Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Space Shuttle :: essays research papers
 The Space Shuttle      The shuttle, a manned, multipurpose, orbital-launch space plane, was designed to  carry payloads of up to about 30,000 kg (65,000 lb) and up to seven crew members  and passengers. The upper part of the spacecraft, the orbiter stage, had a  theoretical lifetime of perhaps 100 missions, and the winged orbiter could make  unpowered landings on returning to earth. Because of the shuttle's designed  flexibility and its planned use for satellite deployment and the rescue and  repair of previously orbited satellites, its proponents saw it as a major  advance in the practical exploitation of space. Others, however, worried that  NASA was placing too much reliance on the shuttle, to the detriment of other,  unmanned vehicles and missions.    The first space shuttle mission, piloted by John W. Young and Robert Crippen  aboard the orbiter Columbia, was launched on April 12, 1981. It was a test  flight flown without payload in the orbiter's cargo bay. The fifth space shuttle  flight was the first operational mission; the astronauts in the Columbia  deployed two commercial communications satellites from November 11 to 16, 1982.  Later memorable flights included the seventh, whose crew included the first U.S.  woman astronaut, Sally K. Ride; the ninth mission, November 28-December 8, 1983,  which carried the first of the European Space Agency's Spacelabs; the 11th  mission, April 7-13, 1984, during which a satellite was retrieved, repaired, and  redeployed; and the 14th mission, November 8-14, 1984, when two expensive  malfunctioning satellites were retrieved and returned to earth.    Despite such successes, the shuttle program was falling behind in its planned  launch program, was increasingly being used for military tests, and was meeting  stiff competition from the European Space Agency's unmanned Ariane program for  the orbiting of satellites. Then, on January 28, 1986, the shuttle Challenger  was destroyed about one minute after launch because of the failure of a sealant  ring on one of its solid boosters. Flames escaping from the booster burned a  hole in the main propellant tank of liquid hydrogen and oxygen and caused the  booster to nose into and rupture the tank. This rupture caused a nearly  explosive disruption of the whole system. Seven astronauts were killed in the  disaster: commander Francis R. Scobee, pilot Michael J. Smith, mission  specialists Judith A. Resnik, Ellison S. Onizuka, and Ronald E. McNair, and  payload specialists Gregory B. Jarvis and Christa McAuliffe. McAuliffe had been  selected the preceding year as the first "teacher in space," a civilian  spokesperson for the shuttle program. The tragedy brought an immediate halt to  shuttle flights until systems could be analyzed and redesigned. A presidential  commission headed by former secretary of state William Rogers and former    					    
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