20th anniversary of the shuttle disaster

Twenty years after Challenger
25/01/2006 13:30 - (SA)

Twenty years ago, the loss of the US shuttle Challenger dealt an enduring blow to confidence in manned space flight yet also helped open up a golden era of exploration by machine.

As Nasa this Saturday mourns the 1986 disaster, the contrast in fortunes between human and unmanned missions in space has never seemed more acute.

In the past year alone, the US orbiter Cassini has sent home stunning images of distant Saturn and a European suicide probe has landed on its moon, Titan.

Delving into the origins of the solar system, a Nasa spacecraft has smashed open a comet and another has returned home with a cargo of stardust.

On Mars, two US rovers are patiently scouring for signs of water and life, helped by a clutch of orbiters overhead.

Other metal-and-silicon pioneers are en route for Mercury, Venus and Pluto, while perhaps the most ambitious of all, a European lab is heading to a rendezvous with a distant comet… in 2014.

As robots take on the role of doughty explorers, manned missions in contrast have remained confined to earth’s backyard and, since Challenger, coloured by safety worries.

“Challenger showed how sophisticated this technology was and how fragile it was, and our dreams were tied to it,” said Roger Launius, chair of the Space History Division at the Smithsonian Institution.

Deep in crisis

The most ambitious manned project, the International Space Station (ISS), and the vehicle on which it depends, the shuttle, are deep in crisis.

The ISS may never be completed or even manned other than by a skeleton crew, yet its final cost is widely put at around $100bn.

A complex design 30 years old, the shuttle has been crippled by flaws that have cost 14 lives in 114 missions and turned it into a “hangar queen” where an army of engineers pore over every piece before worriedly letting the vehicle fly again.

Initially touted as a cheap form of renewable transport, the shuttle has cost $145bn, or around $1.3bn per trip, says Roger Pielke, Director of the Centre for Science and Technology and Research at the University of Colorado.

In contrast, Nasa’s two Martian rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, have cost some $900m. Built to operate for only 90 days, they are still going strong two years later.

The shuttle’s problems are so bad that Nasa is to retire the fleet in 2010, and build a new craft.

With only three shuttles left in service after the loss of Columbia in 2003, and with 18 construction missions needed to bring the ISS to an acceptable state of completion, Nasa is wrestling with a real headache.

Unless it can get the shuttle flying again at quick intervals, the agency will have to delay or even abandon deployment of ISS science modules built by Europe and Japan at an overall cost of at least $1.3bn.

Apart from the ISS, the other big event in manned flight has been the emergence of China, which in 2003 became the third power to place a man in orbit, and of entrepreneurs, after SpaceShipOne in 2004 became the first private craft to touch the fringes of space.

But neither is viewed as especially groundbreaking.

The negligible scientific return of manned missions as compared to their cost and risk, bears heavily with many decision-makers.

The European Space Agency (ESA), for instance, devotes only an eighth of its budget to manned space flight and has not bothered to develop its own spaceship.

Instead, the lion’s share of ESA’s budget goes into launchers, science satellites in earth orbit or space probes that deliver greater value for money. Japan thinks similarly.

Nasa, thirsting to revive the can-do reputation that made it such an inspiring agency in the sixties and early seventies, is pushing hard to take man back out of earth orbit.

This week, its top officials were to meet with international partners to discuss President George W Bush’s vision for humans to return to the moon by 2018 and, later, possibly venture forward to Mars.

Oh my, 20 years, i remember it like yesterday…

Long conversation on MSN just finished on that one, I remember getting the time off school because of the launch (I was 10).

DT.

i Rember siting in class watching it during my last year of high shcool

Sophomore in high school, yeah remember it well, shut down classes all over campus to watch the first teacher in space only to see it go, BOOM. Why you going reminding me of my age there JUGGY:rolleyes:

We were out of school for snow that day. I used to have a newspaper clipping of the flight conversation with the date wrote on it in my wallet. Unfortunately lost wallet but will never forget the day.

And still nothing to replace it.
Another Concorde.

I was still in Primary School. I only heard about it after the fact not direct memorys of the even of that the “new name for N.A.S.A.” joke

I remember exactly what I was doing when that happened. A friend and I were in my dorm room at college watching “The Young and the Restless” while figuring out our classes for the next quarter. The network interrupted the show with the news of it exploding. Dan Rather was on for the rest of the day on that channel. As well as Peter Jennings and Tom Brokaw on their networks.

TWENTY YEARS:eek: jeeez, it seems like seven or so.

Where does the time go.

Must do something with my life

must stop visiting forums…

mumble…