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THe Shuttle
I know I have mentioned him before, but I have a younger brother who is now 10 years old. I feel like all boys of his age have similar interests of dinosaurs, cars, space, and pretty much all sorts of vehicles. Since it is just him and me, he knows a lot about what I am interested in and I know a lot about what he is interested in. He knows a lot about space and rockets of all sorts, but it also helps that we live near the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida. I have gone there countless times as they have many sites to explore. One main attraction of theirs is the Atlantis Space Shuttle, one of only four left in the world. The Discovery Shuttle is at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC, which is another shuttle I have had the privilege of seeing. The other two, the Endeavour and the Enterprise, are in other museums in California and New York. With that being said, there were actually six shuttles built by NASA. The Challenger exploded during launch on January 28, 1986 and the Columbia exploded during re-enter on February 1, 2003.
The Cause
It is known by all that the Challenger Space Shuttle exploded resulting in the deaths of seven passengers, but not everyone knows the real cause of this casualty. A tiny rubber part of the shuttle called the O-ring was the source of the problem. It served as a seal between parts of the solid rocket boosters, but lost its elasticity when exposed to cold temperature (Teitel). The O-ring only works properly above 54 degrees and on January 28, 1986, it was 36 degrees (Teitel). The temperature was so cold, the O-ring did not expand properly and could not prevent the leak (Teitel). The liquid-hydrogen leaking from the booster mixed with the liquid-oxygen tank and the shuttle exploded (Teitel). The Challenger explosion was an unforgettable incident and has taught NASA a lot so that history will not repeat itself.
The Source
Teitel, Amy Shira. “What Caused the Challenger Disaster?” History. A&E Television Networks, LLC., January 28, 2022, www.history.com/news/how-the-challenger-disaster-changed-nasa. Accessed 2 January 2023.