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Debris Photos (GRAPHIC)
Yahoo News photos ^
| 2/2/03
| freepers
Posted on 02/02/2003 7:34:59 AM PST by Mark Felton
Edited on 02/02/2003 12:51:23 PM PST by Admin Moderator.
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To: amom
great photo
To: amom
![](http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20030202/capt.1044230085.shuttle_okso106.jpg)
State troopers guard a piece of debris from the space shuttle Columbia in Etoile, Texas, Sunday, Feb. 3, 2003.
422
posted on
02/02/2003 5:08:15 PM PST
by
amom
To: Mark Felton
Good. I hope it helps.
423
posted on
02/02/2003 5:10:21 PM PST
by
amom
To: Rushmore Rocks; flair2000
405 - "Before you issue another blanket condemnation....go there.
Visit the people. I'm sure they will change your mind, and, hopefully, your heart."
Rush - sssssh!!!! don't tell people that. we don't want all those people ruining it, like they did to South Florida.
flair - this is a terrible place - bad climate, unfriendly people , bad cooking, no jobs, polluted air, just a bunch of ignorant hicks down here in this 'briar patch'. Stay right where you are.
424
posted on
02/02/2003 5:11:55 PM PST
by
XBob
To: Thud
I heard something about new software on TV. I didn't hear but maybe it could have been navigational software. You might want to keep an eye out for that. I also heard an old astronaut describe how control is critical and difficult on re-entry.
Numerous times I've viewed that takeoff incident and IMO it's apparent that whatever fell off evaporated on part of the craft. How much damage could something evaporative do?
425
posted on
02/02/2003 5:12:01 PM PST
by
Lady Jag
(Googolplex Start Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
To: isthisnickcool
thanks for taking the flowers and card ...
426
posted on
02/02/2003 5:12:18 PM PST
by
fnord
(aint it just like the night to play tricks when you're tryin' to be so quiet?)
To: Arkinsaw
The symbol is standard for all military aircraft, regardless of service. The helicopter is an HH-65 Dolphin, painted in Coast Guard orange. Some other more knowledgeable Freeper may correct me if I'm wrong, but to my knowledge the Coast Guard is the only service that flies the HH-65.
But the paint scheme is the big giveaway.
427
posted on
02/02/2003 5:12:43 PM PST
by
kms61
To: Mark Felton
terrible place mark, terrible (seem my #424)
428
posted on
02/02/2003 5:15:06 PM PST
by
XBob
To: XBob
tanks are not metal, they are made of wrapping composite, tape, which I think is to be fiberglass, into a sphere, making a tough, light tank. I know that most are, but was of the impression that some of the tanks which held non-corrosive small-molecule materials like Helium were metal, as it diffuses through many other materials - and it looked like there were two materials, one which burned, and another which maintained its coppery color.
Ah-well.
429
posted on
02/02/2003 5:15:43 PM PST
by
lepton
To: Thud
Agreed- the suspected drag on the left side of the shuttle wing (underside) would bring the ship counter clockwise. Perhaps after the auto correction was initiated, which brought the nose clockwise (over compensated ? ) a gross control failure took place and there was no way to bring the ship's nose back into a forward position, properly aligned with the flight path.
430
posted on
02/02/2003 5:17:36 PM PST
by
freepersup
(Put That Bur qa On ! Put That Bur qa On ! Put That Bur qa On !)
To: XBob
LOL yah...and all the girls are ugly. And that Tyler sausage is awful. And they don't know how to make chicken fried steak for nuthen.
431
posted on
02/02/2003 5:17:45 PM PST
by
amom
(Hook em Horns and pass the Lone Star)
To: Timesink; michigander
415-"Seems they only cost $5. If they were made of something special, you'd think they'd cost more than that."
remember what survived the world trade fires, explosions, and collapse best - paper.
432
posted on
02/02/2003 5:20:21 PM PST
by
XBob
To: amom
433
posted on
02/02/2003 5:22:21 PM PST
by
lepton
To: Elsie
This is incorrect. It takes the SAME amount of time to download, and a bit LONGER to display it!We're not talking about trying to enlarge or reduce any graphics. It's just that when you provide the browser with the proper width and height of a graphic, it can go ahread and create a box for it and display the rest of the page, filling in the empty box as the picture data comes in. Without the height and width parameters, the browser can't display the page at all until the entire photo has been downloaded, because that's the only way for the browser to find out how big the photo is in the first place.
434
posted on
02/02/2003 5:23:17 PM PST
by
Timesink
(They're the Dissociated Press)
To: kms61
Interesting. I was unaware that the winged-star was used by any service other than Air Force.
To: amom
"Hook em Horns and pass the Lone Star"Gig'em Aggies and pass the Lone Star
To: XBob
XBob
Sorry, I almost gave away the secret. Although I've lived in the beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota for over 30 years, I still go to east Texas at least once a year to brush up on my southern accent and eat catfish...nuthin' better! Will go again soon to help thin the new pine trees on the plantation. Who knows what "debris" may lurk there? My relatives are looking over the property for anything to turn over to NASA right now. As dense as the timber and brush are, my great grandchildren may be finding material years from now.
To: sciencediet
"Numerous times I've viewed that takeoff incident and IMO it's apparent that whatever fell off evaporated on part of the craft. How much damage could something evaporative do?"
ah, yes, that baseball bat really evaporates into a poof when it hits a bag of flower.
438
posted on
02/02/2003 5:29:04 PM PST
by
XBob
To: Mark Felton
Gig'em Aggies Oh NO! ;-)
Actually some of my best friends are Aggies...don't tell.
439
posted on
02/02/2003 5:35:07 PM PST
by
amom
(No matter what the Lone Star state is a country unto it's own. With a heart as big as all outdoors.)
To: lepton
I am unaware of that, particularly, of any use of helium (an inert gas), period, except for testing.
helium and hydrogen atoms are so small, they leak through anything, period, no matter what the composition.
helium is used for testing equipment, most comes from Texas, and is shipped and stored in very very thick walled tanks on rail cars, in banks of tanks which look like big pipe racks. and even then they they leak. Hydrogen is made nearby in a hydrogen plant, as needed for each flight.
However, it could be. There are a lot of tanks, for a lot of things, and I am not familiar with the components of each.
440
posted on
02/02/2003 5:37:21 PM PST
by
XBob
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