Posted on 02/01/2003 10:14:13 AM PST by ksen
NASA Press conference any minute now....
"A U.S. official also told Miklaszewski that a heat spike appeared on military satellite data around the time shuttle was reentering - it is being examined to see if it correlates to the shuttle and it breaking up. The highly-sensitive infrared satellite, known as the DSP, originally was developed to detect the heat spike of Soviet ICBM launches. As ground controllers gained familiarity and confidence in its capabilities, it has been used to detect everything from oil fires to volcanic eruptions the the explosion of TWA 800 in 1996. "
Crew got a message on their displays. No other problems with vehicle noted at this time.
Lost all vehicle data around 8AM CST 207,135' Mach 18.3 [didn't have exact time]
Close enough -- all of them knew that was a distinct possibility, along with countless other sorts of disasters (Challenger, etc.)
7:53 am CST - Loss of temperature measurement in left inboard and outboard hydraulic.
7:56 am CST - Left gear brake line temperature increase.
7:58 am CST - 3 temperature sensors in the left wing structure were lost
7:59 am CST - Left inboard/outboard pressure/tire temperature measurements lost. First on-board indication for crew that there was a problem. Columbia still flying nominally.
8:00 am CST (approximate) - Last transmission from Columbia; all telemetry data lost.
http://wwwa.accuweather.com/adcbin/public/headlines.asp?iws=0
It almost sounds like a cable burnthrough out in the wing somewhere.
I was confused about the tire pressures. If I understood correctly, they showed an increase, then went offscale low.
The NASA timeline centers on Left wing DAta losses, elevated temperatures, etc. Culminating in the crew acknowledgement of a High Temp Warning in the last minute before breakup.
That coupled with the knowledge of the debris striking the Left Wing during Liftoff starts to paint a picture of what may have been the cause.
Just rank amatuer speculation, but putting together the facts that something struck the Left wing during Liftoff, and now the NASA acknowledgement that all the abnormal indications came from the Left Wing -- it seems that these astronauts were doomed from the start by a string of tragic circumstances.
My sincere prayers and condolences to the families and friends of these brave pioneers, and to the entire NASA family.
I copied, regarding tires:
7:56 Left-main gear tire-temp
7:59 Left IB and OB Tire Temp + Press. Offscale and Low
Again speculation, but if they had damage to the left wing and elevated temps on that wing and with the tires - what would the effect of the stresses be when you combine that with a high speed turn and inflation of what now appear to be overheating tires.
Could one of the tires have exploded at just the right instant, thereby adding more damage to an already damaged wing?
As with all engineering disasters I think this will be found to be a string of seperate incidents that in and of themselves would have not caused structural failure, but wonce put in motion and combined spelled disaster.
There are temp sensors on the tires, but they are compensation for the tire-pressure strain gages.
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