![]() The exception is a left side shuttle panel on display at Kennedy Space Center’s visitor complex, alongside the charred cockpit window frame from shuttle Columbia, which broke apart over Texas during reentry in 2003, killing seven astronauts. Most of the recovered wreckage remains buried in abandoned missile silos at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. ![]() Thirty years ago, as the nation mourned the loss of. That represents about 47% of the entire vehicle, including parts of the two solid-fuel boosters and external fuel tank. 28, 1986, from a launchpad at Kennedy Space Center, 73 seconds before an explosion killed its crew of seven. Roughly 118 tons (107 metric tons) of Challenger debris have been recovered since the accident. “We want to make sure whatever we do, we do the right thing for the legacy of the crew,” Ciannilli said. The families of all seven Challenger crew members have been notified. The fragment remains on the ocean floor just off the Florida coast near Cape Canaveral as NASA determines the next step. Because there are square thermal tiles on the piece, it’s believed to be from the shuttle’s belly, Ciannilli said. The piece is more than 15 feet by 15 feet (4.5 meters by 4.5 meters) it’s likely bigger because part of it is covered with sand. All seven on board were killed, including the first schoolteacher bound for space, Christa McAuliffe.ĭonald Triplett, the 1st person diagnosed with autism, dies at 89 NASA verified through video a few months ago that the piece was part of the shuttle that broke apart shortly after liftoff on Jan. It’s one of the biggest pieces of Challenger found in the decades since the acciden t, according to Ciannilli, and the first remnant to be discovered since two fragments from the left wing washed ashore in 1996.ĭivers for a TV documentary first spotted the piece in March while looking for wreckage of a World War II plane. and what we all went through as a nation.” When he saw the underwater video footage, “My heart skipped a beat, I must say, and it brought me right back to 1986. “Of course, the emotions come back, right?” said Michael Ciannilli, a NASA manager who confirmed the remnant’s authenticity. ![]() NASA’s Kennedy Space Center announced the discovery Thursday. (AP) - A large section of the destroyed space shuttle Challenger has been found buried in sand at the bottom of the Atlantic, more than three decades after the tragedy that killed a schoolteacher and six others. ![]()
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