Posted on 02/03/2003 4:43:52 PM PST by Wolfstar
Edited on 04/29/2004 2:02:01 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Released Monday morning, a high-speed NASA engineering film shows a piece of debris falling from the large external tank on the space shuttle Columbia's liftoff and hitting the orbiter's left wing. Bear in mind that these are extreme close-ups of a high-speed event. In the top couple of photos, you see only the top of the broken-off piece. Most of it is in the shadows. Depending on which clip you see and how slowly it is run, to the uninitiated person's eye, it can look either like the debris strikes the wing hard enough to pulverize the debris, or the debris strikes a glancing blow and bounces off in the direction of the main and booster engine exhaust.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
now... that was a good sized chunk of whatever it was... and i would guess it would accelerate to some substantial velocity with a 2000 mph wind on it in 40 meters, then striking a body traveling in the opposite direction... the relative difference in velocities could be significant.
momentum... mass (we don't know) X velocity (we don't know).
but... my guess is that even a couple pounds of whatever it was, would be cranking with whatever mass it had... and very well could have raised some serious havoc.
i've seen 200 mph winds stuff a 2X4 through a car.
That was ALL speculation on his part IF THEY HAD KNOWN THEY HAD A BIG PROBLEM.
Can I help it if that's what GE called it? I must admit, when I saw that after searching based on my vague recollection, I couldn't resist. :) This thread needed a little levity, as we all do this week.
I don't think the design of the shuttle is stupid at all. They took technology of the time and made something that worked and worked quite well. And, they've been improving on it over time. One of the reasons that there are so many different types of tile is that there are various needs - there is no single type of ceramic tile that meets all needs concurrently.
No, I think the shuttle is a long series of problems that were overcome, sometimes ingeniously, sometimes brutally, sometimes with math, and sometimes with simple commmon sense. The ship was a series of works, not a single contiguous design. Because that's how new things are developed.
The next models will be better than the last. 7 people have lost their lives in a risky business - it is the nature of NASA to learn from this and improve the program. In the scientific sense, this may be a quantum leap. In the human sense, it is a tragedy.
Maybe, but also maybe there would be to use something that would be good for "one time use" only and could be trimmed to fit? I have no idea, that's pretty far from my fields of expertise.
Take a look at this photo. Please note that the debris is partially obscured behind the wing.
In the video of this event, the debris comes down behind the wing. It strikes the wing, the debris and pulverised material shoots out afterwards. But the debris comes out at a higher angle than the pulverised material.
No it certainly didn't hit the wing at a 90 degree angle, but it did catch on the wing, shooting it out instead of just brushing by the wing.
Does this picture taken from a long range lense depict a piece of debris that is 12" in size to you? Start comparing it to the wing. Then compare it to other things. The black part of the nose is more than two feet tall. The debris is at least half that size.
There were neither space suits to go outside, nor enough delta-V to make it up to the space station. Two good reasons to have enough space suits for every crew member (remember life boats and the Titanic?) and more space stations.
No, no.. You misunderstand me.
It's like a master key.
Carry several large tiles and THEN cut them to fit.
(Now, adhesion is your problem.. I am just the tile guy. Hey!)
I cannot argue with that. Throwing such money after purely political goals is such a waste - NASA, on the other hand actually does something with the money tossed its way. They may not be as efficient as Intel or IBM, but their product is of much greater importance.
That's easy, if you know how big the shuttle is and scale everything you see to that. Then you time how long the object takes to go a known distance. I admit I didn't do that, not explicitly that is, but accepted 20" as "about right" given the size of the shuttle and the size of the object relative to the shuttle.
I am certaily no expert, but if the debris was flying past the shuttle at 1,000 mph, would both the debris and the windows of the shuttle be relatively in focus?
On STS 109...Columbia March 2002...Columbia suffered a pitch/yaw thruster failure...thruster pack is 4 ports..this occured on pre-test prior to de-orbit burn.
Columbia had its guts ripped out,,,re-wired..new monitiors..computer suite...electrical trunking.
After STS 109 in March..Nasa discovered that Columbia had cracks in flow system to engine.
Again..Columbia is torn apart for complex Tungsten weld on flow system cracks.
Columbia had been exstensively re-fit for 1-1/2 years prior to STS 109...too heavy for Space station dock..Columbia was mod to low orbit insertion ..Space hab and Micro Gravity test.
Columbia is in Com link..she is in process of cycling to compensate for wing drag..some sensor activity..then gone.
Hypothetical
Columbia suffers catastrophic system failure which silences the com link..either detonation..or
Columbia is pitched into configuration..either by computer error as per cycling on drag..or is sent into wrong configuration on s turns.
Columbia could have been rolled..inverted by computer ..the shuttles crew cabin facing the earth on descent into the heat barrier....ionization terminating com link.
something happened suddenly.
Un less an explosion took place in Columbias wing..throwing it over..the shuttle should still have been in com link as wing deteriorated...some comment from crew as wing began to fail and send Columbia into a different return configuration.
Nasa said the Columbia was like a new shuttle...having only one flight prior.
Its my opinion Columbia's computer failed in the wing drag cycling..inverting Columbia..or failing to put her into a recoverable mode during turns.
The fact she dropped out of com link is the highest information point..unless Nasa has other com link timeline they have not released to the public.
I am by now means an engineer..so the question remains..would Columbia be silenced by a wing breaking up..with not a few seconds more com ..or did something more catastrophic occur...suddenly ..unrecoverable.
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