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NASA: Shuttle Temperature Rose Suddenly
Yahoo News ^ | 2/2/03 | Paul Recer - AP

Posted on 02/02/2003 2:54:30 PM PST by NormsRevenge

NASA: Shuttle Temperature Rose Suddenly

By PAUL RECER, AP Science Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -

NASA (news - web sites) officials said Sunday that space shuttle Columbia experienced a sudden and extreme rise in temperature on the fuselage moments before the craft broke apart.

Photo
AP Photo


Slideshow

NASA space shuttle program manager Ron Dittemore said the temperature rise — 60 degrees over five minutes in the mid-fuselage — was followed by an increased sign of drag that caused the shuttle's computerized flight control system to try to make an adjustment to the flight pattern.

Dittemore cautioned that the evidence was still preliminary, but that one of the possibilities was that there been damage or a loss of thermal tiles that protect the shuttle from burning up during re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere.

"We are making progress," Dittemore said, adding that the combination of new engineering data and an observer who reported seeing debris from the shuttle while it was still passing over California may create "a path that may lead us to the cause."

The shuttle broke up shortly before landing Saturday, killing all seven astronauts. Most of its debris landed in eastern Texas and Louisiana.

Earlier Sunday, NASA administrator Sean O'Keefe named a former Navy admiral to oversee an independent review of the accident, and said investigators initially would focus on whether a broken-off piece of insulation from the big external fuel tank caused damage to the shuttle during liftoff Jan. 16 that ultimately doomed the flight 16 days later.

"It's one of the areas we're looking at first, early, to make sure that the investigative team is concentrating on that theory," O'Keefe said.

The insulation is believed to have struck a section of the shuttle's left side.

Dittemore said the engineering data showed a temperature rise in the left wheel well of the shuttle about seven minutes before communication was lost with the spacecraft. One minute later, there was an even more significant temperature rise in the middle to left side of the fuselage.

The drag on the left wing began a short while later, causing the shuttle's automated flight system to start to make adjustments.

"There may be some significance to the wheel well. We've got some more detective work," Dittemore said.

The manufacturer of the fuel tank disclosed Sunday that NASA used an older version of the tank, which the space agency began phasing out in 2000. NASA's preflight press information stated the shuttle was using one of the newer super-lightweight fuel tanks.

Harry Wadsworth, a spokesman for Lockheed, the tank maker, said most shuttle launches use the "super-lightweight" tank and the older version is no longer made. Wadsworth said he did not know if there was a difference in how insulation was installed on the two types of tanks.

Wadsworth said the tank used aboard the Columbia mission was manufactured in November 2000 and delivered to NASA the next month. Only one more of the older tanks is left, he said.

O'Keefe emphasized that the space agency was being careful not to lock onto any one theory too soon. He vowed to "leave absolutely no stone unturned."

For a second day, searchers scoured forests and rural areas over 500 square miles of East Texas and western Louisiana for bits of metal, ceramic tile, computer chips and insulation from the shattered spacecraft.

State and federal officials, treating the investigation like a multi-county crime scene, were protecting the debris until it can be catalogued, carefully collected and then trucked to Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana.

The effort to reconstruct what is left of Columbia into a rough outline of the shuttle will be tedious and painstaking.

When a shuttle piece was located this weekend, searchers left it in place until a precise global position satellite reading could be taken. Each shuttle part is numbered; NASA officials say experts hope to trace the falling path of each recovered piece.

The goal is to establish a sequence of how parts were ripped off Columbia as it endured the intense heat and pressure of the high-speed re-entry into the atmosphere.

At least 20 engineers from United Space Alliance, a key NASA contractor for the shuttle program, were dispatched to Barksdale for what is expected to be a round-the-clock investigation.

Other experts, including metallurgists and forensic medicine specialists, are expected to join the investigation. Their focus will be on a microscopic examination of debris and remains that could elicit clues such as how hot the metal became, how it twisted and which parts flew off first.

In addition to NASA's investigation, O'Keefe named an independent panel to be headed by retired Navy admiral Harold W. Gehman Jr., who previously helped investigate the 2000 terrorist attack on the USS Cole (news - web sites).

Gehman's panel will also examine the Columbia wreckage, and come to its own conclusions about what happened. O'Keefe described Gehman as "well-versed in understanding exactly how to look about the forensics in these cases and coming up with the causal effects of what could occur."

Joining Gehman on the commission are four other military officers and two federal aviation safety officials.

Officials used horses and four-wheel-drive vehicles to find and recover the shuttle pieces. Divers were being called in to search the floor of Toledo Bend Reservoir, on the Texas-Louisiana line, for a car-sized piece seen slamming into the water.

Some body parts from the seven-member astronaut crew have been recovered and are being sent to a military morgue in Dover Air Force Base in Delaware.

Columbia came apart 200,000 feet over Texas while it was streaking at more than 12,000 miles an hour toward the Kennedy Space Center (news - web sites). A long vapor trail across the sky marked the rain of debris.


TOPICS: Front Page News; Government
KEYWORDS: columbia; nasa; rose; shuttle; sts107; suddenly; temperature
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To: TheDon
... as one poster is like to put it - "NASA has a beter safety recored than NASCAR - and that ain't bad" or some such ...

Again, NASA has performed the risk/bene analysis - and, according to the brief numbers I looked at, we're still above the break even point.

That, son, is cold, hard reality talking - and even at that rate we've got hundreds of people lining up to go into space. Wish I were able to sell tickets into a gig like that ...

Simply driving down the street is a HIGHLY calculated risk - any activity a thinking, breathing individual undertakes, even sitting slumped in an easy chair, is a 'calculated risk'.

These 'risks' that Dittermore and his crew decided were acceptable were based, now, on twenty or so chronological years, but, collectively, with all the members of the staff he's got working with him probably amounts to more like one thousand years accumulated experience ... backed by the 'numbers' to justify it.

Quite frankly - I am deeply impresed with the horsepower they are able to harness on take-offs - my hat is off to the rocket-motor designers!

221 posted on 02/02/2003 9:15:04 PM PST by _Jim
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To: VRWC For Truth
Would you be so kind and produce the technical degree that Mr. Dittemore has.

What is it you *really* desire?

Do you desire to see what kind of training he had in four, six or eight years in an educational institution?

Schooling twenty years ago has got to have *very* little bearing on his present abilities, although, they may have given him the good, hard-core basics upon which to build in his carreer at NASA.

So, let's get down to what it is you *really* want ...

222 posted on 02/02/2003 9:22:23 PM PST by _Jim
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Sure would be nice to be able to send up a rescue ship

Call 9 1 1 huh?

Right.

(Welcome to the big leagues kid - where it is a high wire act *without* a net ...)

223 posted on 02/02/2003 9:28:09 PM PST by _Jim
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To: Campion
When I was a young kid, NASA was very big, important, and could do anything. We were tought that these folks were the guys who put a man on the moon, they could do anything. I grew up thinking that.

As I got older, NASA became just another "government program". And then somehow, Space became less of a priority, and my apologies, it became sort of a sideshow. There was no real goal, at least it seemed that way to us common folk.

Yes, the shuttle went up, and then it came down. It delivered satellites, and people did experiments. It all seemed so routine. It all seemed, sadly, an anti-climax. We'll probably never build the "best". We seem to have so many "priorities" and "domestic needs" here on Earth, that there is very little left over.

I still wonder what we could have done, had we had the will. But I still have fond memories of assembling my Saturn V model and believing that we could do it! But, I am much older, wiser, and more realistic I guess. I guess we shouldn't expect so much from our space program. Heck, it's still better than 160+ other countries space programs!

224 posted on 02/02/2003 9:30:44 PM PST by Will_Zurmacht
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To: HiTech RedNeck
but what would having two ships ready simultaneously do to the budget?

It would surely increase it,but not as much as some people might think. We already have more than 2 shuttles,so we wouldn't have to build a special one. We already have plenty of astronauts,and they are getting paid at the same rate regardless of if they are sitting in some "ready shack",or out on the golf course. Ditto with the launch crew. They ain't hired by the hour. All are already on the payroll,and I doubt any of them would object to being placed in a ready status on call.

Also how would we be able to get the rescue ship to connect with the other one that's in trouble, so the occupants from the one can transfer to the other without going adrift in space? There's nothing to hook.

A astronaut from one ship could EVA to the other ship with a line they others could use to cross the gap. They could also use some sort of flexible hose similiar to what airliners use as a "tunnel" to connect the two ships,and the astronauts could just walk across from one to the other using the tunnel. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

225 posted on 02/02/2003 9:31:23 PM PST by sneakypete
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To: _Jim
In some Morton-Thiokol memos between engineers, the sealant putty was nicknamed either "lucky putty" or "magic putty".

I merely quoted them.

What we see in NASA re the other vulnerabilities of the Shuttle incuding tile damage similar to what is described in this part of the Challenger Commission report. Here is another quote. Notice the part "they got away with it last time."

EARLY DESIGN

The Space Shuttle's Solid Rocket Booster problem began with the faulty design of its joint and increased as both NASA and contractor management first failed to recognize it as a problem, then failed to fix it and finally treated it as an acceptable flight risk.

Morton Thiokol, Inc., the contractor, did not accept the implication of tests early in the program that the design had a serious and unanticipated flaw. NASA did not accept the judgment of its engineers that the design was unacceptable, and as the joint problems grew in number and severity NASA minimized them in management briefings and reports. Thiokol's stated position was that "the condition is not desirable but is acceptable."

Neither Thiokol nor NASA expected the rubber O-rings sealing the joints to be touched by hot gases of motor ignition, much less to be partially burned. However, as tests and then flights confirmed damage to the sealing rings, the reaction by both NASA and Thiokol was to increase the amount of damage considered "acceptable." At no time did management either recommend a redesign of the joint or call for the Shuttle's grounding until the problem was solved.

FINDINGS

The genesis of the Challenger accident -- the failure of the joint of the right Solid Rocket Motor -- began with decisions made in the design of the joint and in the failure by both Thiokol and NASA's Solid Rocket Booster project office to understand and respond to facts obtained during testing.

The Commission has concluded that neither Thiokol nor NASA responded adequately to internal warnings about the faulty seal design. Furthermore, Thiokol and NASA did not make a timely attempt to develop and verify a new seal after the initial design was shown to be deficient. Neither organization developed a solution to the unexpected occurrences of O-ring erosion and blow-by even though this problem was experienced frequently during the Shuttle flight history. Instead, Thiokol and NASA management came to accept erosion and blow-by as unavoidable and an acceptable flight risk.

Note that tile damage at launch has been regarded as unavoidable and an acceptable flight risk until now.

Specifically, the Commission has found that:

1. The joint test and certification program was inadequate. There was no requirement to configure the qualifications test motor as it would be in flight, and the motors were static tested in a horizontal position, not in the vertical flight position.

2. Prior to the accident, neither NASA nor Thiokol fully understood the mechanism by which the joint sealing action took place.

3. NASA and Thiokol accepted escalating risk apparently because they "got away with it last time." As Commissioner Feynman observed, the decision making was:

"a kind of Russian roulette. ... (The Shuttle) flies (with O-ring erosion) and nothing happens. Then it is suggested, therefore, that the risk is no longer so high for the next flights. We can lower our standards a little bit because we got away with it last time. ... You got away with it, but it shouldn't be done over and over again like that."

4. NASA's system for tracking anomalies for Flight Readiness Reviews failed in that, despite a history of persistent O-ring erosion and blow-by, flight was still permitted. It failed again in the strange sequence of six consecutive launch constraint waivers prior to 51-L, permitting it to fly without any record of a waiver, or even of an explicit constraint. Tracking and continuing only anomalies that are "outside the data base" of prior flight allowed major problems to be removed from and lost by the reporting system.

5. The O-ring erosion history presented to Level I at NASA Headquarters in August 1985 was sufficiently detailed to require corrective action prior to the next flight.

6. A careful analysis of the flight history of O-ring performance would have revealed the correlation of O-ring damage and low temperature. Neither NASA nor Thiokol carried out such an analysis; consequently, they were unprepared to properly evaluate the risks of launching the 51-L mission in conditions more extreme than they had encountered before.

226 posted on 02/02/2003 9:33:29 PM PST by UnChained
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To: _Jim
My purpose here is to take the situation as we understood it at the time the telemetry failed and, using the prior conditions as a base, extend what may have happened that is not yet know. I don't think it is unfair to say that there had been a complete loss of control following the loss of the telemetry. It doesn't take an engineering degree to understand that.

I believe that the initial conditions at the launch did not put the wheels in motion to ultimately destroy the shuttle. Whatever fell off of the connector between the shuttle and the main fuel tank I do not believe could have caused the destruction of enough tiles to cause the failure of the tiles.

As of this moment we do not know what caused the increased heating or drag along the fuselage but I think it is safe to assume that the increased friction and resulting heat penetrated this less protected area ultimately causing the explosion of the craft.

Finally, I do not personally believe that this was sabotage, but if anyone told me that someone deliberately flew commercial aircraft loaded with passengers into the world trade center I'd have told them I don't believe that either.
227 posted on 02/02/2003 9:35:57 PM PST by One Sided Media
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To: One Sided Media
Please don't hold my comments against my spouse "one sided media," this is her spouse who was unable to get a password today to join this group in a conversation regarding Columbia.
228 posted on 02/02/2003 9:42:54 PM PST by One Sided Media
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To: chaosagent
Is what you're trying to say is that they should move the ISS to the Shuttle?

Not exactly, I'm wondering if they both could have moved to meet in the middle.

If so, the ISS doesn't really have any propulsion capabilities, only small thrusters for stationkeeping.

The ISS has a propulsion module made by the Russians. I can't recall the name, but it starts with a "Z."

On top of that I doubt it would stay together if you tried to move it. It's not designed to move.

How else would the orbit get reboosted? Shuttles were routinely used to reboost the ISS orbit.

229 posted on 02/02/2003 9:44:08 PM PST by Moonman62
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To: UnChained
I distinctly recall memos outlining observations of 'puffs' from the joints in the SRB's during lift-off ... part of the 'sealing process these rockets go though' was the explanation - and an acceptable risk given the cost of a re-designing the booster.

But, consider this: *no* failurs had occurred of the SRB up until the Challenger accident. None. Zip. Zero.

The appearance of a little smoke from a rocket joint does not indicate a fail or a fault, this was normal for this series of rockets. In fact, it could be consdered analougous to the 'rings' seating in a car - the "o" rings must first seat, after which they seal.

Again the Risk/Benefit aspect must be considered - treat the booster within proper parameters, and, she will perform as designed.

The mistake came when the SRB was operated outside 'her' limits paramets - a temperature below which the "o" ring would not remain pliable enough, where the normally pliable sealing compound became hardened - and failed to seal-in the high-pressure combustion-product gases that form with the SRB. A failure to seal in those gases - allowing them to escape - was the problem ...

230 posted on 02/02/2003 9:46:39 PM PST by _Jim
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To: HighWheeler
I don't wonder that you do not want me to post to you. Like Eva Gabor in Green Acres you have managed to completely obfusticate the original point of our discussion.

Let us review it:

In Post 21 I stated:

"The tile damage was done after liftoff. After Main Engine Cut Off there was literally nothing NASA could do. "

Your response, in message 89 was that quote followed by the following:

“Here you go:

RTLS: Return to Launch Site
An engine fails within the first few minutes of flight, or a systems problem (cabin leak, loss of cooling, etc.) occurs which requires the shuttle to come home early. In this case, the shuttle will fly downrange a bit, and then do a flip: it's originally travelling east, with the ET on "top" (away from the earth). During this flip maneuver, the shuttle will rotate so that its nose and tail swap places, and at the end the shuttle is flying backwards into is own exhaust, with the tank on the bottom. Eventually this will negate all of its forward momentum, and start to move back towards KSC. Then it's just a matter of dropping the ET and gliding back to the Cape. The whole thing takes about 25 minutes.

TAL: Transoceanic Abort Landing
If a problem occurs after the last RTLS capability, then the shuttle will have to land on the other side of the Atlantic. Depending on inclination, this will be either in Africa (Ben Guerir, Morocco) or Spain (Zaragoza or Moron). A TAL takes about 35 minutes.”


Post 89 is a non-sequitor. My post 21 stated that after MECO nothing could be done. Your response was to highlight two options that can only be chosen before MECO. This prompted my response in Post 111

“OK, Captain Science, explain -- using one and two syllable words, because I must be slow -- how we do a RTLS or a TAL after Main Engine Cut Off.”


To which you responded in Post 122

“Why don't you ask NASA, they developed the contingencies.

“My reading of this is that the MECO would now happen immediately after SRB separation.”

Note that your second statement is wrong, absolutely.

In post 139 I replied:

“Maybe because I already know the answer, not having gotten Shuttle Backseat Pilot wings from collecting enough cereal boxtops. You cannot. MECO ends powered flight. At MECO you are committed to where you are going. You have to opt for an RTLS or a TAL almost immediately after liftoff. Four minutes into the mission and you lose RTLS. Six minutes, and you cannot do a TAL. As I said earlier, the problem occurred at T+80, and was probably noted *after* MECO. “

Your sparkling response in Post 193 was simply to repeat the information you posted in 89.

In Post 206 I stated:

“My original statement was "Explain How you opt for a RTLS or a TAL after MECO." The SRBs are not MAIN ENGINES.

The Main Engines are those three things in the back that keep burning *after* SRB Sep. Please explain again -- using small words that I can understand -- what portion of the NASA document you have quoted contradicts my claim that you cannot opt for an RTLS or a TAL after MECO. In fact, I will *broaden* my claim. You cannot opt for an ATO or an AOA after MECO.

But if you can explain how it is done, why then I will be properly humbled. (What were you saying about karma?)”

And of course in post you respond:

“Hey, you are absolutely wrong as I pointed out. You forgot to notice that. So you can stop posting, at least to me.

Your "facts" cannot be trusted. Truce, you shoot from the hip, and supply absolutely wrong information. You even asked (in post 111) "...how we do a RTLS or a TAL after Main Engine Cut Off". Well Truce, you can't, as I pointed out so clearly in the NASA press package post, the Main Engines are required to be operational to do either abort option."


My response is that my original position was that there was nothing that could be done after MECO. You insisted that an abort could be used -- in a context that implied they would be used after MECO. You stated that the Mains would cut off after SRB sep on an abort. You ignored my response that it was impossible to do an abort after MECO, and then claim that that was my position.

I am not sure whether you know you were wrong, and are trying to cover it up, or whether you sincerely believe what you are saying. Either way, don't ever bother sending me your resume.
231 posted on 02/02/2003 9:48:38 PM PST by No Truce With Kings (The opinions expressed are mine! Mine! MINE! All Mine!)
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To: One Sided Media
Please don't hold my comments against my ...

He (or is it she - I'm confused now) is in for it when He (or is it she) gets back on the board ...

!Kidding!

232 posted on 02/02/2003 9:50:27 PM PST by _Jim
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To: _Jim
We are not talking about unavoidable, acceptable risk you describe so well. We are talking about avoidable, unacceptable risk taking.

We are talking apples and oranges.
233 posted on 02/02/2003 9:58:45 PM PST by TheDon
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To: Moonman62
"Is what you're trying to say is that they should move the ISS to the Shuttle?

Not exactly, I'm wondering if they both could have moved to meet in the middle.

If so, the ISS doesn't really have any propulsion capabilities, only small thrusters for stationkeeping.

The ISS has a propulsion module made by the Russians. I can't recall the name, but it starts with a "Z."

On top of that I doubt it would stay together if you tried to move it. It's not designed to move.

How else would the orbit get reboosted? Shuttles were routinely used to reboost the ISS orbit.

Here are some answers:

You could not meet in the middle because both vehicles have less that 1000ft/sec of delta-V. (In fact, I think the station has only about 300 ft/sec.) The ISS can reboost, but it up higher than the Orbiter was -- 220 or 250 NMI. Don't remember exactly. Further, it is up high like that to minimize atmospheric drag (aerodrag drops by a factor of 10 every 10 NMI you go up.

ISS does have a propulsion module but they have to be very careful using it lest they damage the station. They generally run it a low thrusts. It is only intended for reboost. Yes, Shuttles reboost the Station. It is a hairy procedure that uses the Shuttle's reaction control system, not the OMS. It takes up to an hour, and only raises the ISS's orbit by a mile.

234 posted on 02/02/2003 10:00:01 PM PST by No Truce With Kings (The opinions expressed are mine! Mine! MINE! All Mine!)
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To: TheDon
What's the mortality rate, per mile, flown by NASA?

What's the mortality rate for astronauts as a percentage of the total astronaut corp versus the general public (consider only accidental deaths for this exercise)?

What's the mortality rate for NASCAR drivers?

235 posted on 02/02/2003 10:07:25 PM PST by _Jim (NASA has a better safety recored than NASCAR")
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To: _Jim
Its a he. My wife is a politico and I happened to contact AMES through one of my engineering friends about getting the cart before the horse on the investigation and she suggested I might want to kick in my thoughts to this board. No agenda. It would be good however if you could obtain a password without going through a background check or at least waiting until someone arrives at the "office" Monday a.m.
236 posted on 02/02/2003 10:10:41 PM PST by One Sided Media
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To: _Jim
You seem to be very knowledgable about the shuttle so I am curious as to what you think most likely caused the destruction of the craft. If you have multiple possible answers can you assign a probability to them? I believe in the Expectancy Value theorem so you should get pretty close if you are actually as informed as you appear.
237 posted on 02/02/2003 10:28:00 PM PST by One Sided Media
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To: Moonman62
Reboosting and completely changing the ISS's orbit are two completely different things.

It's just not possible.
238 posted on 02/02/2003 10:42:32 PM PST by chaosagent
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To: chaosagent
good replies - there is really no chance if critical tiles are lost.

we need to spend the money on anti-gravety research.
239 posted on 02/03/2003 12:51:56 AM PST by XBob
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To: judgeandjury
Note to NASA: On future Space Shuttle flights, equip the astronauts with longer teathers.

That wouldn't help much either. Okay, let's say you've got a space suit and a long tether. *Now* what?

It's not as easy to maneuver in zero-G as you'd think. The outside of the shuttle is not studded with hand-holds. Magnetic boots won't work on much of it, and especially won't work on the tile area. So what's your plan, float around at random and hope you swing past the spot you want to look at or work on?

Yes, I know NASA developed an MMU to help astronauts move around outside, but now you've added *another* piece of heavy, dangerous (it needs to be fueled) equipment to be carried on every flight "just in case", along with all conceivable tools, replacement equipment, raw materials, etc. etc. etc.

Hindsight is always 20-20. And trying to be prepared for *every* contingency is simply unworkable. Imagine trying to carry a car repair shop in your car with you on every trip...

240 posted on 02/03/2003 1:36:20 AM PST by Dan Day
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