On Sun, 22 Apr 2012 15:44:55 -0400, JF Mezei
<
jfmezei...@vaxination.ca> wrote:
>> You must inhabit a different universe than the one I'm living in,
>> because I don't remember that at all. I do remember them saying there
>> was no chance the *crew* survived, which was of course correct.
>
>What I remember is that NASA and/or media stating that there was no need
>for a search and rescue because there was no chance they survived the
>explosion.
This is the extent of what NASA said officially that day. You might
remember hearing other things, but they weren't from NASA and
therefore have no bearing on what NASA did or didn't do that day.
"It is with deep, heartfelt sorrow that I address you here this
afternoon. At 11:40 a.m. this morning, the space program experienced a
national tragedy with the explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger
approximately a minute and a half after launch from here at the
Kennedy Space Center. I regret that I have to report, that based on
very preliminary searches of the ocean where the Challenger impacted
this morning… these searches have not revealed any evidence that the
crew of Challenger survived.
The dedicated crew members of Challenger are Commander Francis Dick
Scobee, Pilot Michael J. Smith, Mission Specialists Dr. Judy Resnik,
Ellison Onizuka and Dr. Ronald McNair. And Payload Specialists onboard
were Christa McAuliffe and Greg Jarvis.
All early indications at the Launch Control Center at the Kennedy
Space Center had indicated that the launch was normal up to
approximately 11:40 a.m. this morning, about a minute or so into the
flight. Flight controllers in the launch Control Center here, and in
the Mission Control Center in Houston, were polled immediately after
the explosion and reported that they did not see anything unusual up
to that point.
The Solid Rocket Booster recovery ships were immediately dispatched to
the area, approximately 18 or so miles downrange from Kennedy, along
with various Coast Guard and military ships, helicopters and planes.
I have taken an immediate action to form an Interim Investigating
Board to implement early activities in this tragedy. Data from all of
the shuttle instrumentation, photographs, launch pad systems,
hardware, cargo, ground support systems, and even notes made by any
member of the launch team and flight ops team are being impounded for
study. A formal board will be established by the acting administrator
very, very shortly. Subsequent reports on this tragedy will be made by
this formal review board.
I am aware of and have seen the media is showing footage of the launch
today from the NASA Select System. We will not speculate as to the
specific cause of the explosion based on that footage. It will take
all the data, careful review of that data, before we can draw any
conclusions on this national tragedy. Thank you."
- Jesse Moore
NASA Associate Administrator for Spaceflight
Kennedy Space Center, Florida
4:30pm, January 28, 1986
(Five hours after the disaster)
That's it. Everything else is either a fabricated memory of yours, or
the work of the talking heads and correspondents on TV who were making
things up as they went along. And most of those correspondents had no
clue what they were talking about, they were only there for Christa
McAulliffe. They feverishly worked to get people on air who did know
what they were talking about, but almost all of them were elsewhere,
not in Florida, and therefore not privy to what was happening within
NASA that horrible day (Gene Cernan seems to have been a network
favorite that day, but what that retired Apollo veteran knew about
Shuttle, I have no idea.)
Brian