A timeline of events in the last flight of space shuttle Columbia. All times EST.
Jan. 16, 10:39 a.m. – Columbia rockets into orbit from Kennedy Space Center.
Feb. 1, 8:15 a.m. – Columbia fires braking rockets, streaks toward touchdown.
9 a.m. – Mission Control loses all data and contact with Columbia crew.
9 a.m. – Residents of Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana report hearing “a big bang” and seeing flames in the sky.
9:16 a.m. – Columbia’s scheduled landing.
9:29 a.m. – NASA declares emergency.
9:44 a.m. – NASA warns residents to stay away from possibly hazardous debris.
11 a.m. – NASA lowers flag next to its countdown clock at Cape Canaveral, Fla., to half-staff.
2:05 p.m. – President Bush: “Columbia is lost; there are no survivors.”
Month: February 2003
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Columbia Timeline
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Indians Mourn Their Loss
NEW DELHI (Reuters) – Thousands of people in northern India braved a cold winter’s night on Saturday to ring temple bells and pray for a miracle after the space shuttle Columbia exploded on re-entry with an Indian-born astronaut on board.
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Columbia Flight Path
MSNBC posts the flight path of the lost space shuttle Columbia.
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More Columbia News
Writing from the Starbucks down the street from my dad’s in Dallas. We heard the sonic boom around 8am. It shook the windows. WFAA had a crew out to shoot the reentry for the morning newscast, and they caught the whole sad incident on tape. Ironically, some of the debris fell in the town of Palestine. Dad and I watched the video with a self-imposed clinical distance, it seemed to be the best way to handle it.
A steady stream of somber-faced employees filed into the Johnson Space Center this morning as NASA scrambled to gather information on Space Shuttle Columbia’s disintegration over Texas.
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Columbia Update
This is tough to take. Challenger was my generation’s JFK. I had not watched a launch since until this most recent one. I had an awful feeling that something was going to go wrong so I tuned in. I was relieved when it went up without incident. Now this happens. I’m overwhelmed with sadness.
NASA didn’t immediately declare the crew dead; however, the U.S. flag next to its countdown clock was lowered to half-staff.
President Bush is returning to the White House after briefings on the apparent in-flight breakup of the space shuttle Columbia.
Family members of the shuttle crew, which included the first even Israeli astronaut, were gathered on the landing strip to greet their loved ones when news of the mishap emerged. NASA officials quickly huddled the relatives into a shuttle and kept them in seclusion at the Kennedy Space Center.
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Space Shuttle Columbia
Transcribing from TV news: The space shuttle Columbia on mission STS-107 apparently broke up on earth athmosphere reentry. Contact was lost at 1500CET, 0800CST over Texas, scheduled landing time was 0916EST at Kennedy Space Center. The space shuttle is presumed to have disintegrated at 200000 feet and 6 times the speed of sound. People in Texas are advised to report any findings of debris to local authorities and not to go near them due to the toxic propellant used in the shuttle.
Sad, sad news. Here’s the roundup from news.google.com.
The shuttle was carrying the first Israeli astronaut and six Americans, and authorities had feared it would be a terrorist target.
[…]
There were reports of debris seen falling.
NASA declared an emergency after losing communication with space shuttle Columbia as the ship soared over Texas several minutes before its expected landing time Saturday morning.
[…]
Gary Hunziker in Plano said he saw the shuttle flying overhead. “I could see two bright objects flying off each side of it,” he told The Associated Press. “I just assumed they were chase jets.”
[…]
On launch day, a piece of insulating foam on the external fuel tank came off during liftoff and was believed to have struck the left wing of the shuttle.
The spacecraft was due for a sheduled landing at 2.16 GMT. There are unconfirmed reports that “multiple tails” or vapour trails were seen coming from the craft as it was descending over the US.
The space shuttle Columbia is missing and presumed lost.
Search and rescue crews have been dispatched to the Dallas/Fort Worth area of Texas. NBC News is reporting a large explosion over Dallas, Texas. Video of Columbia’s descent over Texas shows multiple trails of debris reentering the atmosphere.
Mission Control in Houston last made contact with the Orbiter as it reentered Earth’s atmosphere at about 207,000 feet over Texas at about 9 a.m. EST, about 16 minutes prior to its scheduled landing at Florida’s Kennedy Space Center. Columbia was scheduled to land at 9:16 a.m. EST.
Tracking systems at the Kennedy Space Center did not acquire Columbia as it was scheduled to approach the Florida coast.
We will next update this box as soon as more information becomes available.
— Roger Guillemette, SPACE.com correspondent for the Cape Canaveral Bureau
More from Space.com:
Columbia was carrying a crew of seven astronauts: commander Rick Husband, pilot Willie McCool and mission specialists Kalpana Chawla, Laurel Clark, Mike Anderson, David Brown and Israeli payload specialist Ilan Ramon.
NASA’s oldest shuttle, Columbia was inaugurated in flight on April 12, 1981, and had flown 27 times in space.
The accident was the first of its kind in the history of 42 years of space flight. NASA has never lost a spacecraft while on approach for landing. But the accident did occur only days after the 17th anniversary of the explosion of the shuttle Challenger in 1986.
CNN:
Slashdot was a good source for information on 9/11, I’m sure it will be news-rich today.
Dave Winer is also covering the news:
Glenn Reynolds has a link to Spaceflight Now, which provides a real-time chronology of events.
Other webloggers are also covering events and news:
Ed Cone reflects on the tragedy:
For me, at least, the death of astronauts and the loss of a spacecraft feels very different than military casualities or the crash of a passenger plane.
Sorry about the flood of news, I think it’s a coping mechanism.
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Apokapiptik’s PHP FTP Indexer
Scott Johnson points to Apokaliptik’s FTP indexer, which is open source and written in PHP.
Consider it filed in the back of my head.
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URLs, Life: Linkage From Japan
I always feel like a rock star when I get linkage from The Diary Formerly Known as The Diary Formerly Known as Go Ahead and Make My Day.
Babelfish usually does a half-decent job at translating it for me.
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TBPY + tblib == EVIL!
Phil Ringnalda points to Mark Paschal’s TBPY, a TrackBack server as a CGI written in Python. (Thanks Phil!)
You could do some evil stuff with TBPY + tblib. EVIL!
I’ve also added a highlighted version of the source (using GNU Source-highlighter). Here they are:
Are you sick of hearing about tblib yet? Sorry. I’ve been posting the more munade details in my projects channel.
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Distributed Internet Backup System
A quick link before I go to bed: DIBS: Distributed Internet Backup System:
Since disk drives are cheap, backup should be cheap too. Of course it does not help to mirror your data by adding more disks to your own computer because a fire, flood, power surge, etc. could still wipe out your local data center. Instead, you should give your files to peers (and in return store their files) so that if a catastrophe strikes your area, you can recover data from surviving peers. The Distributed Internet Backup System (DIBS) is designed to implement this vision.
Thanks for the pointer, Erik. I’ll have to check it out in the morning.
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JSPWiki: Wow! What About Roller Integration?
Wow, thanks for pointing out JSPWiki, Greg. I love the wiki idea, but it suffers from *nuke syndrome, every wiki (more or less) looks the same. I really like the sidebar design on the JSPWiki site and CocoonWiki. I think I’m stuck with MoinMoin (which I still thinks rocks, btw) or the equivalent on the server side, though I think I’ll set up a JSPWiki for behind the firewall.
How easy would it be to integrate something like JSPWiki with Roller? I really like the integration that Mr. Orchard has accomplished over at 0xDECAFBAD. I’m not personally a Roller user (tho I’ve played with it and love it), but given the JSP connection, I think it might not be too impossible