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Listen: The Legacy of NASA's Shuttle Program in Texas and Beyond

Challenger taking off from the launch pad in 1986.
Image via NASA (Public Domain)
Challenger taking off from the launch pad in 1986.

From Texas Standard:

Today in 1986, the  Challenger space shuttle broke apart over the coast of Cape Canaveral, Florida. Just 73 seconds after the shuttle's lift-off, its seven crew members were dead.

It was the fault of one small rubber O-ring that sealed booster joints at ignition. Shuttle engineers knew it could become brittle in cold temperatures and, after seeing the weather forecast for the day, tried to stop the launch. But NASA went ahead with the launch as scheduled.

 

Then, on February 1, 2003, seven more shuttle crew members died when the  Columbia spacecraft reentered the Earth's atmosphere. A hole had been punctured in the leading edge of one of Columbia's wings. The shuttle didn't last the intense heat of re-entry.

In 2004, President George W. Bush announced  NASA would close the shuttle program in the next six or seven years.

The program ended in 2011. At that time, Nathan Bernier created this tribute to the program for KUT News.

Copyright 2020 KUT 90.5. To see more, visit KUT 90.5.

Nathan Bernier a KUT reporter and the local host during All Things Considered and Marketplace. He grew up in the small mountain town of Nelson, BC, Canada, and worked at commercial news radio stations in Ottawa, Montreal and Boston before starting at KUT in 2008.