St. Petersburg Times
 tampabaycom
tampabay.com

Print storySubscribe to the Times

Columbia

Foam mystery solved

A year after the shuttle explosion, NASA believes it knows what went wrong.

By Associated Press
Published February 21, 2004

CAPE CANAVERAL - A full year after the Columbia tragedy, NASA has determined how and why the large piece of foam insulation that doomed the spacecraft broke off the fuel tank at liftoff.

NASA's top spaceflight official, Bill Readdy, said Friday that the agency has learned that air liquefied by the supercold fuel in the tank almost certainly seeped into a crack or void in the foam, or collected around bolts and nuts beneath the foam. The trapped air expanded as the shuttle rose, and blew off a chunk of foam the size of a suitcase.

Rather than peeling off, as NASA had assumed it would from past experience, the foam was pushed off with explosive force, Readdy said. The space agency also had assumed the foam would fall down along the tank and miss the shuttle, but the falling foam shot toward Columbia's left wing, resulting in a large, fatal gash.

In all likelihood, faulty application of the foam created air pockets, Readdy said.

A tank redesign and improved techniques for applying and double-checking the foam should solve the problem, NASA said. But this will take longer than expected and is one reason space shuttles will not fly again until next year.

At the time Columbia shattered over Texas during re-entry on Feb. 1, 2003, NASA had run only 400 computer models involving flyaway foam and other launch debris. Since then, millions of models have been run and the space agency has a much better understanding of what went wrong and how to fix it, Readdy said.

A newer problem involves the rudder speed brake, a tail assembly that is used to guide and slow the spaceship as it comes in for a landing. In recent months, corrosion and microcracks were found in the machinery that operates Discovery's rudder speed brake.

NASA has decided to remove and X-ray the same pieces of machinery in its two other shuttles. The work is progressing fastest on Discovery and that is why it will fly first, Readdy said.

Atlantis, next in line, will serve as a potential rescue ship in case Discovery is damaged by foam or other launch debris and cannot return safely to Earth.

The seven Discovery astronauts could seek refuge at the international space station, where they are headed anyway, for as long as three months. A rescue mission could be put together in as little as 35 days, Readdy said.

Readdy said the second post-Columbia mission also will have a shuttle on standby for a potential rescue.

[Last modified February 21, 2004, 01:31:48]


World and national headlines

  • Atlanta admits it hid crimes to get Olympics
  • Turnout key to success of Iran elections
  • Wedding march halts in N.M.
  • Canadian gets U.N. human rights post
  • Report: Nuclear sales net $3-million

  • Columbia
  • Foam mystery solved

  • Election 2004
  • Doctored Kerry photo becomes ethics lesson

  • Nation in brief
  • Flight to Morocco lands in Maine

  • Obituary
  • A 'fade-free' legacy, one barn at a time

  • Religion
  • Science influences Vatican report
  • Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111