Columbia Accident Investigation Board Final Report, Volume 1

Columbia Accident Investigation Board Final Report, Volume 1

by Columbia Accident Investigation Board

38 chapters19h 3mEnglish2003

About this book

In 1981, Columbia became the first spacecraft of its type to fly in Earth orbit and successfully completed 27 missions over more than two decades. During the STS-107 mission, Columbia and its crew traveled more than six million miles in 16 days. The Orbiterʼs destruction, just 16 minutes before scheduled touchdown, shows that space flight is still far from routine. It involves a substantial element of risk, which must be recognized, but never accepted with resignation. The seven Columbia astronauts believed that the risk was worth the reward. The Board salutes their courage and dedicates this report to their memory. - Summary from the Board Report Note: Volumes 2-6 are supporting documents and transcripts not included in this recording.

Chapters (38)

1Cover Explanation, In Memoriam, Board Statement
707
2Executive Summary, Report Synopsis
1374
3An Introduction to the Space Shuttle, An Introduction to NASA
1310
4Pt 1: The Accident Ch 1: The Evolution of the Space Shuttle Program
2120
5Ch 2a: Columbia's Final Flight, part 1
1947
6Ch 2b: Columbia's Final Flight, part 2
1970
7Ch 2c: Columbia's Final Flight, part 3
1761
8Mission Control Center Communications
1244
9Ch 3a: Accident Analysis, part 1
1695
10Foam Fracture Under Hydrostatic Pressure
574
11Ch 3b: Accident Analysis, part 2
1257
12Ch 3c: Accident Analysis, part 3
1795
13Ch 3d: Accident Analysis, part 4
2930
14Ch 3e: Accident Analysis, part 5
1791
15Ch 3f: Accident Analysis, part 6
1677
16Ch 4a: Other Factors Considered, part 1
1795
17Ch 4b: Other Factors Considered, part 2
1847
18Pt 2: Why the Accident Occurred, Ch 5a: From Challenger to Columbia, part 1
2473
19Ch 5b: From Challenger to Columbia, part 2
2053
20Ch 5c: From Challenger to Columbia, part 3
2261
21Ch 6a: Decision Making at NASA, part 1
2482
22Ch 6b: Decision Making at NASA, part 2
1634
23Ch 6c: Decision Making at NASA, part 3
2134
24Ch 6d: Decision Making at NASA, part 4
1460
25Ch 6e: Decision Making at NASA, part 5
1651
26Ch 6f: Decision Making at NASA, part 6
1625
27Ch 6g: Decision Making at NASA, part 7
2069
28Ch 6h: Decision Making at NASA, part 8
2210
29Ch 6i: Decision Making at NASA, part 9
578
30Ch 7a: The Accident's Organizational Causes, part 1
2101
31Ch 7b: The Accident's Organizational Causes, part 2
1896
32Ch 7c: The Accident's Organizational Causes, part 3
2469
33Ch 8a: History As Cause: Columbia and Challenger, part 1
1726
34Ch 8b: History As Cause: Columbia and Challenger, part 2
2090
35Pt 3: A Look Ahead, Ch 9: Implications for the Future of Human Space Flight
2102
36Ch 10a: Other Significant Observations, part 1
1987
37Ch 10b: Other Significant Observations, part 2
2987
38Ch 11: Recommendations
806

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