http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A3597-2003Feb26.html

NASA said Tuesday night that it had recovered a videotape showing four of
the Columbia astronauts in the last minutes of their flight just before
things went awry.

The 13 minutes of tape, which includes the space shuttle's flight over the
Pacific just before problems developed, shed no light on what went wrong,
said an official close to the investigation into the Feb. 1 disaster. The
astronauts are seen doing routine tasks in the cockpit, like putting on
their gloves, and casually chatting, the official said.

The tape ends, because it was burned, four minutes after the start of
Columbia's atmospheric entry while the spaceship is still above the Pacific
and flying normally. The first sign of trouble shows up in temperature
monitors in the left landing gear compartment another four minutes after the
end of the tape, the official said.

Reportedly seen on camera are the pilots Rick Husband and William McCool,
flight engineer Kalpana Chawla and Laurel Clark. The three other astronauts
were on the lower deck. Neither the official nor a NASA spokeswoman knew
where, when or how the tape was found, but it was thought to have been
recovered from Texas wreckage sometime in the past week.

Board members knew about the videotape for the past several days but did not
discuss it at the weekly news conference Tuesday afternoon, the official
said, because they wanted to give NASA time to show it to the astronauts'
families. NASA plans to release copies to the news media later this week.

In an interview broadcast by CNN late Tuesday, Husband's widow, Evelyn, who
is deeply religious, said she has "not felt hopelessness," but that her
strength has failed her at times: "There have been times through this that I
don't think I can take it anymore. The pain is horrible."

Earlier Tuesday, the accident investigators said they wanted to know more
about a mysterious object that almost certainly fell off the shuttle and was
flying alongside the spacecraft during its second day in orbit.

The object orbiting near Columbia was never noticed during the flight. After
the shuttle's destruction over Texas, the Air Force Space Command began
analyzing radar data that might shed light on the disaster and noticed the
object.

Initially, NASA said it suspected the object might be frozen waste water
dumped overboard or an orbiting piece of space junk that the shuttle
happened to encounter.

But Air Force Brig. Gen. Duane Deal, a board member, discounted both
possibilities Tuesday and said the object almost had to have come from the
shuttle itself.

"You or I could invent a dozen scenarios," Deal said. "It could have been
something loose that separated, it could have been something inside the
payload bay." It also could have been part of the left wing, where all the
overheating and other troubles developed during re-entry.

He described the object as about 1 foot by 1.3 feet in size and said it was
flying in tandem with Columbia one day into the mission. It was within 50
feet of the shuttle and, within that first day, started separating farther
and farther away until it burned up on re-entry three days later, he said.

"It's not like my friend Rick Husband rendezvoused with a piece in orbit,"
Deal said, referring to Columbia's commander. "It was something that more
than likely came loose."

The composition of the object is unknown, but it was lightweight and not
dense, Deal said. Lab testing is planned by the Air Force and NASA to
determine the material, based on its reflectivity.

Columbia had just gone through a major maneuver in orbit Jan. 17, about 24
hours into its flight, when the object popped out of nowhere, Deal said.
That suggests it could have broken loose from the shuttle during the
maneuver.

Following the accident, Space Command staff went through reams of data to
track the object until its atmospheric re-entry Jan. 20. Nearly 3,200 radar
observations were made of Columbia during its 16 days in orbit.

"It's been the most laborious examination that's ever taken place in the
history of Space Command, looking at every single one of those
observations," Deal said.

Because the astronauts did not do a spacewalk and did not have many windows,
they would not have noticed the unidentified object, Deal said.

Meanwhile, a piece of a thermal tile, believed to be from the top of the
left wing, remains the westernmost piece of debris found yet - and probably
the earliest known fragment from its breakup.

The board's chairman, retired Navy Adm. Harold Gehman Jr., said the fragment
came from the upper surface of the left wing near the fuselage. It was found
in West Texas, about 300 miles west of Fort Worth.

Gehman said he does not know how badly damaged the fragment is and stressed
that it is too early to draw any conclusions from it.

But he held up pictures of another tile fragment found about 30 miles west
of Fort Worth. It was dark gray or almost black with orange specks and
extremely rough surfaces - heat damage that is much more severe than what is
normally seen from shuttle tiles.

Engineers do not yet know whether the damage occurred during or after the
breakup of Columbia, Gehman said. It is so badly damaged that investigators
do not even know what part of the shuttle it came from.

Of the more than 8,100 pieces of shuttle debris recovered, about 5,300 have
been identified, Gehman said.

Both NASA and the investigation board believe any wreckage west of Texas
could provide hard evidence about what was happening to Columbia as it
descended on its way to a Florida landing. The shuttle was 16 minutes away
from touchdown when it disintegrated over Texas, killing all seven
astronauts.

The 10-member board suspects the left wing was breached, allowing
superheated gases to penetrate during re-entry. A central focus of the
investigation is whether any of the debris from liftoff 16 days earlier
caused or contributed to that breach.

Board member Scott Hubbard, director of NASA's Ames Research Center, said
computer analyses show that a hole of 20 square inches would account for the
rapid 60-degree rise in temperature detected in Columbia's left landing gear
compartment during the final few minutes of flight.

What needs to be done next is a more sophisticated and complex analysis in
which the hole is moved to various wing locations, he said.

Among the early tentative findings: the tires in the left landing gear
compartment likely did not explode, though there was some disturbance going
on in that area; the ship's hydraulic systems failed in the final seconds of
the doomed flight and the hydraulic fluid dumped out somewhere; and even
though the power and guidance systems were still working up until the total
loss of data and the fuselage was still intact, there were no signals from
the left wing.



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Tributes Maru
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Limitless undying love which
shines around me like a million suns
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