NASA Seeks Shuttle Tiles For Clues to Disaster
Washington, Feb. 4 2003 (VOA News) -- A top NASA official
says the U.S. space agency is working to recover pieces
of heat-resistant tiles from the scattered remains
of space shuttle Columbia, which could explain what
caused it to disintegrate shortly after re-entering
the earth's atmosphere.
Key
to finding out what caused Columbia to disintegrate
could be finding out what caused the temperature on
the left side of the shuttle's fuselage to climb rapidly,
just minutes before Columbia broke into pieces and
fell to Earth.
"There's
some other missing link that we don't have yet, that
is contributing to this temperature increase, and
we've got to go find that," said program manager
Ron Dittemore. He said NASA is hoping to recover pieces
of the shuttle's heat-resistant tiles, which he believes
will hold answers. "That missing link is out
there, and we just need to be persistent and go find
it," he said.
One
possible theory now being explored involves an incident
just after liftoff on January 16, when a piece of
hardened foam insulation struck Columbia's left wing.
At the time, NASA engineers judged it to be of no
concern to the overall safety of the shuttle. But
investigators are looking into whether it may have
set off a chain of events that ultimately caused the
shuttle to break up under the extreme heat and pressure
of re-entering the earth's atmosphere just minutes
before landing.
"We
want to know if we made any erroneous assumptions.
We want to know if we weren't conservative enough.
We want to know if we made any mistakes. And so, we
are redoing the complete analysis," said Mr.
Dittemore.
It
may be months, or longer, before the cause of the
Columbia disaster is determined. For the moment, Mr.
Dittemore describes it as a mystery. "We may
never know the exact root cause. Because we may never
gather all the evidence to pin point it happened at
this location for this cause. We may never know that,"
he said.
As
the investigation continues, so do efforts to recover
the remains of the six Americans as well as the man
who had become Israel's first astronaut. On Tuesday,
President Bush will attend a memorial in honor of
all seven at the Johnson Space Center near Houston.
--
Nick Simeone
- Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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