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"Shuttle Photos: Issue of Crew's Fate"
The excerpts below are from the above article in the NY times, dated April 25, 1986, by David E. Sanger: ============================================ The photographs released Wednesday showing the space shuttle Challenger plunging toward the ocean suggest that within days of the disaster officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration suspected the crew cabin remained largely intact until it hit the water, sources familiar with the investigation say. Nevertheless, in public hearings and news conferences, officials of the space agency said nothing to contradict the widely held view that an explosion instantly disintegrated the craft and killed its crew. .... The 10 photographs were taken by a high-speed, 70-millimeter NASA camera two miles from the launching pad. A NASA spokesman said that the photographs were prepared for investigators only recently, but some NASA officials say they were undoubtedly developed within a week of the Jan. 28 disaster that killed seven astronauts. The photographs were not made public for nearly three months, and then only after several news agencies filed requests under the Freedom of Information Act. The space agency has still declined to make public hundreds of other pictures taken by the camera, which critics contend would show the crew cabin, apparently intact, spinning wildly out of control in its eight-mile plunge into the ocean off Cape Canaveral. .... ... ... At Cape Kennedy, Hugh Harris, the NASA spokesman, denied that the agency was involved in any effort to alter the public's perceptions about the accident or manage the news through selective distribution of evidence. .... While it is unclear what was done to enhance the photographic images, NASA says that each of the prints was blown up from only a tiny section of the original negatives. Veterans of the space program said that this is not the first time the space agency has been accused of withholding information about accident investigations. The day after the Apollo 1 flash fire that killed three astronauts on the launching pad, NASA officials suggested at a news conference that all three had died instantly. Several days later, however, word leaked out that a tape recording showed more than a minute of frantic efforts by the astronauts to escape from the capsule. =========================================== Since NASA has never conclusively proved that the 51-L crew died at water impact, I have referred to it as NASA's illusion. -- John Thomas Maxson, Retired Engineer (Aerospace) Author, The Betrayal of Mission 51-L (www.mission51l.com) |
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