Home Science ‘Space Shuttle Columbia: The Final Flight’ documentary set to conclude on CNN

‘Space Shuttle Columbia: The Final Flight’ documentary set to conclude on CNN

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‘Space Shuttle Columbia: The Final Flight’ documentary set to conclude on CNN

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Forty-three years to the day after the space shuttle Columbia landed from its first mission, CNN is set to conclude airing a four-part series on the orbiter’s ill-fated last return to Earth.

Space Shuttle Columbia: The Final Flight,” a new documentary co-produced by BBC and Mindhouse Productions, looks back at the winged spacecraft’s 28th mission, STS-107, which ended in tragedy on Feb. 1, 2003. The program features new interviews with members of the fallen astronauts’ families and some of the NASA managers and engineers who supported the flight and later contributed to learning why Columbia and its crew were lost.

“If you work in human spaceflight, this is the worst possible thing that could ever happen,” says astronaut Ellen Ochoa in the third episode of “Final Flight.” Ochoa was in Mission Control when Columbia broke apart as it reentered the atmosphere after a successful 16-day science mission in Earth orbit.

The first two hours of “Final Flight” debuted last Sunday (April 7) and will be aired again on Saturday (April 13) beginning at 8 p.m. EDT/PDT. CNN will then premiere the remaining two episodes at the same time the following day, coinciding with the anniversary of shuttle Columbia’s STS-1 landing in 1981.

Related: Columbia is Lost: Space.com’s STS-107 Archive

An arrow points to a piece of foam liberated from the external tank, which next strikes the leading edge of space shuttle Columbia’s left wing, sealing the fate of the STS-107 crew on board. (Image credit: NASA)

As the documentary recounts, the issue that sealed Columbia’s fate was known to NASA engineers from almost the first day the orbiter took flight. Foam covering the shuttle’s external tank and its connection points to the spacecraft would fall off during launch and, depending on when and from where those liberations occurred, the foam could impact and damage the orbiter.

It was just such an occurrence that left a hole in the leading edge of Columbia’s left wing, allowing hot plasma to compromise the integrity of the orbiter’s airframe, which then led to the break up of the spacecraft and the death of the STS-107 crew, commander Rick Husband, pilot Willie McCool, mission specialists Laurel Clark, David Brown, Michael Anderson and Kalpana Chawla and Israeli payload specialist Ilan Ramon.



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