STS-107 Mishap Response Status Report #2

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



STS-107 Mishap Response Status Report #2
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2003 - 2 p.m. CST

Two trucks containing debris from the space shuttle Columbia arrived at
Kennedy Space Center (KSC) this morning. They were the first bringing debris
from Barksdale AFB near Shreveport, La., to KSC where investigators will lay
them out, about as they were positioned on Columbia. 

Members of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) arrived at KSC
about 11 a.m. EST today. The group toured facilities, including the Orbiter
Processing Facility Bay 2, housing the Shuttle Endeavour, and Bay 3, where
Discovery is undergoing maintenance. The CAIB also visited the Vehicle
Assembly Building where Shuttle Atlantis, with its external tank and solid
rocket boosters, is atop its mobile launch platform. The CAIB met at
intervals throughout the day with KSC officials to get an overview of ground
processing activities.

On Thursday the board is scheduled to visit the Solid Rocket Booster (SRB)
Disassembly Facility and tour the SRB assembly and refurbishment facilities.
Members also will visit the Launch Control Center and Launch Pad 39A, where
Columbia was launched.

Retired Navy Admiral Harold Gehman, CAIB chairman, spoke briefly with news
media representatives.  He said the CAIB wants to look at four things at
KSC: launch procedures; Shuttle refurbishment between flights; the Columbia
mishap reconstruction site;  "and be sure in our own minds the process here
for Columbia reconstruction meets our investigatory needs."  The efforts
will take place in the Reusable Launch Vehicle Hangar located adjacent to
the Space Shuttle runway at KSC.

Gehman described the trip to KSC as an orientation visit. He said the CAIB
would return to KSC a number of times during the investigation. The CAIB is
scheduled to travel to Huntsville, Ala., and then New Orleans before
returning to Houston Saturday night. Gehman said Sunday would be a workday,
and that the board would be working seven- or six-day weeks "from now on."

More than 2,500 federal, state and local employees continued to search for
Columbia debris in Texas and Louisiana today. Officials say they have the
resources to cover every body of water in the debris trail within 5 weeks.
While teams continue to investigate reports of debris as far west as
California, no confirmed pieces of debris from Columbia have been found west
of the Fort Worth, Texas area. 

Hundreds of items continue to be collected from areas in eastern Texas and
western Louisiana. Several hundred items were shipped in the past 24 hours
to Barksdale from locations in Lufkin, Nacogdoches and Hemphill, Texas. 

The International Space Station's Expedition 6 crew, Commander Ken Bowersox,
Flight Engineer Nikolai Budarin and NASA Station Science Officer Don Pettit,
took time Wednesday for interviews with CNN, ABC, CBS and NBC
representatives. They talked about their shock and grief after being told
the morning of Feb. 1 by Johnson Space Center Director Jefferson D. Howell
Jr. of the loss of Columbia, and their willingness to remain aboard the ISS
as long as necessary.

For more information about NASA on the Internet, see:

www.nasa.gov <http://www.nasa.gov>



--end--



-------------------------------------------------------------

For automatic email subscriptions to this KSC originated press releases, send an Internet electronic mail message to mailto:ksc-news_release-subscribe@kscnews.ksc.nasa.gov. With no subject or message. The system will reply with a confirmation via e-mail of each subscription.

To remove your name from the list at any time, send an email addressed to mailto:ksc-news_release-unsubscribe@kscnews.ksc.nasa.gov . With no subject or message.

or you can (un)subscribe on the World Wide Web at: http://kscnews.ksc.nasa.gov/

Status reports and other NASA publications are available on the World Wide Web at: http://www-pao.ksc.nasa.gov/kscpao/kscpao.htm .



[Index of Archives]     [KSC Site]     [NASA News]     [NASA Science News]     [JPL]     [Marshall Space Flight Center]     [NTSB]     [Yosemite News]     [Tuolumne Meadows Campground]     [STB]     [Deep Creek Forum]     [Cassini Status Reports]     [Telescopes]

  Powered by Linux