computer could check the film in real time, with enough precision to make a go/no-go decision.  I may be wrong.  It would detect and highlight certain frames.  If those frames were judged by a NASA tech to be a problem, you could no-go space entry.  That is an iffy proposition.  Even after two weeks the conclusion regarding the problem the insullation actually posed, is still iffy.  What you might set up here is a red-tag on each and every mission do to second-guessing.  I'd rather see a space retrieval remedy devised.

I'm not as anti-NASA as it sounds on some of these threads.  I'm willing to kick them on the hind-side if I think they warrant it.  I'm also willing to recognize sucesses when it's warranted.  What might be a good idea, is to set up a review board that establishes an oversight of NASA operations.  They shouldn't be too tied to the techs or the management.  They should be an unbiased liason, that in extreme circumstances could slap down management hard.  Floating from one mission specific pre-flight crew to the next, they could develop a relationship with hands on people that would make absolutely sure NASA management wasn't sh-t canning valid complaints and concerns.  I do not believe we are at the stage where privatization is viable.  I still believe an SSTO space plane is a must before privatization can be realized.  BTW, I think that is the single most important task this nation faces, outside of immenent military hostilities and the war on terrorism.

Space is the high ground.  We need access on a ho-hum basis.  Fly into space, return the same day.  Fly into space again.  When this happens, the United States will become the Federation.  We will inhabit space.  We will make sure that a representative Republic rules the high frontier.  Commercially, privately, governmentally, militarily, this should be the only acceptable outcome to citizens of the United States.

170 posted on 02/07/2003 9:30:17 AM PST by DoughtyOne (Freeper Caribbean Cruise May 31-June 6, Staterooms As Low As $610 Per Person For Entire Week!)
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To: ContemptofCourt
Your post makes no sense....first, you are telling me that a standard video camera can accurately photograph an object at 200K feet traveling 12K miles an hour.....second, why would the shuttle be backwards and angled down 30 deg, when it was traveling fowards angled up 57 deg.?

a standard video camera if using optical + digital zoom can get to 100X magnification. When panning the camera, lateral speed is negated. I said that in the photo, the view is from the rear and the craft is in a down angle configuration, when the cmeraman pulls back it shows the object travelling to the left.....sideays. send me an E-address where I can send you the pics for comparison.

171 posted on 02/07/2003 9:30:27 AM PST by Vinnie_Vidi_Vici
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To: SMEDLEYBUTLER
I meant to delete all your questions from the post and didn't quite make it. Sorry if that was somewhat confusing.
172 posted on 02/07/2003 9:33:12 AM PST by DoughtyOne (Freeper Caribbean Cruise May 31-June 6, Staterooms As Low As $610 Per Person For Entire Week!)
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To: The Magical Mischief Tour
Marking to read.
173 posted on 02/07/2003 9:34:41 AM PST by abner (Cruise the Caribe with FReepers! FRN Network Cruise)
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To: isthisnickcool
I saw the report that indicated that the crew had been notified about the potential of damage and were asked to photograph anything they saw. It made no mention of seeing any in the e-mail..

It would not have made any diff, anyway cuz they were screwed. If that did infact happen, I would assume we will never know.

174 posted on 02/07/2003 9:35:14 AM PST by Cold Heat
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To: DoughtyOne; RJayneJ
Agree; and should be 'Quote of the Day' material.

Space is the high ground. We need access on a ho-hum basis. Fly into space, return the same day. Fly into space again. When this happens, the United States will become the Federation. We will inhabit space. We will make sure that a representative Republic rules the high frontier. Commercially, privately, governmentally, militarily, this should be the only acceptable outcome to citizens of the United States.

175 posted on 02/07/2003 9:53:16 AM PST by brityank (The more I learn about the Constitution, the more I realise this Government is UNconstitutional.)
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To: DoughtyOne
Agree entirely. Remember during WWII after the battle of the Coral Sea, the Enterprise (i believe) had been severly damaged, being knocked out of action for "months", or so everyone thought. Working feverishly, the Navy crews in Hawaii got it fixed in 48 HOURS, it sailed off to Midway and was one of the crucial factors in the great US victory there, which was the turning point in the Pacific: Japan never again was a serious threat.

Its all about WILL and GUMPTION. The crew could have been saved if the decision had been made to save them...

176 posted on 02/07/2003 9:57:28 AM PST by chilepepper
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To: RightOnline
..does anyone here know what speed the launch vehicle would have attained at 80 seconds into flight? I'm betting.........pretty damned fast. Take something that large and as hard as a brick......slam it into ceramic tiling at that speed..........and you have damage, folks. Severe damage.

No, the form section would have a relatively small delta V ( velocity difference). STS107 at that time was between mach 1.5 and mach 2 (@1500 mph) and the foam that separated is moving at the same speed. It has little mass to do any damge and would accelerate from drag in the slipstream between the tank and the shuttle. In less than 100 feet it may have slowed by 100 mph at point of impact with the shuttle. This would be the same as if the shuttle was on the ground at zero speed and the foam hit with a speed of @50-100mph.

From the photo of the foam break up after impact I would tend to believe the first point of impact was the leading edge and not underwing tiles. Grazing the tiles would not cause the falling tank foam to go to powder but hitting the leading edge first would. It is still unlikely this caused enough damge alone to be the single root cuase of failure but more study is needed.

177 posted on 02/07/2003 9:59:34 AM PST by Mat_Helm
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To: chilepepper
It was the Hornet that was damaged at Coral sea and repaired at Pearl.
178 posted on 02/07/2003 10:01:00 AM PST by Mat_Helm
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To: Vinnie_Vidi_Vici
Why not just post your enhanced pic for all to see, especially those with more knowledge of photography than I.
179 posted on 02/07/2003 10:01:28 AM PST by ContemptofCourt
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To: The Magical Mischief Tour
Amazing post BUMP
180 posted on 02/07/2003 10:02:03 AM PST by Lancey Howard
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