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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,400 --> 00:00:05,680 It's almost over Sacramento now. 2 00:00:08,280 --> 00:00:10,960 Don't see anything yet. Nothing, nothing, nothing. 3 00:00:13,640 --> 00:00:16,760 See. Oh, is that it? There it is. Right there. There it is. 4 00:00:16,760 --> 00:00:19,520 Yeah, I see it. I saw it. There it is. 5 00:00:19,520 --> 00:00:21,080 Oh, it's cool. 6 00:00:21,080 --> 00:00:22,760 That is cool! 7 00:00:24,280 --> 00:00:25,520 Oh, check that out, man! 8 00:00:27,760 --> 00:00:29,120 It's going really fast. 9 00:00:32,200 --> 00:00:34,800 What the heck is that?! I don't know. 10 00:00:34,800 --> 00:00:36,000 Wow! 11 00:00:36,000 --> 00:00:39,360 Look at the chunks coming off of it! Yeah. I saw it. Yeah. 12 00:00:39,360 --> 00:00:41,240 I see what you're saying. 13 00:00:41,240 --> 00:00:45,040 That thing looks like it's flipping all over the place. Oh, yeah! 14 00:00:45,040 --> 00:00:47,280 I can still see it, but I'm losing it. 15 00:00:47,280 --> 00:00:50,400 I can't. I've got it... Still got it in the camera. 16 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:52,680 Where's it over right now, Dad? 6.50... 17 00:00:52,680 --> 00:00:54,560 They're in Texas right now. 18 00:01:02,600 --> 00:01:04,840 It was a Saturday morning. 19 00:01:04,840 --> 00:01:07,200 I was preparing to come to work. 20 00:01:07,200 --> 00:01:09,960 It was a beautiful day, beautiful drive. 21 00:01:11,120 --> 00:01:14,760 And as I turned onto Park Street... 22 00:01:14,760 --> 00:01:17,360 ..I heard a loud boom. 23 00:01:19,000 --> 00:01:21,920 All of a sudden, our house just shook. 24 00:01:21,920 --> 00:01:27,400 We, you know, looked at each other and we said, "What is that?" 25 00:01:27,400 --> 00:01:31,520 When I looked up, I saw a bright white ball. 26 00:01:34,520 --> 00:01:35,640 SIREN WAILS 27 00:01:41,520 --> 00:01:43,600 Phones were ringing off the hook, 28 00:01:43,600 --> 00:01:45,960 much more than our dispatch staff could handle. 29 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:53,600 I didn't know if we were being attacked. 30 00:01:55,120 --> 00:01:57,400 REPORTER: Search and rescue teams are warning people 31 00:01:57,400 --> 00:02:01,320 not to touch any debris should they come across it. 32 00:02:01,320 --> 00:02:03,440 REPORTER: There are some disturbing pictures 33 00:02:03,440 --> 00:02:05,840 that are coming up from the broadcasters. 34 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:09,760 NEWSREADER: We're waiting for more details as to how this happened, 35 00:02:09,760 --> 00:02:12,280 maybe the beginnings of why it happened. 36 00:02:14,280 --> 00:02:17,680 Nasa has declared a state of emergency over Texas. 37 00:02:19,000 --> 00:02:22,880 REPORTER: There is something amiss. We are watching Mission Control. 38 00:02:22,880 --> 00:02:26,440 Nasa has gone through this before, 17 years ago, 39 00:02:26,440 --> 00:02:28,080 with the space shuttle Challenger. 40 00:02:28,080 --> 00:02:31,800 You can see in their eyes that it is hectic and it is tense. 41 00:02:32,920 --> 00:02:34,520 If you work in human space flight, 42 00:02:34,520 --> 00:02:37,240 this is the worst possible thing that can ever happen. 43 00:02:51,600 --> 00:02:55,040 The shuttle is the most complicated space machine ever built. 44 00:03:00,840 --> 00:03:03,360 The world's greatest electric flying machine. 45 00:03:09,720 --> 00:03:12,880 It has been a bad day for Nasa. 46 00:03:12,880 --> 00:03:14,760 A sense of tragedy in the space programme, 47 00:03:14,760 --> 00:03:16,800 and as word spreads across the nation... 48 00:03:20,440 --> 00:03:22,920 There are no simple and easy answers. 49 00:03:22,920 --> 00:03:25,240 We are doing everything we possibly can to find out 50 00:03:25,240 --> 00:03:27,000 what caused this accident. 51 00:03:32,440 --> 00:03:35,040 All the warning signs were there. 52 00:03:35,040 --> 00:03:37,960 This didn't have to happen. We let it happen. 53 00:03:49,720 --> 00:03:51,600 Lean in. Bunch up. Arms. 54 00:03:52,760 --> 00:03:54,560 Hug up. Bunch up. Bunch up. 55 00:03:54,560 --> 00:03:56,440 Lean in there, everyone. 56 00:03:54,560 --> 00:03:56,440 LAUGHTER, CHATTER 57 00:03:56,440 --> 00:03:57,960 All right! 58 00:03:57,960 --> 00:03:59,280 Here we go! 59 00:03:57,960 --> 00:03:59,280 CAMERA FLICKERS 60 00:03:59,280 --> 00:04:01,000 All right, very good. 61 00:04:01,000 --> 00:04:02,760 OK, don't move too far. 62 00:04:04,120 --> 00:04:06,120 Who's first? OK, here we go. 63 00:04:06,120 --> 00:04:08,400 Grins again. Ready, one, two... CAMERA FLICKERS 64 00:04:08,400 --> 00:04:10,040 OK, thank you... 65 00:04:10,040 --> 00:04:13,480 I was an astronaut crew secretary. 66 00:04:13,480 --> 00:04:15,120 All right... Cheese! 67 00:04:13,480 --> 00:04:15,120 LAUGHTER 68 00:04:15,120 --> 00:04:16,920 I would see the crew daily. 69 00:04:16,920 --> 00:04:19,640 Hold on, let me take the glasses off. 70 00:04:19,640 --> 00:04:21,640 That would be easier. 71 00:04:21,640 --> 00:04:23,840 I'm not a starstruck kind of person, right? 72 00:04:23,840 --> 00:04:28,080 But you fly 12,500 miles an hour? 73 00:04:28,080 --> 00:04:31,200 I was like, "Yeah! I like you." 74 00:04:31,200 --> 00:04:33,240 SHE LAUGHS 75 00:04:33,240 --> 00:04:35,320 Woohoo, baby! 76 00:04:33,240 --> 00:04:35,320 LAUGHTER 77 00:04:36,520 --> 00:04:41,600 When they got selected as a crew, I went and got their astronaut bio 78 00:04:41,600 --> 00:04:43,840 and I read what they did with their lives. 79 00:04:45,160 --> 00:04:48,400 I went over, and I'm like, "Oh, doctor!" 80 00:04:48,400 --> 00:04:51,040 Dr Dave Brown, surgeon. 81 00:04:51,040 --> 00:04:53,520 Dr Kalpana Chawla, PhD. 82 00:04:53,520 --> 00:04:57,560 Laurel... Laurel was a submarine doctor. 83 00:04:57,560 --> 00:05:00,240 I thought that was so cool. 84 00:05:00,240 --> 00:05:02,560 Mike, he was an Air Force pilot. 85 00:05:02,560 --> 00:05:06,360 And then Willie, he was like a test pilot. 86 00:05:06,360 --> 00:05:08,320 Rick, he'd already been up to space. 87 00:05:08,320 --> 00:05:09,520 And then there was Ilan - 88 00:05:09,520 --> 00:05:12,160 you know, he was already a hero in his country. 89 00:05:12,160 --> 00:05:16,840 So, I was like, "Wow, we have the juice here! This will work." 90 00:05:26,720 --> 00:05:29,560 They came together to start training. 91 00:05:29,560 --> 00:05:31,200 Welcome aboard. 92 00:05:31,200 --> 00:05:34,160 Good morning. You ready for us to pull down these window shades 93 00:05:34,160 --> 00:05:35,480 and get going here? 94 00:05:35,480 --> 00:05:38,440 This is your sleeping liner. And this is the sleeping pad. 95 00:05:38,440 --> 00:05:40,720 Post-flight, if you can provide us some comments, 96 00:05:40,720 --> 00:05:42,840 we'd really appreciate if this worked for you. 97 00:05:42,840 --> 00:05:45,160 Laurel, do you want camera? 98 00:05:45,160 --> 00:05:47,360 Four of us are flying for the first time, 99 00:05:47,360 --> 00:05:49,400 and that could be seen as a disadvantage. 100 00:05:49,400 --> 00:05:51,280 In some ways, it's an incredible advantage 101 00:05:51,280 --> 00:05:55,080 because we have a wealth of enthusiasm and excitement 102 00:05:55,080 --> 00:05:57,840 that other, more seasoned crews may not have. 103 00:05:57,840 --> 00:06:00,240 When you put the helmet on the EMU, it interferes... 104 00:06:00,240 --> 00:06:03,600 I was married to Laurel Clark, who was on the Columbia mission. 105 00:06:05,000 --> 00:06:07,880 We met in Navy dive school. 106 00:06:07,880 --> 00:06:10,280 She beat us in the swimming, the guys. 107 00:06:10,280 --> 00:06:13,440 And that was kind of irritating. 108 00:06:13,440 --> 00:06:15,640 She was just tenacious. 109 00:06:15,640 --> 00:06:18,000 She always had a smile on her face no matter what happened. 110 00:06:18,000 --> 00:06:19,280 It was really beautiful. 111 00:06:19,280 --> 00:06:21,320 THEY LAUGH 112 00:06:21,320 --> 00:06:24,040 I feel very fortunate to be assigned to this mission. 113 00:06:24,040 --> 00:06:28,600 I'm expecting it to be an experience of my lifetime so far. 114 00:06:28,600 --> 00:06:31,680 If you're a rookie astronaut and you've never flown before, 115 00:06:31,680 --> 00:06:33,760 the first mission is the best mission. 116 00:06:33,760 --> 00:06:37,600 It could have been hauling garbage to some planet 117 00:06:37,600 --> 00:06:39,040 and she would have loved it. 118 00:06:39,040 --> 00:06:41,040 Ready, ready, mark. 119 00:06:41,040 --> 00:06:42,360 We were so excited. 120 00:06:45,800 --> 00:06:47,680 I remember going into Nasa, 121 00:06:47,680 --> 00:06:52,680 taking a series of photos with my mom and dad after school. 122 00:06:52,680 --> 00:06:54,680 I was seven. 123 00:06:54,680 --> 00:06:58,600 She had her orange jumpsuit on with the helmet. 124 00:06:58,600 --> 00:07:00,400 I was worried. I was, like, thinking, like, 125 00:07:00,400 --> 00:07:02,600 "How is her hair going to fit in there?" 126 00:07:04,440 --> 00:07:07,560 She made everything joyful all the time. 127 00:07:08,760 --> 00:07:10,320 She was my whole world. 128 00:07:15,920 --> 00:07:18,800 I remember the Columbia mission being announced. 129 00:07:18,800 --> 00:07:20,080 I mean, I knew them all. 130 00:07:20,080 --> 00:07:25,120 In my class was Dave Brown, Willie McCool and Laurel Clark. 131 00:07:25,120 --> 00:07:26,840 We were all there at the same time. 132 00:07:28,800 --> 00:07:31,160 You get your blue flight suit... HE CHUCKLES 133 00:07:31,160 --> 00:07:34,680 ..that's pretty exciting. I mean, you're like, "Yes!" 134 00:07:34,680 --> 00:07:37,360 Yeah. It's a... It's a big deal. 135 00:07:37,360 --> 00:07:40,360 This is like the lifelong dream for all of us. 136 00:07:51,400 --> 00:07:56,440 I've spent 54 days in space over four missions. 137 00:07:57,800 --> 00:08:01,680 Yeah, I mean, it's the most fun thing I've ever done, by far. 138 00:08:06,800 --> 00:08:09,560 There's a lot of risk involved. 139 00:08:09,560 --> 00:08:13,680 But I really believe that humans are explorers. 140 00:08:13,680 --> 00:08:16,080 You want to see what's over the next hill, 141 00:08:16,080 --> 00:08:18,280 you want to see what's across the ocean, 142 00:08:18,280 --> 00:08:20,720 you want to see what's on the surface of the moon. 143 00:08:20,720 --> 00:08:22,880 Almost like it's in our DNA. 144 00:08:25,440 --> 00:08:26,520 And in this country - 145 00:08:26,520 --> 00:08:28,560 I mean, especially the United States of America - 146 00:08:28,560 --> 00:08:30,560 I mean, we're really good at this stuff. 147 00:08:31,800 --> 00:08:34,720 Nasa is a very popular government agency. 148 00:08:36,800 --> 00:08:39,160 I mean, think about this for a second - 149 00:08:39,160 --> 00:08:42,600 we sent people to the moon in the 1960s. 150 00:08:42,600 --> 00:08:44,400 Think about how hard that was. 151 00:08:48,560 --> 00:08:52,760 Americans like that we're a country that does hard things. 152 00:08:52,760 --> 00:08:55,120 APPLAUSE 153 00:08:55,120 --> 00:08:57,280 And Nasa does some hard stuff. 154 00:08:58,240 --> 00:09:01,080 We've got the best scientists and the best engineers. 155 00:09:01,080 --> 00:09:02,960 Aw, it's beautiful, Mike. It really is. 156 00:09:02,960 --> 00:09:04,200 They've got the flag up now... 157 00:09:04,200 --> 00:09:07,960 It's about what it means for us as a nation to lead in space 158 00:09:07,960 --> 00:09:10,960 and lead in this kind of technology. 159 00:09:10,960 --> 00:09:14,640 You know, we have a record of success. 160 00:09:14,640 --> 00:09:16,680 MUSIC: Kids in America by Kim Wilde 161 00:09:20,600 --> 00:09:23,400 # Friday night and everyone's moving 162 00:09:23,400 --> 00:09:28,000 # I can feel the heat, but it's soothing, heading down 163 00:09:28,000 --> 00:09:29,760 # I search for... # 164 00:09:29,760 --> 00:09:32,240 This is a once-in-a-lifetime happening. 165 00:09:32,240 --> 00:09:34,360 The maiden voyage of the space shuttle... 166 00:09:34,360 --> 00:09:37,800 Columbia will open a new chapter in American space travel. 167 00:09:37,800 --> 00:09:39,960 # We're the kids in America Whoa... # 168 00:09:39,960 --> 00:09:42,680 Did you come here to watch the space shuttle going off? 169 00:09:42,680 --> 00:09:45,640 Yeah. Ooh! We've come a long way to see it. 170 00:09:45,640 --> 00:09:49,000 The shuttle is the most complicated space machine ever built. 171 00:09:49,000 --> 00:09:52,640 It cost $10 billion to develop, and here at the Cape, 172 00:09:52,640 --> 00:09:55,240 it will show whether or not it can fly. 173 00:09:56,240 --> 00:09:58,240 I had an emotional feeling with Columbia 174 00:09:58,240 --> 00:10:00,000 because she was the number one. 175 00:10:00,000 --> 00:10:03,600 She was paving the way to the utilisation of space 176 00:10:03,600 --> 00:10:06,360 in a more practical way - cheaper, better. 177 00:10:08,520 --> 00:10:12,640 Previously, rockets were expendable, one-time use. 178 00:10:12,640 --> 00:10:15,600 But the space shuttle was reusable in its design, 179 00:10:15,600 --> 00:10:17,640 up to 100 times. 180 00:10:17,640 --> 00:10:20,920 It was a quantum leap forward in space travel. 181 00:10:23,960 --> 00:10:25,760 The first flight of Columbia... 182 00:10:26,840 --> 00:10:31,040 ..there's cars all over the place and there are people outside. 183 00:10:31,040 --> 00:10:34,240 And I'd been sleeping in the clover by the car 184 00:10:34,240 --> 00:10:36,440 cos we didn't have a hotel room. 185 00:10:36,440 --> 00:10:39,200 I have binoculars and I have a camera. 186 00:10:39,200 --> 00:10:40,840 We're three miles away. 187 00:10:41,880 --> 00:10:45,120 MISSION CONTROL: T-minus ten, nine, eight, seven, 188 00:10:45,120 --> 00:10:47,520 six, five, four... 189 00:10:47,520 --> 00:10:50,400 We've gone for main engine start... SPECTATORS EXCLAIM 190 00:11:15,160 --> 00:11:17,680 WHISTLING AND CHEERING 191 00:11:17,680 --> 00:11:19,240 And it's up and away. 192 00:11:19,240 --> 00:11:22,360 All of us had been saying, "Go, go, Columbia, go!" 193 00:11:26,760 --> 00:11:30,400 People had seen Apollo launches exploring the moon. 194 00:11:30,400 --> 00:11:33,400 The space shuttle reignited that interest. 195 00:11:34,680 --> 00:11:38,000 It was the pride of the United States. 196 00:11:38,000 --> 00:11:41,160 I still think it's one of the most complex machines 197 00:11:41,160 --> 00:11:43,000 ever built by the human race. 198 00:11:54,640 --> 00:11:57,320 History will be made today when the Space Shuttle Columbia 199 00:11:57,320 --> 00:11:59,880 comes down for the first time from space. 200 00:11:59,880 --> 00:12:03,000 You can see the faint speck in the middle of the dark spot. 201 00:12:03,000 --> 00:12:05,080 This was a grand experiment, 202 00:12:05,080 --> 00:12:09,480 because no-one had ever had to land a spacecraft like a glider before. 203 00:12:09,480 --> 00:12:12,360 This is the single most critical time for the spacecraft 204 00:12:12,360 --> 00:12:15,120 to see whether...the wings hold up, the heat tiles stay on, 205 00:12:15,120 --> 00:12:16,560 the structure takes it. 206 00:12:16,560 --> 00:12:20,120 As the shuttle was entering the Earth's atmosphere, 207 00:12:20,120 --> 00:12:24,240 it would get to about 3,000 degrees at the highest heating point. 208 00:12:24,240 --> 00:12:27,760 Most metallic structures without protection 209 00:12:27,760 --> 00:12:31,080 start losing their properties and may even start melting... 210 00:12:31,080 --> 00:12:33,880 Columbia, you're really looking good, right on the money. 211 00:12:33,880 --> 00:12:36,840 ..so they devised the heat shield, which was made of tiles 212 00:12:36,840 --> 00:12:40,720 to protect the shuttle from breaking up during entry. 213 00:12:40,720 --> 00:12:43,400 CHEERING 214 00:12:40,720 --> 00:12:43,400 Welcome home, Columbia. 215 00:12:43,400 --> 00:12:46,360 Beautiful, beautiful! 216 00:12:46,360 --> 00:12:50,400 We can assume their re-entry through the atmosphere worked like a charm. 217 00:12:50,400 --> 00:12:52,080 CHEERING 218 00:12:53,520 --> 00:12:55,800 The reusable space truck will be given a free ride 219 00:12:55,800 --> 00:12:58,720 back to the Kennedy Space Center, where a second launch is planned, 220 00:12:58,720 --> 00:13:00,320 perhaps as early as August. 221 00:13:03,440 --> 00:13:07,120 In the beginning, there were four operating shuttles - 222 00:13:07,120 --> 00:13:10,560 Columbia, Challenger, Atlantis and Discovery. 223 00:13:10,560 --> 00:13:13,600 One of the goals was to fly 20 missions a year. 224 00:13:15,320 --> 00:13:17,720 Sometimes, they were sending satellites. 225 00:13:17,720 --> 00:13:22,000 Quite a few classified missions for the Department of Defense. 226 00:13:22,000 --> 00:13:25,200 Eventually, they were used for assembling and building 227 00:13:25,200 --> 00:13:28,240 the International Space Station. 228 00:13:28,240 --> 00:13:30,920 But reusability puts demands on the design - 229 00:13:30,920 --> 00:13:33,680 that it has to be robust and resilient 230 00:13:33,680 --> 00:13:37,080 and come back intact and fully operational. 231 00:13:37,080 --> 00:13:38,560 That's a huge demand. 232 00:13:54,520 --> 00:13:59,080 The mission aboard the orbiter Columbia is a 24/7 science marathon. 233 00:13:59,080 --> 00:14:03,120 Working in a 2,000-cubic foot lab attached to the cargo hold, 234 00:14:03,120 --> 00:14:05,520 the crew will study fires, moss growth, 235 00:14:05,520 --> 00:14:10,320 human prostate cancer cells and how rats adapt to weightlessness. 236 00:14:10,320 --> 00:14:13,040 In all, there are more than 59 experiments. 237 00:14:15,800 --> 00:14:20,360 My husband, Rick, was the commander of the Space Shuttle Columbia. 238 00:14:20,360 --> 00:14:21,880 Howdy! 239 00:14:20,360 --> 00:14:21,880 LAUGHTER 240 00:14:21,880 --> 00:14:24,520 Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd ever meet an astronaut, 241 00:14:24,520 --> 00:14:27,080 much less marry one. 242 00:14:27,080 --> 00:14:29,720 My mother always told me, when you go out with someone, 243 00:14:29,720 --> 00:14:32,240 to ask them about themselves, because guys really like that. 244 00:14:32,240 --> 00:14:35,120 SHE LAUGHS 245 00:14:32,240 --> 00:14:35,120 So that's what I did. 246 00:14:35,120 --> 00:14:36,960 And so he told me, he said that he wanted, 247 00:14:36,960 --> 00:14:40,320 since he was four years old, that he wanted to be an astronaut. 248 00:14:40,320 --> 00:14:43,600 Hi, my name is Rick Husband. I'm the commander of STS-107. 249 00:14:43,600 --> 00:14:46,920 We're going to be flying a 16-day science mission. 250 00:14:48,120 --> 00:14:50,960 I was, I think, probably 10 or 11. 251 00:14:52,960 --> 00:14:56,040 I knew it was a big, in-charge position 252 00:14:56,040 --> 00:15:00,360 and that he would be the leader of the team. 253 00:15:00,360 --> 00:15:04,640 You think of something like Buzz Lightyear in Star Command. 254 00:15:04,640 --> 00:15:07,840 You're like, "Wow, Dad's the commander of a shuttle!" 255 00:15:09,160 --> 00:15:12,720 OK, let's do like this, you know? 256 00:15:12,720 --> 00:15:16,680 While they were in training, Dave Brown, one of the astronauts, 257 00:15:16,680 --> 00:15:20,120 came to Rick and asked if it was OK if he recorded footage of the crew 258 00:15:20,120 --> 00:15:21,400 throughout the mission. 259 00:15:23,800 --> 00:15:26,000 We're just watching our... 260 00:15:26,000 --> 00:15:28,960 No! We're just trying to ignore our best pal Dave, 261 00:15:28,960 --> 00:15:32,240 who is busy documenting our journey toward space. 262 00:15:32,240 --> 00:15:34,520 He was an amateur videographer, but not that amateur. 263 00:15:34,520 --> 00:15:36,440 He was really good at it. 264 00:15:36,440 --> 00:15:40,160 Dr Dave! Man! This is really above and beyond. 265 00:15:40,160 --> 00:15:41,880 I know. 6.30. 266 00:15:41,880 --> 00:15:45,000 Dave, your camera is affecting me. SHE LAUGHS 267 00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:46,800 It is? Yeah. Why? 268 00:15:47,840 --> 00:15:49,000 You know, Rick just... 269 00:15:49,000 --> 00:15:52,080 He wanted to make sure that the crew was comfortable with it... 270 00:15:52,080 --> 00:15:55,520 Chicken and rice, Italian vegetables, all in a tortilla. 271 00:15:55,520 --> 00:15:56,680 ..which they were. 272 00:15:56,680 --> 00:15:59,840 They trusted Dave. They felt comfortable with him doing that. 273 00:16:07,000 --> 00:16:08,280 OK, you're on. 274 00:16:10,720 --> 00:16:14,280 Rolling. Take three, Dave and Laurel. 275 00:16:14,280 --> 00:16:16,160 Action! 276 00:16:16,160 --> 00:16:19,480 We're here in the Wind River mountains with the crew of STS-107. 277 00:16:19,480 --> 00:16:22,120 Brought to you by the National Outdoor Leadership School. 278 00:16:22,120 --> 00:16:23,760 Well, Laurel, are you ready? 279 00:16:23,760 --> 00:16:26,080 Dave, my palms are sweaty, 280 00:16:26,080 --> 00:16:27,320 my knees are weak. 281 00:16:27,320 --> 00:16:29,680 I'm ready for an outdoor adventure. 282 00:16:29,680 --> 00:16:31,800 CHEERING, APPLAUSE 283 00:16:34,720 --> 00:16:38,960 The crew went on an outdoor team-building trip in Wyoming. 284 00:16:38,960 --> 00:16:41,320 Now, Willie's not safe until we're all safe. 285 00:16:41,320 --> 00:16:43,720 It was, I think, close to two weeks long. 286 00:16:43,720 --> 00:16:45,240 And it comes around. 287 00:16:45,240 --> 00:16:47,040 Right down into this valley. 288 00:16:47,040 --> 00:16:50,040 My dad had come up with the idea to help them bond, 289 00:16:50,040 --> 00:16:53,320 and Dave filmed the crew while they were doing that. 290 00:16:53,320 --> 00:16:54,840 LAUGHTER 291 00:16:54,840 --> 00:16:56,240 This is such a nightmare. 292 00:16:56,240 --> 00:16:58,480 I'm trying to make these stupid brownies 293 00:16:58,480 --> 00:17:01,200 because everybody wanted brownies for breakfast. 294 00:17:01,200 --> 00:17:02,840 You're not hungry? 295 00:17:02,840 --> 00:17:04,080 I'm not that hungry. 296 00:17:04,080 --> 00:17:06,160 No? But I would love to have some breakfast brownies. 297 00:17:06,160 --> 00:17:08,320 That would be delicious. Well, there's some right here. 298 00:17:08,320 --> 00:17:10,320 SHE LAUGHS 299 00:17:10,320 --> 00:17:11,360 Wow! 300 00:17:12,640 --> 00:17:14,360 Looks kind of like bear scat. 301 00:17:14,360 --> 00:17:16,440 THEY LAUGH 302 00:17:16,440 --> 00:17:17,720 But...you know. 303 00:17:17,720 --> 00:17:22,200 On the trip in Wyoming, they had to work together as a team. 304 00:17:22,200 --> 00:17:24,800 Mmm! 305 00:17:22,200 --> 00:17:24,800 LAUGHTER 306 00:17:26,360 --> 00:17:29,760 When you're on the space shuttle, you really have to have a high level 307 00:17:29,760 --> 00:17:33,320 of what they call behavioural health... 308 00:17:33,320 --> 00:17:34,600 And what do you think, Willie? 309 00:17:37,920 --> 00:17:40,040 ..where you're not just technically competent, 310 00:17:40,040 --> 00:17:41,840 but you're low-maintenance... 311 00:17:43,760 --> 00:17:46,440 ..cos you are inherently in a confined space. 312 00:17:46,440 --> 00:17:49,920 You can't say, "I'm just going to take a time out and go outside 313 00:17:49,920 --> 00:17:53,640 "and not deal with your, you know, BS any more." 314 00:17:54,640 --> 00:17:57,240 You would not believe the things that have happened up there. 315 00:17:57,240 --> 00:17:58,840 There have been fights. 316 00:17:58,840 --> 00:18:00,440 There was a cosmonaut who talked about 317 00:18:00,440 --> 00:18:03,400 how he was going to kill his fellow cosmonaut. 318 00:18:05,760 --> 00:18:09,080 So Nasa had started to realise, "We got to get a handle on this. 319 00:18:09,080 --> 00:18:11,120 "And it's really important." 320 00:18:15,480 --> 00:18:17,800 CHEERING 321 00:18:28,040 --> 00:18:33,520 When they came back, it was like their bond... 322 00:18:33,520 --> 00:18:35,720 ..was forever. 323 00:18:35,720 --> 00:18:37,880 They walked in sync with each other. 324 00:18:37,880 --> 00:18:40,920 It was like, "Left, right, left, right." 325 00:18:40,920 --> 00:18:44,800 They were the Columbia crew. They were STS-107. 326 00:18:44,800 --> 00:18:46,960 They were a unit. 327 00:18:46,960 --> 00:18:50,000 ALL: One, two, three! 328 00:18:50,000 --> 00:18:51,360 Excellent! 329 00:18:51,360 --> 00:18:53,240 Woohoo! 330 00:18:59,960 --> 00:19:02,680 Well... Here we are. Here we are. 331 00:19:02,680 --> 00:19:05,600 The EVA team for STS-107. That's right. 332 00:19:09,960 --> 00:19:12,240 Michael Anderson was my husband. 333 00:19:13,880 --> 00:19:17,440 We got to go watch him, to look at part of the training, 334 00:19:17,440 --> 00:19:22,120 the underwater experience to simulate zero gravity. 335 00:19:22,120 --> 00:19:23,200 He was excited. 336 00:19:23,200 --> 00:19:25,640 But if you looked at him, you would think calm and collected. 337 00:19:25,640 --> 00:19:26,840 But he was excited. 338 00:19:28,440 --> 00:19:32,080 He would tease the kids we were going to go to Mars as a family. 339 00:19:32,080 --> 00:19:35,040 Halfway he was joking, but halfway he was thinking, 340 00:19:35,040 --> 00:19:36,760 "Hmm! This would be kind of cool." 341 00:19:38,080 --> 00:19:41,680 Check O2 actuator is in EVA. 342 00:19:41,680 --> 00:19:44,760 He loved it. It was his dream. 343 00:19:44,760 --> 00:19:46,680 Complete VD2. 344 00:19:46,680 --> 00:19:49,520 But he thought about it. I mean, he thought about the safety issues 345 00:19:49,520 --> 00:19:53,720 and he knew he was in a dangerous career field. 346 00:19:53,720 --> 00:19:55,920 I'm probably different than most astronauts. 347 00:19:55,920 --> 00:19:57,240 I really don't enjoy launches. 348 00:19:57,240 --> 00:20:00,640 You know, I think a launch is a terrible way to get to space. 349 00:20:00,640 --> 00:20:03,320 When you launch in a rocket, you're not really flying that rocket. 350 00:20:03,320 --> 00:20:05,040 You're just sort of hanging on. 351 00:20:05,040 --> 00:20:08,280 Even though we've gone to great pains to make it as safe as we can, 352 00:20:08,280 --> 00:20:10,680 there's always the potential for something going wrong. 353 00:20:10,680 --> 00:20:12,760 You know, so we try not to think about those things. 354 00:20:12,760 --> 00:20:16,240 We train and try to prepare for the things that may go wrong. 355 00:20:16,240 --> 00:20:17,840 But there's always that unknown, 356 00:20:17,840 --> 00:20:20,400 and I guess it's that unknown that I don't like. 357 00:20:22,320 --> 00:20:24,400 I went with Michael to Florida for the first time 358 00:20:24,400 --> 00:20:26,400 and actually saw the shuttle. 359 00:20:26,400 --> 00:20:29,760 And when I saw it, I was like, "You really want to get up in this?" 360 00:20:29,760 --> 00:20:34,240 "You really, really, really want to do this?", I remember saying to him. 361 00:20:34,240 --> 00:20:36,400 Because... 362 00:20:36,400 --> 00:20:43,360 ..somehow it didn't look as glamorous as it did on television. 363 00:20:43,360 --> 00:20:46,680 I was like, "Wow, that's, you know, the oldest one in the fleet, 364 00:20:46,680 --> 00:20:49,040 "and I don't know about this." 365 00:20:49,040 --> 00:20:51,400 It looked smaller to me. 366 00:20:51,400 --> 00:20:54,280 You know, it looked a little older. 367 00:20:54,280 --> 00:20:57,360 I was like, "OK, this is getting really real." 368 00:20:57,360 --> 00:21:02,120 And then I remember thinking about what happened to Challenger. 369 00:21:11,200 --> 00:21:13,840 Space Shuttle Challenger is just a few seconds away 370 00:21:13,840 --> 00:21:16,040 from blasting off from the Kennedy Space Center 371 00:21:16,040 --> 00:21:17,400 near Cape Canaveral, Florida. 372 00:21:17,400 --> 00:21:19,680 Let's take a look right now. 373 00:21:19,680 --> 00:21:26,120 CROWD: Five, four, three, two one... Wooooh! 374 00:21:31,920 --> 00:21:34,920 RADIO: Lift off confirmed. Lift off. 375 00:21:34,920 --> 00:21:37,440 Engines throttling up, three engines now at 104%. 376 00:21:37,440 --> 00:21:39,880 Challenger go at throttle up. 377 00:21:39,880 --> 00:21:41,960 Roger, go at throttle up. 378 00:21:44,080 --> 00:21:47,400 CROWD SCREAMS 379 00:22:01,560 --> 00:22:03,480 The vehicle has exploded. 380 00:22:03,480 --> 00:22:05,760 We hear from Launch Control the vehicle has exploded. 381 00:22:05,760 --> 00:22:09,240 That's the orbiter itself. The shuttle Challenger has exploded. 382 00:22:09,240 --> 00:22:13,720 We must assume... Contingency. ..that the crew is not alive. 383 00:22:14,840 --> 00:22:18,880 This is unheralded in the history of the space programme. 384 00:22:18,880 --> 00:22:22,640 Ladies and gentlemen, I have covered the space shuttle launches 385 00:22:22,640 --> 00:22:27,400 since the very first launch, since before the first launch itself, 386 00:22:27,400 --> 00:22:31,240 going way back, and nothing like this has ever happened. 387 00:22:31,240 --> 00:22:34,160 WAILING 388 00:22:34,160 --> 00:22:36,680 It was a sad day for all Americans. 389 00:22:36,680 --> 00:22:38,600 This was our space programme. 390 00:22:38,600 --> 00:22:40,600 This was our national space programme. 391 00:22:40,600 --> 00:22:43,440 And here they lost their lives doing it for our country. 392 00:22:45,800 --> 00:22:49,560 When I thought about Challenger, I talked to Michael. 393 00:22:49,560 --> 00:22:52,480 I said, "You know what? You do what you're doing, 394 00:22:52,480 --> 00:22:54,520 "I'm glad you're loving and liking it, 395 00:22:54,520 --> 00:22:57,840 "but you got a wife and two little kids here if something happens.' 396 00:23:01,640 --> 00:23:04,400 We prayed a lot about it. 397 00:23:04,400 --> 00:23:07,760 He talked to us about his faith, things like, "Hey, God has got me. 398 00:23:07,760 --> 00:23:10,480 "Like, if something happens, God is going to take care of me, 399 00:23:10,480 --> 00:23:13,280 "he's going to take care of, you know, you guys as a family, 400 00:23:13,280 --> 00:23:16,240 "you'll be OK. There are risks to this. Like, I chose 401 00:23:16,240 --> 00:23:18,960 "a profession that, you know, is dangerous sometimes." 402 00:23:18,960 --> 00:23:21,720 He was like, "But we don't want to be fearful about it." 403 00:23:23,440 --> 00:23:27,480 Do you remember in the conversation, did you nearly say, "I'm not sure," 404 00:23:27,480 --> 00:23:30,000 or, like, maybe, "Don't"? 405 00:23:30,000 --> 00:23:32,960 How do you stop somebody from doing something that they've worked 406 00:23:32,960 --> 00:23:37,080 so hard to do and achieve, and was so dedicated and committed to? 407 00:23:37,080 --> 00:23:39,000 I wouldn't have stopped him. 408 00:23:42,200 --> 00:23:44,240 I was working at Nasa then. 409 00:23:46,040 --> 00:23:48,720 I had done this threat assessment. 410 00:23:48,720 --> 00:23:52,520 Any commercial airliner, your chances of a bad outcome 411 00:23:52,520 --> 00:23:56,280 are one in a million, probably closer to one in 10 million. 412 00:23:56,280 --> 00:23:59,320 Scuba diving and flying in general aviation, 413 00:23:59,320 --> 00:24:02,520 military flying, is one in 100,000. 414 00:24:02,520 --> 00:24:04,200 And flying in a space shuttle? 415 00:24:04,200 --> 00:24:10,040 One in 100. Your chances of a bad outcome are one in 100. 416 00:24:10,040 --> 00:24:13,120 Doing OK, ma'am? I'm OK. Great. 417 00:24:13,120 --> 00:24:16,880 I told Laurel and she said to me, she goes, 418 00:24:16,880 --> 00:24:20,520 "Well, if it really is that risky, what doesn't Nasa tell that to me?" 419 00:24:20,520 --> 00:24:22,600 And I said, "Well, I don't know, 420 00:24:22,600 --> 00:24:26,080 "but I'm at Nasa and this is the analysis I've done." 421 00:24:29,640 --> 00:24:31,200 You know, if somebody told me, 422 00:24:31,200 --> 00:24:33,760 "Hey, you can go on this roller-coaster ride 423 00:24:33,760 --> 00:24:38,680 "and there's one in 100 chance that you'll die," 424 00:24:38,680 --> 00:24:42,000 well, there's no chance in the world, 425 00:24:42,000 --> 00:24:45,200 no chance in hell, I would do that. 426 00:24:45,200 --> 00:24:47,560 Flying on the space shuttle, 427 00:24:47,560 --> 00:24:51,840 the benefit we get for our country is enormous. 428 00:24:54,160 --> 00:24:55,760 You know, I think a lot of us feel 429 00:24:55,760 --> 00:25:00,240 that this is a tremendous amount of risk... 430 00:25:01,480 --> 00:25:04,720 ..and there will be, you know, 431 00:25:04,720 --> 00:25:07,920 accidents and people will lose their lives, 432 00:25:07,920 --> 00:25:10,200 but I also think that people generally think 433 00:25:10,200 --> 00:25:12,080 it's not going to be them. 434 00:25:16,720 --> 00:25:20,160 Nasa has grounded its four shuttles until at least September 435 00:25:20,160 --> 00:25:22,960 because of small cracks that have been found in the fuel lines. 436 00:25:22,960 --> 00:25:25,040 The concern is the cracks could grow 437 00:25:25,040 --> 00:25:27,920 and splinter into hazardous chunks of metal. 438 00:25:31,160 --> 00:25:34,080 They got a bunch of us, like, a dozen engineers, 439 00:25:34,080 --> 00:25:38,320 to go fly down to Kennedy Space Center to go look at cracks. 440 00:25:38,320 --> 00:25:41,240 There was copious amounts of engineering discussion 441 00:25:41,240 --> 00:25:43,120 and testing going on. 442 00:25:45,440 --> 00:25:48,640 If a main engine were to explode, that would destroy the vehicle, 443 00:25:48,640 --> 00:25:51,840 it'd be out of control. We'd lose the vehicle and the crew. 444 00:25:52,920 --> 00:25:55,080 It's too dangerous to fly any shuttle 445 00:25:55,080 --> 00:25:57,120 until we get a handle on this. 446 00:25:57,120 --> 00:26:00,480 It grounded the entire fleet, including Columbia. 447 00:26:01,520 --> 00:26:04,600 They found a crack in one of our older vehicles 448 00:26:04,600 --> 00:26:07,720 that are undergoing some rehab work, 449 00:26:07,720 --> 00:26:11,600 and so there's concern, you know obviously, if there's maybe cracks 450 00:26:11,600 --> 00:26:13,200 in some of the other vehicles. 451 00:26:15,480 --> 00:26:18,520 It was, like, delayed and delayed and delayed. 452 00:26:19,920 --> 00:26:21,880 You're kind of glad that they're dealing with 453 00:26:21,880 --> 00:26:24,760 whatever the issue is and you're hoping that everything's OK. 454 00:26:24,760 --> 00:26:27,840 And, you know, it makes it a little bit more nerve-racking. 455 00:26:32,080 --> 00:26:34,920 There were many, many meetings and many thousands of hours spent 456 00:26:34,920 --> 00:26:38,600 on this, but Nasa management and engineering came up with solutions. 457 00:26:40,680 --> 00:26:44,280 Once these propulsion cracks were fixed and repaired, 458 00:26:44,280 --> 00:26:46,680 we can resume flight. 459 00:26:46,680 --> 00:26:49,320 But I had oversight into all the missions 460 00:26:49,320 --> 00:26:52,440 and there were numerous problems with the other shuttle fleet. 461 00:26:52,440 --> 00:26:54,840 They were just, one after another, it just wouldn't end - 462 00:26:54,840 --> 00:26:58,280 the damages and things that were out of whack. 463 00:26:58,280 --> 00:27:01,000 The thermal protection system, the tiles, 464 00:27:01,000 --> 00:27:04,600 were being damaged every flight. 465 00:27:04,600 --> 00:27:07,040 One time, a large piece of foam 466 00:27:07,040 --> 00:27:08,800 from the gigantic fuel tank 467 00:27:08,800 --> 00:27:11,760 dented the solid rocket boosters on liftoff. 468 00:27:13,760 --> 00:27:16,360 Another time, a vulture hit the tank. 469 00:27:19,040 --> 00:27:21,640 If it hit the windows? Catastrophe. 470 00:27:23,720 --> 00:27:28,960 This is a complex vehicle that always needs a lot of caretaking. 471 00:27:37,920 --> 00:27:41,000 I'm Sean O'Keefe. I was the administrator 472 00:27:41,000 --> 00:27:44,000 of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration - 473 00:27:44,000 --> 00:27:46,320 the leader of the agency at that time. 474 00:27:48,560 --> 00:27:52,720 Every single mission that I was there for 475 00:27:52,720 --> 00:27:56,080 was scrubbed, rescheduled, 476 00:27:56,080 --> 00:28:01,560 delayed because something wasn't exactly right. 477 00:28:01,560 --> 00:28:04,960 What did catch my attention in terms of the shuttle, 478 00:28:04,960 --> 00:28:08,800 from the very first time I saw them up close, 479 00:28:08,800 --> 00:28:12,480 was this was 1970s technology. 480 00:28:12,480 --> 00:28:15,040 This was a lot of moving parts - 481 00:28:15,040 --> 00:28:17,280 a lot of mechanical moving parts. 482 00:28:17,280 --> 00:28:19,520 And any time you have that happen, 483 00:28:19,520 --> 00:28:23,000 it's...challenging to keep it flying. 484 00:28:43,120 --> 00:28:45,720 Have you already done the missed chamber leak, please? 485 00:28:47,880 --> 00:28:51,160 We don't have too much time because launch is coming. 486 00:28:51,160 --> 00:28:54,920 36, 37 days to launch 487 00:28:54,920 --> 00:28:57,960 and it's starting to get exciting. 488 00:28:59,400 --> 00:29:01,760 Why is it exciting? 489 00:29:01,760 --> 00:29:04,640 What do you mean, why is it exciting? To go to space. 490 00:29:04,640 --> 00:29:08,240 For the first time at least, for us, for me, it's exciting. 491 00:29:12,120 --> 00:29:15,760 Three weeks from the launch, we were flying from Houston 492 00:29:15,760 --> 00:29:17,880 to Albuquerque for Christmas, 493 00:29:17,880 --> 00:29:20,360 Iain and Laurel and I. 494 00:29:20,360 --> 00:29:25,440 It was my dad flying the plane and me and our dog in the back seat. 495 00:29:25,440 --> 00:29:28,280 And we start hitting some of this turbulence, 496 00:29:28,280 --> 00:29:32,840 and all of a sudden the plane gets into this, like, downwash. 497 00:29:32,840 --> 00:29:34,600 It's going down like this. 498 00:29:34,600 --> 00:29:36,600 Well, I mean, we just crashed. 499 00:29:36,600 --> 00:29:40,880 It was just, you know, bam, slap down! 500 00:29:40,880 --> 00:29:44,320 And the fact that we survived is, to this day, 501 00:29:44,320 --> 00:29:46,240 something I cannot explain. 502 00:29:48,320 --> 00:29:51,360 I think it messed Iain up because the closer we got 503 00:29:51,360 --> 00:29:54,080 to the flight itself, he kept saying, 504 00:29:54,080 --> 00:29:57,800 "I don't want you to leave, Mom. I want you to stay here on Earth." 505 00:29:57,800 --> 00:30:01,680 Basically, he said, "I don't want you to go." 506 00:30:01,680 --> 00:30:05,440 I begged her pretty desperately not to go. 507 00:30:06,720 --> 00:30:09,680 I was... I was very emotional, 508 00:30:09,680 --> 00:30:12,200 and I was crying to her. 509 00:30:12,200 --> 00:30:15,120 Stop... Tried to stop her from leaving. 510 00:30:17,480 --> 00:30:19,840 How hard do you think it was for Laurel? 511 00:30:19,840 --> 00:30:23,000 Oh, deeply difficult. 512 00:30:23,000 --> 00:30:27,680 I think that you couldn't quantify the magnitude of their love. 513 00:30:30,600 --> 00:30:32,600 Motherhood's been incredible. 514 00:30:32,600 --> 00:30:34,040 And I tell my son all the time 515 00:30:34,040 --> 00:30:36,640 that my most important job is being his mother. 516 00:30:38,280 --> 00:30:41,120 I relied on my mom for so much. 517 00:30:41,120 --> 00:30:42,480 So much. 518 00:30:43,840 --> 00:30:46,360 How much did she love being a mom? 519 00:30:46,360 --> 00:30:50,040 Well, I think she loved that more than being an astronaut. 520 00:30:50,040 --> 00:30:53,200 I think that she loved that more than anything else in her life. 521 00:30:54,480 --> 00:30:57,160 And if she'd pulled out at that point, 522 00:30:57,160 --> 00:30:59,160 how would that have impacted the mission? 523 00:30:59,160 --> 00:31:01,280 Oh, it would have cancelled it, 524 00:31:01,280 --> 00:31:03,320 or delayed it at the very least. 525 00:31:04,440 --> 00:31:07,280 Because the crew members are so specifically trained, 526 00:31:07,280 --> 00:31:09,800 there's no backups. 527 00:31:09,800 --> 00:31:13,360 I can't even imagine the quandary that she would have faced, 528 00:31:13,360 --> 00:31:15,920 having to decide that. 529 00:31:15,920 --> 00:31:21,040 But she was committed and determined to get the job done. 530 00:31:30,040 --> 00:31:33,320 These guys have trained, you know, forever for this mission. 531 00:31:33,320 --> 00:31:37,440 And the last thing they want is for them to catch something and be sick. 532 00:31:37,440 --> 00:31:42,040 That just would be catastrophic for the...for the mission. 533 00:31:42,040 --> 00:31:46,040 So they put them in quarantine a week prior. 534 00:31:46,040 --> 00:31:48,920 The children weren't allowed to be around them. 535 00:31:50,000 --> 00:31:54,240 I had to say goodbye to him before he went to quarantine. 536 00:31:54,240 --> 00:31:55,960 And I remember hugging his waist 537 00:31:55,960 --> 00:31:59,640 because that's where I came to him when I was 12. 538 00:31:59,640 --> 00:32:02,720 That moment, actually right here in the kitchen, 539 00:32:02,720 --> 00:32:05,800 I remember crying and just knowing 540 00:32:05,800 --> 00:32:07,920 how much I would miss him. 541 00:32:10,520 --> 00:32:13,000 We drove him to quarantine, 542 00:32:13,000 --> 00:32:15,800 and we all said goodbye and, like, had hugs and kisses, 543 00:32:15,800 --> 00:32:17,440 and it was a really sweet moment. 544 00:32:17,440 --> 00:32:21,160 And it was just us, and that was it, he was off. 545 00:32:31,080 --> 00:32:33,280 This is going to be good. 546 00:32:33,280 --> 00:32:35,080 Ilan just walks into the kitchen, 547 00:32:35,080 --> 00:32:37,320 starts looking in cupboards, starts grabbing stuff, 548 00:32:37,320 --> 00:32:40,400 and it just miraculously happened. He transformed it. 549 00:32:40,400 --> 00:32:42,000 Cheers. 550 00:32:42,000 --> 00:32:44,240 We're almost there! 551 00:32:44,240 --> 00:32:48,800 The last time Iain saw his mom was in Houston, in the crew quarters. 552 00:32:48,800 --> 00:32:52,680 And actually they're supposed to not see their kids for seven days, 553 00:32:52,680 --> 00:32:55,880 and we snuck him into crew quarters, 554 00:32:55,880 --> 00:32:58,800 unbeknownst to anybody else, 555 00:32:58,800 --> 00:33:01,000 for him to get a hug from his mom, 556 00:33:01,000 --> 00:33:05,800 and this would have been probably three days before the launch. 557 00:33:05,800 --> 00:33:08,480 She was just reassuring me that it was going to be OK. 558 00:33:08,480 --> 00:33:11,760 And I'll miss you, too. But, you know, I'll be back. 559 00:33:11,760 --> 00:33:14,160 It was a very long hug. 560 00:33:14,160 --> 00:33:17,400 You know, maybe... 561 00:33:17,400 --> 00:33:19,880 I don't know if they knew it was the last one or not. 562 00:33:21,680 --> 00:33:24,680 Who could deprive a child of that from his mom? 563 00:33:42,240 --> 00:33:45,320 APPLAUSE 564 00:33:45,320 --> 00:33:47,480 Absolutely thrilled to be here. 565 00:33:47,480 --> 00:33:49,520 Thrilled to go do a lot of work, 566 00:33:49,520 --> 00:33:52,120 see some incredible things and spend some more time 567 00:33:52,120 --> 00:33:54,480 with this great group of people I'm with today. 568 00:33:55,840 --> 00:34:02,000 I left Washington to head down to Florida to witness the launch. 569 00:34:02,000 --> 00:34:05,080 Had an opportunity to visit with the crew. 570 00:34:06,800 --> 00:34:11,440 The launch of the Columbia occurred a year and a half after 9/11. 571 00:34:11,440 --> 00:34:16,280 At that time, I was in briefings in the White House 572 00:34:16,280 --> 00:34:19,120 to identify what are the high-value targets, 573 00:34:19,120 --> 00:34:22,800 what are the things that would be an attraction for terrorists 574 00:34:22,800 --> 00:34:25,880 to just get the attention of the American people? 575 00:34:25,880 --> 00:34:30,000 One of them was a shuttle. 576 00:34:30,000 --> 00:34:32,760 But this one I looked at more carefully 577 00:34:32,760 --> 00:34:34,880 because of the presence of the Ilan Ramon. 578 00:34:36,200 --> 00:34:39,600 Ilan Ramon says he is uncomfortable in the spotlight, 579 00:34:39,600 --> 00:34:41,680 but none of his six shuttle crewmates 580 00:34:41,680 --> 00:34:43,760 is the first astronaut from Israel. 581 00:34:45,000 --> 00:34:49,360 The fact that he was on board that flight was considered to be 582 00:34:49,360 --> 00:34:54,400 a higher security concern given the nature of the Middle East 583 00:34:54,400 --> 00:34:59,280 relations and tensions and all the other things that go with this. 584 00:34:59,280 --> 00:35:05,440 Anybody from Al-Qaeda, from Isis, you know, the extremists, 585 00:35:05,440 --> 00:35:09,400 would love to make a statement about, why don't we take that out 586 00:35:09,400 --> 00:35:12,280 as a way to make a statement across the globe 587 00:35:12,280 --> 00:35:14,360 of what we're capable of doing? 588 00:35:14,360 --> 00:35:21,080 I'm not thinking myself or my family as targets, but as human beings, 589 00:35:21,080 --> 00:35:25,760 and this flight especially is going to take care 590 00:35:25,760 --> 00:35:27,880 of a better life on Earth. 591 00:35:30,920 --> 00:35:33,360 I was 12 years old. 592 00:35:33,360 --> 00:35:37,800 I remember, before the launch, there was a lot of security. 593 00:35:37,800 --> 00:35:39,760 We were taken from place to place 594 00:35:39,760 --> 00:35:42,080 and being escorted with different cop cars. 595 00:35:43,480 --> 00:35:45,920 Security following the bus. 596 00:35:45,920 --> 00:35:49,680 My dad didn't want us to be worried about anything, 597 00:35:49,680 --> 00:35:51,960 but we knew it was risky. 598 00:35:54,120 --> 00:35:56,840 The post-9/11 regimen remains in place. 599 00:35:56,840 --> 00:36:00,400 A huge no-fly zone around the launchpad, patrolled by fighters, 600 00:36:00,400 --> 00:36:03,240 enhanced radars, surface-to-air missiles 601 00:36:03,240 --> 00:36:06,400 and the launch time kept secret until the day before. 602 00:36:07,800 --> 00:36:10,120 There were gunboats out there. 603 00:36:10,120 --> 00:36:13,400 There's, you know, frogmen in the water. 604 00:36:14,440 --> 00:36:17,600 They had snipers on the roof of the hotel 605 00:36:17,600 --> 00:36:20,480 as well as mounted police all up and down the beach. 606 00:36:21,480 --> 00:36:26,040 You could easily hide a sniper in a swamp out there 607 00:36:26,040 --> 00:36:29,880 with a high-powered rifle, and a couple of hits 608 00:36:29,880 --> 00:36:33,640 in the wrong spot on the shuttle and...bad day. 609 00:36:56,560 --> 00:36:58,080 This is shuttle launch control 610 00:36:58,080 --> 00:36:59,320 and everything is going well 611 00:36:59,320 --> 00:37:01,480 and as planned with the countdown for the launch of Columbia 612 00:37:01,480 --> 00:37:03,680 and shuttle mission STS-107. 613 00:37:07,320 --> 00:37:10,880 Today's launch represents the 28th flight of the shuttle Columbia and 614 00:37:10,880 --> 00:37:13,760 the 113th shuttle flight overall in Nasa's space shuttle programme. 615 00:37:23,560 --> 00:37:26,240 INDISTINCT CHATTER 616 00:37:26,240 --> 00:37:28,120 Good morning. Morning, Ilan. 617 00:37:28,120 --> 00:37:29,360 How are you doing? 618 00:37:30,880 --> 00:37:35,680 All right. We all ready this morning? I think I am, we are. 619 00:37:35,680 --> 00:37:37,440 How about you? Are you ready? 620 00:37:37,440 --> 00:37:39,360 I'm ready. I've got the easy part. 621 00:37:50,960 --> 00:37:54,120 Shalom. Ready for the big day? 622 00:38:00,880 --> 00:38:04,800 Pliers...tethers... 623 00:38:04,800 --> 00:38:07,840 Hey, Dave... Dreaming of sleeping in space. 624 00:38:07,840 --> 00:38:11,320 ..give me the camera a little bit. 625 00:38:11,320 --> 00:38:13,800 Yeah, I want to take a picture with Laurel. 626 00:38:19,880 --> 00:38:24,280 In 2003, I was responsible for all the astronauts. 627 00:38:26,600 --> 00:38:29,720 I was here supporting. I was an astronaut myself. 628 00:38:29,720 --> 00:38:34,040 Every time you get suited up, there is anticipation. 629 00:38:34,040 --> 00:38:36,360 I don't know, anxiety, excitement. 630 00:38:37,760 --> 00:38:41,280 Yeah, launch day is pretty special. 631 00:38:41,280 --> 00:38:43,520 HELMET CLICKS 632 00:38:43,520 --> 00:38:45,280 Good sound. Yeah. 633 00:38:48,000 --> 00:38:50,720 OK. Go ahead and close your visor... 634 00:39:00,880 --> 00:39:03,920 OK. All right. Here we go. 635 00:39:06,880 --> 00:39:10,000 Every launch, we do this really strange thing where we play this 636 00:39:10,000 --> 00:39:12,000 card game, this poker game, 637 00:39:12,000 --> 00:39:14,840 because it's been done since Neil Armstrong. 638 00:39:14,840 --> 00:39:18,360 You win. You win. No, that's good. It's good. It's good to win. 639 00:39:18,360 --> 00:39:20,880 One step closer to launch here. 640 00:39:20,880 --> 00:39:23,400 Thinking, you know, when I was a little kid, Neil Armstrong 641 00:39:23,400 --> 00:39:25,800 was standing here in this room before he went to the moon. 642 00:39:25,800 --> 00:39:27,080 it's incredibly exciting. 643 00:39:27,080 --> 00:39:29,560 There's nothing I can think of that's more exciting. 644 00:39:29,560 --> 00:39:32,400 All right. And the time is... 645 00:39:34,200 --> 00:39:38,120 Everything is timed very specifically and they actually 646 00:39:38,120 --> 00:39:43,280 have a...you know, it was an old analogue clock with a marker on it. 647 00:39:43,280 --> 00:39:45,600 And you just got to wait. You want to go. 648 00:39:47,160 --> 00:39:50,080 You know the risk and you know what you're getting ready to do. 649 00:39:50,080 --> 00:39:53,480 You know, if you don't, you probably shouldn't be in that business. 650 00:39:54,600 --> 00:39:58,880 Rick Husband got the whole crew together inside the suit room 651 00:39:58,880 --> 00:40:01,480 before they went out the door into the hallway. 652 00:40:01,480 --> 00:40:05,560 And they all got together, arms around each other, head bowed 653 00:40:05,560 --> 00:40:08,040 and said a prayer. 654 00:40:08,040 --> 00:40:11,480 Lord, please be with our crew and take us safely on this mission. 655 00:40:11,480 --> 00:40:14,920 Thank you for bringing us to this point. ALL: Amen. 656 00:40:14,920 --> 00:40:20,440 Christian, Hindu, Jew, all together as one, 657 00:40:20,440 --> 00:40:23,640 as they walked out of the suit room. 658 00:40:23,640 --> 00:40:26,080 CHEERING AND APPLAUSE 659 00:40:27,640 --> 00:40:30,360 CHEERING AND WHISTLING 660 00:40:30,360 --> 00:40:32,920 All right! You can do it! 661 00:40:37,240 --> 00:40:38,680 All right! 662 00:40:38,680 --> 00:40:41,720 And our astronauts coming out now 663 00:40:41,720 --> 00:40:44,640 as they're making their way to the astronaut van. 664 00:40:44,640 --> 00:40:47,840 Commander Rick Husband, payload specialist Ilan Ramon, 665 00:40:47,840 --> 00:40:52,800 pilot William McCool and mission specialists Michael Anderson, 666 00:40:52,800 --> 00:40:56,720 David Brown, Laurel Clark, Kalpana Chawla. 667 00:41:03,120 --> 00:41:06,440 Morning, Ronnie. Morning. How you doing? Doing great. 668 00:41:06,440 --> 00:41:08,600 LAUGHTER 669 00:41:14,680 --> 00:41:17,840 All right, we're going to go today. There's our helicopter. 670 00:41:29,560 --> 00:41:31,160 There it is. 671 00:42:10,560 --> 00:42:13,200 You have a good one, sir. Thank you. Take care. 672 00:42:29,840 --> 00:42:33,240 OK, everybody on? Yep. 195, here we come. 673 00:42:33,240 --> 00:42:37,360 OK, everybody, high five. Here we go. Whoo! 674 00:42:37,360 --> 00:42:43,040 Hut, hut, hut, hut, hut, hut... Woohoo! All right. 675 00:42:47,880 --> 00:42:50,840 Morning, gentlemen, welcome to the 195. 676 00:42:50,840 --> 00:42:53,240 We're going to have a wonderful day today. 677 00:42:56,280 --> 00:42:58,440 When you're up there at the 195-foot level 678 00:42:58,440 --> 00:43:02,280 and you're getting ready to get in the vehicle, it's pretty amazing. 679 00:43:05,640 --> 00:43:09,640 I mean, you're all suited up and this is for real. 680 00:43:09,640 --> 00:43:12,840 And the vehicle, it's venting, it's creaking. 681 00:43:12,840 --> 00:43:15,200 It's like it's alive. 682 00:43:19,880 --> 00:43:22,480 You just can't believe in a couple of hours you're going to be 683 00:43:22,480 --> 00:43:25,360 inside this thing blasting off into space. 684 00:43:28,360 --> 00:43:29,840 This thing is big. 685 00:43:29,840 --> 00:43:32,760 It's big. It's really big. 686 00:43:34,280 --> 00:43:37,240 For me, if there was any apprehension, it was then. 687 00:43:37,240 --> 00:43:40,360 I mean... But you can't say, "No, I don't think I want to do this." 688 00:43:40,360 --> 00:43:42,600 You know, you're pretty much, you're going. 689 00:43:53,320 --> 00:43:55,680 How are you? How you doing? 690 00:43:55,680 --> 00:43:57,320 Ilan. Good to see you. 691 00:43:57,320 --> 00:44:00,040 Thank you. Good to see you. 692 00:44:00,040 --> 00:44:01,640 The final folks to speak to them, 693 00:44:01,640 --> 00:44:04,760 that's the astronaut support personnel and the crew 694 00:44:04,760 --> 00:44:07,840 that's strapping them into the vehicle. 695 00:44:07,840 --> 00:44:10,280 And the Nasa test director, Jeff Spaulding, 696 00:44:10,280 --> 00:44:14,160 has given approval for the crew to begin entry into the vehicle. 697 00:44:14,160 --> 00:44:17,040 Once they're in their seats, they will be, basically, 698 00:44:17,040 --> 00:44:18,560 laying on their backs. 699 00:44:18,560 --> 00:44:24,880 Husband climbing in somewhat difficult, cramped quarters there. 700 00:44:24,880 --> 00:44:28,480 Next to enter the vehicle will be Ilan Ramon, 701 00:44:28,480 --> 00:44:32,400 and he is currently taking his seat on the mid-deck. 702 00:44:37,040 --> 00:44:39,120 They help get their harnesses on, 703 00:44:39,120 --> 00:44:42,200 get them strapped in and, you know, 704 00:44:42,200 --> 00:44:45,040 when they close the hatch, that's it. 705 00:44:46,440 --> 00:44:48,720 ON RADIO: Yes, sir. Do I have a go to close the hatch? 706 00:44:48,720 --> 00:44:50,680 You have a go to close the hatch. Copy that. 707 00:44:53,320 --> 00:44:55,400 Here at the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida, 708 00:44:55,400 --> 00:44:58,600 a lot of concern about security with the first Israeli astronaut 709 00:44:58,600 --> 00:45:01,800 on board Columbia for this 16-day science mission. 710 00:45:01,800 --> 00:45:05,360 I'm there to cover that launch, like we always were. 711 00:45:05,360 --> 00:45:08,560 I'm three miles away, which is as close as they let anybody. 712 00:45:08,560 --> 00:45:12,760 28th launch for Columbia, the 113th shuttle mission launch. 713 00:45:12,760 --> 00:45:17,280 I'm always thinking about what I would say if things go really wrong, 714 00:45:17,280 --> 00:45:21,400 and... Because that's my responsibility, to be that person. 715 00:45:21,400 --> 00:45:23,360 One of the experiments on board the shuttle... 716 00:45:23,360 --> 00:45:27,040 So you sort of have to go down the list of threats, if you will. 717 00:45:27,040 --> 00:45:31,560 You know, 9/11, Ilan Ramon, did they really fix those cracks? 718 00:45:31,560 --> 00:45:35,280 And then it's up to, you know, a million movable parts 719 00:45:35,280 --> 00:45:38,920 all working in synchronicity, which is kind of...the fact that it 720 00:45:38,920 --> 00:45:41,240 ever worked at all is pretty amazing. 721 00:45:41,240 --> 00:45:44,280 Back here in the space shuttle flight control room, 722 00:45:44,280 --> 00:45:47,000 the ascent team of flight controllers, who have been 723 00:45:47,000 --> 00:45:50,560 on console since about 3:30 this morning, monitoring Columbia's 724 00:45:50,560 --> 00:45:53,720 systems in preparation for the first shuttle launch of the year. 725 00:45:53,720 --> 00:45:55,720 The ascent team is led by flight director 726 00:45:55,720 --> 00:45:57,560 LeRoy Cain for today's launch. 727 00:45:57,560 --> 00:46:00,080 OK, folks. 728 00:46:00,080 --> 00:46:02,480 Going to ops one, count from 20. 729 00:46:05,280 --> 00:46:07,560 The launch day's unique, whether it's in 730 00:46:07,560 --> 00:46:11,120 the Launch Control Center in Florida or in Mission Control in Houston. 731 00:46:11,120 --> 00:46:13,840 You could commit to launch or you could scrub 732 00:46:13,840 --> 00:46:16,280 and have to come back and try again another day. 733 00:46:18,880 --> 00:46:21,360 As a flight controller in Mission Control, 734 00:46:21,360 --> 00:46:24,280 STS-107 was my second mission. 735 00:46:24,280 --> 00:46:29,240 For me, it was always when you got at the T-minus ten-minute hold 736 00:46:29,240 --> 00:46:31,920 and you give the final go/no go for launch, 737 00:46:31,920 --> 00:46:34,880 that is kind of the moment where you realise 738 00:46:34,880 --> 00:46:36,680 that this is about to get real. 739 00:46:38,000 --> 00:46:40,000 Go/no go for launch. FIDO? Go. 740 00:46:40,000 --> 00:46:42,880 Guidance? Go. GC? Go. Prop? Go. 741 00:46:42,880 --> 00:46:45,360 GNC? Go. MMACS? Go. EGIL? Go. 742 00:46:45,360 --> 00:46:48,560 EECOM? Go. FAO? Go. Payloads? Go. 743 00:46:48,560 --> 00:46:51,920 For me, personally, I could feel my adrenaline gland 744 00:46:51,920 --> 00:46:55,840 just go and then my heart rate pick up a little bit, 745 00:46:55,840 --> 00:47:00,080 and, mentally, I would just have to use a breathing technique. 746 00:47:00,080 --> 00:47:02,080 Get ready for a G1 launch target. 747 00:47:02,080 --> 00:47:03,960 There's a lot of responsibility. 748 00:47:03,960 --> 00:47:07,320 You're getting ready to launch a space shuttle with humans on board. 749 00:47:07,320 --> 00:47:09,960 It is not an easy business. 750 00:47:09,960 --> 00:47:11,560 Houston, flight is go. 751 00:47:11,560 --> 00:47:13,520 By then, it's too late to figure out 752 00:47:13,520 --> 00:47:15,600 whether you're ready to do it or not. 753 00:47:15,600 --> 00:47:17,320 You're committed at that point, 754 00:47:17,320 --> 00:47:19,560 so now it's focus on what's ahead of you. 755 00:47:26,160 --> 00:47:30,120 The only person who was authorised to launch 756 00:47:30,120 --> 00:47:33,200 the shuttle itself was the launch director 757 00:47:33,200 --> 00:47:35,560 at the Kennedy Space Center. 758 00:47:35,560 --> 00:47:39,080 On the moment on which everything lined up 759 00:47:39,080 --> 00:47:42,120 and the launch director was convinced they were ready to go 760 00:47:42,120 --> 00:47:45,120 for launch, that's when he said, "Go for launch," 761 00:47:45,120 --> 00:47:47,040 pressed the button and that was it. 762 00:48:18,480 --> 00:48:20,720 The countdown clock will resume on my mark. 763 00:48:20,720 --> 00:48:23,760 Three, two, one. Mark. 764 00:48:23,760 --> 00:48:25,360 T-minus nine minutes and counting. 765 00:48:32,920 --> 00:48:35,640 So, does everybody stand up as soon as it launches? 766 00:48:38,520 --> 00:48:41,640 We had 300 or 400 invited guests to the launch, 767 00:48:41,640 --> 00:48:44,760 and so each family had that amount. 768 00:48:44,760 --> 00:48:46,240 It is a huge event. 769 00:48:48,160 --> 00:48:51,560 The strongest emotion is just excitement. I mean, we're just... 770 00:48:51,560 --> 00:48:55,680 There's a huge buzz. I mean, it's really amazing. 771 00:48:56,640 --> 00:48:58,640 We were in this big building and they had us 772 00:48:58,640 --> 00:49:00,840 standing on the roof to watch everything. 773 00:49:00,840 --> 00:49:04,680 So we were just kind of waiting all together and, you know, 774 00:49:04,680 --> 00:49:07,040 all the kids were kind of talking and playing 775 00:49:07,040 --> 00:49:09,760 until things kind of started counting down. 776 00:49:09,760 --> 00:49:11,840 Go for orbiter access arm retract. 777 00:49:14,120 --> 00:49:17,000 T-minus five minutes and counting. 778 00:49:17,000 --> 00:49:19,720 And we have a go for APU start. 779 00:49:19,720 --> 00:49:23,680 The auxiliary power unit activation has been recorded. 780 00:49:23,680 --> 00:49:27,640 I do remember being outside and looking 781 00:49:27,640 --> 00:49:29,760 at the shuttle getting ready to take off. 782 00:49:29,760 --> 00:49:33,520 He was adamant now to me that he didn't want his mum to go 783 00:49:33,520 --> 00:49:35,200 and then he started crying. 784 00:49:35,200 --> 00:49:39,360 The whole launch was him crying. It was awful. 785 00:49:39,360 --> 00:49:43,440 T-minus three minutes, 25 seconds and counting. 786 00:49:43,440 --> 00:49:46,440 And final aerial surface checks of the orbiter's wing elevons 787 00:49:46,440 --> 00:49:48,680 and rudder are being completed at this time. 788 00:49:48,680 --> 00:49:51,920 I remember, for a brief second, looking at the orbiter 789 00:49:51,920 --> 00:49:53,800 on the launchpad and I just thought, 790 00:49:53,800 --> 00:49:56,720 "I have absolutely no control over how this is going to go." 791 00:49:56,720 --> 00:49:59,440 There's just such a mixture of emotion. 792 00:49:59,440 --> 00:50:03,640 There's pride, excitement, fear. 793 00:50:04,600 --> 00:50:08,320 I remember my mum stroking my hair, like... 794 00:50:08,320 --> 00:50:13,000 And I think that was, like, sort of a comfort for her and for me. 795 00:50:13,000 --> 00:50:15,880 And the gaseous oxygen vent hood will be slowly retracted 796 00:50:15,880 --> 00:50:18,000 away from the top of the external tank. 797 00:50:18,960 --> 00:50:21,040 You feel it. 798 00:50:21,040 --> 00:50:23,880 And it's, "My husband's in that... 799 00:50:23,880 --> 00:50:27,320 "with all that fuel and all that power." 800 00:50:27,320 --> 00:50:29,680 So you trust everybody has done their jobs 801 00:50:29,680 --> 00:50:32,320 that they're supposed to do. You trust the shuttle works well, 802 00:50:32,320 --> 00:50:36,320 you trust the Lord over and above everything. You trust the Lord. 803 00:50:36,320 --> 00:50:39,320 Columbia, for the flight crew, close and lock your visors 804 00:50:39,320 --> 00:50:41,320 and initiate O2 flow. 805 00:50:41,320 --> 00:50:44,200 For the first two-plus minutes of the mission, 806 00:50:44,200 --> 00:50:46,560 with the solid rocket boosters attached, 807 00:50:46,560 --> 00:50:48,960 there's no option for abort. 808 00:50:48,960 --> 00:50:53,000 You have to wait till they're done and burned out and cut away. 809 00:50:53,000 --> 00:50:56,160 That is a blackout zone. That's a death zone. 810 00:50:56,160 --> 00:51:01,120 No matter what happens in that scenario, you cannot do anything. 811 00:51:01,120 --> 00:51:05,600 That was when the Challenger went down, was in that blackout zone. 812 00:51:05,600 --> 00:51:07,720 T-minus one minute and counting. 813 00:51:07,720 --> 00:51:11,040 And we're coming up on a go for our auto sequence start. 814 00:51:11,040 --> 00:51:12,720 And then the moment came, you know, 815 00:51:12,720 --> 00:51:15,600 the moment where the launch was coming. 816 00:51:15,600 --> 00:51:20,160 Each family came together and kind of were hugging 817 00:51:20,160 --> 00:51:23,680 and holding each other, you know, just really getting emotional 818 00:51:23,680 --> 00:51:26,880 about this, and then the launch sequence starts to happen. 819 00:51:26,880 --> 00:51:28,840 Whoo! 820 00:51:28,840 --> 00:51:32,720 11, ten, nine, eight, 821 00:51:32,720 --> 00:51:37,240 seven, six, five, four, three, 822 00:51:37,240 --> 00:51:39,600 two, one. 823 00:51:37,240 --> 00:51:39,600 CHEERING 824 00:51:39,600 --> 00:51:44,520 The weird thing is that you see that flash 825 00:51:44,520 --> 00:51:46,880 and you see that smoke coming up and it's like, 826 00:51:46,880 --> 00:51:49,480 "Whoa! Well, that sucks. There's no sound." 827 00:51:51,440 --> 00:51:54,920 And so you're like, "What the..." 828 00:51:54,920 --> 00:51:56,720 And then it's "Ba-boom!" 829 00:51:56,720 --> 00:51:58,560 LOUD BANG 830 00:51:59,840 --> 00:52:01,600 CHEERING 831 00:52:05,200 --> 00:52:09,480 You don't quite expect it to be as powerful. 832 00:52:09,480 --> 00:52:12,800 107! 107! 833 00:52:12,800 --> 00:52:17,800 You feel your insides shaking and vibrating from this huge sound. 834 00:52:17,800 --> 00:52:20,720 Everybody is just so emotional and it's... 835 00:52:20,720 --> 00:52:23,560 ..it's hard not to, not to cry. 836 00:52:23,560 --> 00:52:25,560 ALL CHEER 837 00:52:29,360 --> 00:52:33,760 For me, it's like The Star-Spangled Banner playing. 838 00:52:33,760 --> 00:52:40,240 It's incredibly visceral and emotive and inspirational. 839 00:52:41,920 --> 00:52:44,640 The international research mission finally under way. 840 00:52:57,240 --> 00:53:00,440 You sit there and you look at that trail of fire and you think, 841 00:53:00,440 --> 00:53:03,840 "God, there's seven people on top of that." 842 00:53:03,840 --> 00:53:05,800 Every time that kind of gets me. 843 00:53:06,960 --> 00:53:10,440 Columbia travelling at 1,800 miles an hour. 844 00:53:10,440 --> 00:53:13,320 You're watching seven of your closest friends on this 845 00:53:13,320 --> 00:53:15,080 ball of flame going off into space. 846 00:53:15,080 --> 00:53:18,640 My heart's going like this and I had tears running down. 847 00:53:18,640 --> 00:53:20,040 I mean, it's very emotional. 848 00:53:20,040 --> 00:53:21,760 Columbia's three main engines 849 00:53:21,760 --> 00:53:24,000 draining a half a ton of fuel per second, 850 00:53:24,000 --> 00:53:27,400 heading towards space on the first shuttle mission of the year. 851 00:53:27,400 --> 00:53:31,160 You know how on TV it looks like you're going up really smoothly? 852 00:53:31,160 --> 00:53:34,200 No. Not at all. 853 00:53:34,200 --> 00:53:36,480 It's kind of... It's kind of a wild ride. 854 00:53:38,400 --> 00:53:40,960 And there's a lot of vibration. 855 00:53:40,960 --> 00:53:44,200 You know, my first flight, it was so much, I thought to myself, 856 00:53:44,200 --> 00:53:46,520 "There's something wrong here." 857 00:53:46,520 --> 00:53:49,640 I was like, "This does not feel right to me. 858 00:53:49,640 --> 00:53:51,840 "Cannot possibly feel like this." 859 00:53:57,920 --> 00:54:00,040 Solid rocket booster separation confirmed. 860 00:54:00,040 --> 00:54:01,520 Guidance now converging. 861 00:54:01,520 --> 00:54:04,240 Columbia's onboard computers commanding the main engine nozzles 862 00:54:04,240 --> 00:54:06,960 to gently swivel, aiming the shuttle for a precise target 863 00:54:06,960 --> 00:54:08,600 in space for main engine cutoff. 864 00:54:10,840 --> 00:54:14,080 I was, like, more nervous. 865 00:54:14,080 --> 00:54:17,120 You know, you see the plumes of smoke and the fire 866 00:54:17,120 --> 00:54:19,840 and you kind of know what's going on, but you're just kind of like 867 00:54:19,840 --> 00:54:22,760 in the back of your head, "Is it supposed to do that? Is that correct? OK." 868 00:54:22,760 --> 00:54:25,320 Like, "There they go. Oh, that's so high." You know, it just... 869 00:54:25,320 --> 00:54:28,440 All these thoughts and then all of a sudden they're just gone 870 00:54:28,440 --> 00:54:30,360 and you're just still hearing it. 871 00:54:44,800 --> 00:54:48,400 When I lost sight of the shuttle going up, 872 00:54:48,400 --> 00:54:52,280 that's when I kind of felt like a little sting from it. 873 00:54:52,280 --> 00:54:54,280 You know, just like a feeling of, 874 00:54:54,280 --> 00:54:56,600 "Man, how could she just leave like that?" 875 00:55:04,200 --> 00:55:07,720 Columbia in its preliminary orbit. 876 00:55:30,200 --> 00:55:32,800 I remember looking at the planet for the first time. 877 00:55:34,440 --> 00:55:38,840 I mean, I still have the whole image burned into my brain 878 00:55:38,840 --> 00:55:42,480 where you look over and you see this big, round, blue ball. 879 00:55:44,320 --> 00:55:48,120 And it's just incredible to see the planet as what it is, 880 00:55:48,120 --> 00:55:51,200 you know, for the very first time. You know, a globe. 881 00:55:52,960 --> 00:55:57,280 And that is just a wild thing, a wild thing to see. 882 00:55:59,280 --> 00:56:03,600 Everything in great shape as the orbiter is now 883 00:56:03,600 --> 00:56:07,760 settled into an orbit about 143 nautical miles above the earth. 884 00:56:07,760 --> 00:56:10,480 Standing by for further activity on board. 885 00:56:12,800 --> 00:56:15,480 Space shuttle Columbia is safe in orbit 886 00:56:15,480 --> 00:56:17,520 and here at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, 887 00:56:17,520 --> 00:56:21,280 Nasa and the US Air Force breathing a collective sigh of relief. 888 00:56:21,280 --> 00:56:25,000 The perfect launch for Columbia, a perfect climb to orbit. 889 00:56:26,080 --> 00:56:31,040 They're in orbit and that's when you're, you know, you're home free. 890 00:56:31,040 --> 00:56:34,520 So it was like...a sigh of relief when they, 891 00:56:34,520 --> 00:56:36,080 when they were, you know, 892 00:56:36,080 --> 00:56:39,800 up in space and it feels like, "Phew! They've made it." 893 00:56:41,320 --> 00:56:43,400 Let's take a look at the view from orbit. 894 00:56:43,400 --> 00:56:46,840 This is 225km above us. 895 00:56:46,840 --> 00:56:52,000 I stayed in place until they were...the main engine cut off, 896 00:56:52,000 --> 00:56:54,880 because anything can happen till then, and once they turn off 897 00:56:54,880 --> 00:56:57,200 those main engines and they're in orbit, 898 00:56:57,200 --> 00:57:00,920 you know, you're in a relatively safe situation. 899 00:57:00,920 --> 00:57:04,560 You can safely walk away from the camera and... 900 00:57:04,560 --> 00:57:07,840 ..they started quickly playing the launch replays and... 901 00:57:07,840 --> 00:57:09,720 And that was when we saw it. 902 00:57:12,040 --> 00:57:14,400 This is Mission Control, Houston, continuing to watch 903 00:57:14,400 --> 00:57:18,040 replays of Columbia's launch, which occurred on time and flawlessly, 904 00:57:18,040 --> 00:57:23,000 just 28 minutes ago from the Kennedy Space Center's launchpad 39A. 905 00:57:23,000 --> 00:57:24,480 I was in our truck. 906 00:57:24,480 --> 00:57:26,840 Producer called me in, said, "You've got to look at this." 907 00:57:28,320 --> 00:57:31,200 It was kind of a grainy image but you see this... 908 00:57:31,200 --> 00:57:33,160 this, poof! Like a... 909 00:57:33,160 --> 00:57:36,280 Like you dropped a bag of flour on the ground and it all 910 00:57:36,280 --> 00:57:38,600 floated into the air. 911 00:57:38,600 --> 00:57:42,800 Didn't take much of a telephoto to show this kind of explosion, 912 00:57:42,800 --> 00:57:44,840 but it did not look good at all. 913 00:57:44,840 --> 00:57:46,040 It looked bad. 115539

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