The Most Watched Disaster In Human History | What Went Wrong: Countdown to Catastrophe

2023 ж. 30 Там.
194 755 Рет қаралды

In 1986, the space shuttle Challenger exploded 73 seconds after launch due to a failed O-ring seal in the solid fuel booster. The explosion resulted in the tragic deaths of seven astronauts, including teacher Krista McAuliffe, and raised doubts about NASA's management of the complex Space Program.
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  • The engineers explaining how the rubber in the o-rings actually work, using everyday examples, was really amazing to listen to. Being able to tie an extremely technical idea to a more simple one always helps me understand easier. Super cool of them to take the time to explain.

    @connermckinnon5520@connermckinnon5520Ай бұрын
  • This wasn't a disaster, it was criminal negligence.

    @havik82@havik827 ай бұрын
    • YES BOTH DISASTER DO TO NEGLIGENCE

      @leelunk8235@leelunk82353 ай бұрын
    • it was a murder-suicide for sure.

      @rstidman@rstidmanАй бұрын
    • Exactly my thought!!!

      @TinciiBa_1992@TinciiBa_1992Ай бұрын
  • I was 19 years old, and my dad was almost 56. The same age I am now. I remember getting up early with him to see the launch, and when I saw the white smoke going to different directions I turned to him and said," it wasn't supposed to look like that was it? Dad?" And he said," no honey. They're gone." My dad passed away at 93 over the summer, and I can still remember this as clear as day. Rest in peace to all of the challenger crew and rest in peace forever, Dad. ❤

    @thebandit666@thebandit6668 ай бұрын
    • I had just turned 19 only 4 days earlier. I was in class in college. Between classes I watched what I thought was normal replays on the big tv in the student union. I saw the multitrails & thought "that doesn't look right"

      @beckysegundo6688@beckysegundo66888 ай бұрын
    • @@beckysegundo6688 Hi, I totally get it. I wasn't really sure what it was supposed to look like, so I was confused until I looked at my dad.

      @thebandit666@thebandit6668 ай бұрын
    • RIP to your dad and the passengers on Challenger. I was in middle school at music class when it happened.

      @mikebuckets@mikebuckets2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@mikebucketsIt's a memory that you will never forget for the rest of your life, sad to say.

      @TerryMundy@TerryMundy2 ай бұрын
    • I was 18, almost 19, in my senior year of high school, about to write mid-term exams. I had an anxious day, more about the exams, then learned about this disaster in the evening news. 😢

      @moniquemcpherson6927@moniquemcpherson6927Ай бұрын
  • Think this is the first time I have been made aware that the crew were alive after the explosion. That they all most likely died instantly on impact. Those last few minutes must have been horrific for the crew.

    @joebloggs2635@joebloggs26358 ай бұрын
    • It is more likely they were unconscious and never knew their fate.

      @dukeford8893@dukeford88933 ай бұрын
    • Yes I heard it before..

      @semoneg2826@semoneg28263 ай бұрын
    • There’s a strong possibility that the crew cabin didn’t lose pressurization. If the cabin didn’t depressurize, they would’ve remained conscious throughout the entire descent. In that situation, I’m sure the last 2 minutes 45 seconds were terrifying. The only “good thing” about that scenario is the fact that the death upon impact was instantaneous and they didn’t feel a thing.

      @tigerlioness1@tigerlioness12 ай бұрын
    • They're still alive NOW..

      @thepostofficeprince8819@thepostofficeprince8819Ай бұрын
    • @@dukeford8893 they had on their emergency oxygen masks on. Pilot was still flying it.

      @user-rc9nf4gx3g@user-rc9nf4gx3gАй бұрын
  • Almost 40 years later and this still gets to me

    @annetteslife@annetteslife5 ай бұрын
    • Me, too.

      @mcmlxii4419@mcmlxii44195 ай бұрын
    • @@mcmlxii4419 🥰

      @annetteslife@annetteslife5 ай бұрын
  • This happened on my 24th birthday. It was the first event in my lifetime that was one of those, "I remember exactly where I was when this happened". I was over at my friend's house, picking her up so we could go riding our horses together and her t.v. was on while I waited for her to get ready. Of course the launch was on every channel and I was interested in it because of the teacher on board. I remember so distinctly calling out to my friend (who was in her bedroom), "OMG COME HERE!!! It just blew up!!!". She had no idea what I was talking about so she came walking in, and we both just sat there on her couch, holding each other's hands as we watched it again and again and just kept whispering, "Is this really happening?". I'm 61 years old, and it was the only time in my life that something shocked me to the bones like that... until 9/11.

    @amydavis4945@amydavis49458 ай бұрын
    • You lived through the shuttle failure wayergate 9/11 covid and jan6 the stories you must have omg 😮

      @sequillawilliams8809@sequillawilliams88093 ай бұрын
    • ​@@sequillawilliams8809omg. This is nowhere near the horror of 9/11. People are just being dramatic. Its not 9/11. It's not a pearl harbor. It's sad and horrible but sad and horrible things happen daily. Things earth shattering happen rarely (thank God), and those are the horrors that take pieces of your soul. The holocaust is another. This is bad. But anyone who tries to make it more are just ridiculous.

      @lesterine77@lesterine773 ай бұрын
    • I was 8 when 9/11 happened and I remember it almost identical to the way you remember the challenger disaster. I remember where I was and how it seemed like a dream. It couldn’t be real. To this day I can’t shake the feeling I felt watching the towers fall … live in front of my eyes. It changed something in me. I never got that back.

      @user-qg1sm5vr5f@user-qg1sm5vr5f2 ай бұрын
    • Same here, sis. I was kind of confused when I saw it because I wasn't sure if the smoke was supposed to look like that. That's when I turned to my dad and asked him if it was supposed to look like that and that's when he told me that it had exploded. It was such a preventable tragedy. I used to have horses too! Those were some happy times in my life.

      @thebandit666@thebandit666Ай бұрын
    • @@sequillawilliams8809 I think of things like that all the time. My great-grandmother who was born in 1895, so everything from horses and wagons to a man lending on the moon in her lifetime! My dad lived through the depression, world war II, the Korean war which he was stationed in Korea for. And then the Kennedy assassination, water gate, the shuttle, and 9/11. And then of course January 6th. He passed away last June at age 93. I'm 57 and even I have lived through some history in my lifetime.

      @thebandit666@thebandit666Ай бұрын
  • I’ve always believed that the officials at NASA should’ve been charged with a crime for what happened to Challenger. They were made aware over and over again about this issue and how deadly it could be but they willfully ignored it. They put the lives of those astronauts in danger simply because they wanted to stay on schedule. They really should’ve been charged with manslaughter or negligent homicide. What they did was so willfully negligent that the deaths of the astronauts should’ve been viewed as a crime.

    @Boyso5407@Boyso54078 ай бұрын
    • Reagan should have resigned, also. He created the pressure and corruption.

      @nora22000@nora220008 ай бұрын
    • Alas, they'd get off with the technicality that the astronauts knew the risks when they flew, and the signed document saying that it was okay to launch. The managers responsible though were removed from their jobs and were offered other roles where they'd never have that influence again. They all retired instead, because they knew that their careers and reputation were over.

      @beauferret5414@beauferret54148 ай бұрын
    • @@beauferret5414 Unfortunately, Ronald Reagan wasn't impeached and imprisoned for creating the problem.

      @nora22000@nora220008 ай бұрын
    • It's never that easy. They had pressure to launch from all sorts of places; even the White House itself.

      @playgroundchooser@playgroundchooser7 ай бұрын
    • ​@@playgroundchooserstill doesn't make it right Typical complacency from nasa and the powers above

      @markmitchell450@markmitchell4506 ай бұрын
  • I was home that day with the flu and was channel surfing, came onto CNN almost an hour before launch time. I thought I would be lucky to get this historic moment on video. I put a brand new tape into the VCR and hit the Record button. I got everything before, during, and after the disaster, including President Reagan's address about the disaster later that night. I still have this tape, still as clear as the day it happened, and it has been transferred to DVD as well. Such a sad and shocking event. My then-husband called a few minutes after it happened to find out if it were true. Through tears I told him it was, and I was taping it. He watched the video (still recording) when he got home that afternoon. I went back to work 2 days later, and the mood was very somber and sad. RIP Challenger 7. Never forget. I play the DVD on the anniversary every year. (Jan Griffiths).

    @douglasgriffiths3534@douglasgriffiths35348 ай бұрын
    • Thats based af for real for real. You should make a mix tape out of it.

      @SunBear69420@SunBear694208 ай бұрын
    • Whatever this footage is, I hope we get to see a full look at it one day.

      @ElectricoGamez@ElectricoGamez7 ай бұрын
    • I wish I had taped any of the launches, especially this one. I remember scheduling my morning work break just before the launch. I could not believe my eyes when it broke up.

      @zanpsimer7685@zanpsimer76857 ай бұрын
    • I really hope you upload it, for historical records sake. A continuous recorning of all those things would be pretty amazing, actually

      @silverdandylmao@silverdandylmao7 ай бұрын
    • I remember watching it in school. It was the first time they had TV in school for me. I remember how quiet the whole school got for the rest of the day. Such a sad experience for young kids to see..

      @robertschumann7737@robertschumann77376 ай бұрын
  • I remember being a freshman in HS, and we all gathered to watch the challenger launch... the first teacher was on board. But i will never forget the crying, screams, and general heartbreaking feeling as we watched it explode.

    @jennifertwede7142@jennifertwede71428 ай бұрын
  • They put a team together afterwards to see what went wrong. They didn’t need a team they already knew in advance what the problem was. No one wanted to admit it. Putting a team together was the cover up. Bless this man and his integrity.

    @Cindy-vx6us@Cindy-vx6us8 ай бұрын
    • Exactly, this is why Astronaut Dr. Sally Ride went behind the Rogers Commissions back. Reagan had ordered Rogers to go easy on NASA. Dr. Ride secretly obtained the Thiokol evidence and enlisted Air Force Major Don Katyna and Nobel Physicist Dr Richard Feynman to back and ream both Thiokol and NASA management against the wall. When Rogers found out what they were doing he immediately made it a closed session, in spite of the openness proclaimed. The American public was literally denied their "Watergate" moment regarding the space shuttle program.

      @gogamarra@gogamarra8 ай бұрын
    • I’d be willing to bet nearly every department thought they knew what went wrong, and thought they were at fault. It’s a complicated system and it can always be “safer.” Everyone’s always worried about something. These guys just happened to be right, so it’s the story we hear.

      @mikemck4796@mikemck47964 ай бұрын
    • ​@@mikemck4796sure, every department had their worries, but the administration leaders knew that they had just pressured Morton Thiokal to back off on their warning. Every single person familiar with the whole situation knew exactly what had just happened.

      @mikebronicki8264@mikebronicki82644 ай бұрын
    • ​@@mikebronicki8264Hell yeah, the one engineer told his wife the night before the launch "We just killed 7 astronauts." He, and other engineers KNEW what was going to happen BEFORE it happened. There was no need to investigate it. It was already investigated.

      @JamesStreet-tp1vb@JamesStreet-tp1vb4 ай бұрын
    • Well one reason they got away with it is because no one is naming names. Not even the people speaking how they saw it coming in this documentary.

      @ddespair@ddespair4 ай бұрын
  • I was an employee of Morton Thiokol at the time and I was working on O-ring test blocks. I don't like the phrase "engineering disaster" because it should be "a management disaster"

    @ronaldmontgomery8446@ronaldmontgomery84466 ай бұрын
    • True

      @semoneg2826@semoneg28263 ай бұрын
    • I doubt that.

      @zuleikabibishaik8580@zuleikabibishaik85802 ай бұрын
    • @@zuleikabibishaik8580 Thanks for sharing. No one cares.

      @alecaquino4306@alecaquino43062 ай бұрын
    • ​@@alecaquino4306I didn't share anything

      @zuleikabibishaik8580@zuleikabibishaik85802 ай бұрын
    • It really doesn't matter if it was engineering or management. Both knew it could happen. I know it's "guilt by association" but the general public couldn't differentiate

      @TheoryAug@TheoryAugАй бұрын
  • A suit executive should never veto an engineer. The executives were worried about losing the contract. The engineers were worried about losing human lives.

    @krumplethemal8831@krumplethemal88315 ай бұрын
    • They cared about lives but executives generally have a blind self confidence and dismiss fears. It is handy when everything works perfectly...

      @SuperLordHawHaw@SuperLordHawHaw3 ай бұрын
    • The executives were pressured by NASA bureaucrats, accountable to no one, like every other government scumbag, because they were afraid that congress might reduce their budget.

      @ynptrip@ynptrip2 ай бұрын
  • My english teacher in junior highschool actually was a student of Krista McAuliffe. She was always choked up on the anniversary of the disaster. I'm also glad NASA was taken to account for this, they 100% caused this accident, no doubt.

    @phoenixmastm@phoenixmastm8 ай бұрын
    • Ronald Reagan and his administration of corruption and disdain for experts and professionalism was the primary culprit, imo.

      @nora22000@nora220008 ай бұрын
    • Krista was my mom like frfr ong

      @SunBear69420@SunBear694208 ай бұрын
    • They should have been jailed for that

      @charlesnjeru5216@charlesnjeru52168 ай бұрын
    • Yep, no doubt. One of the teachers where my ex wife went to grade school was a finalist to go on this. Needless to say she was especially upset by this; she came close to being on that mission.

      @rustyneuron@rustyneuron7 ай бұрын
    • KZhead bullshitters, you have no no shame lol

      @anddontcallmeshirley-@anddontcallmeshirley-4 ай бұрын
  • I watched this live while at work in Whittier, California . . . The whole office froze. Money and Power - Always the prime motivators, showed it's face again. Until we can balance safety into that equation, it will go on . . . RIP, our seven heros...

    @quietguy1948@quietguy19488 ай бұрын
    • 🤣wtf does a teacher going to space have to do with money and power? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂🤦🏼‍♂

      @napoleonbonerfart278@napoleonbonerfart2788 ай бұрын
    • More like blown up US ego & patriotism

      @ingridakerblom7577@ingridakerblom75778 ай бұрын
    • May they RIP.

      @MYLOVEOFIRELAND2303@MYLOVEOFIRELAND23038 ай бұрын
    • Yes, I agree.

      @MYLOVEOFIRELAND2303@MYLOVEOFIRELAND23038 ай бұрын
    • ​@@napoleonbonerfart278Reagan forced NASA to carry "payloads” and make money to get their budget approved. The 'go' decision that killed Challenger was made to keep the payload schedule on track.

      @nora22000@nora220008 ай бұрын
  • This was not just a negligent act where someone didn't perform up to standard, these deaths were the direct result of a reckless disregard for human life-- a deliberate choice to place others in unjustifiable and preventable peril. They not only knew about the danger, in no uncertain terms, but they knew that there was a high degree of likelihood that their actions would result in serious injury, or in this case death. Unfortunately this sort of thing happens often in bureaucracy; decisions get made based on someone protecting their power base and position rather than accomplishing the stated mission. Often times the person who is making a decision where bad results are highly likely may believe that they can blame any undesirable results on someone else-- a scapegoat or even diffuse the blame among many people; this kind of thing can clearly highlight individuals who are not afraid of doing the wrong thing, but only in getting caught or blamed. Unfortunately a bureaucracy is inevitable in government, elsewise executive functions wouldn't get done; regretfully in this case the necessary evil of bureaucracy resulted in tragedy.

    @rustyneuron@rustyneuron7 ай бұрын
  • Why have engineers if you don’t listen to them?

    @Asiaguydude@Asiaguydude8 ай бұрын
    • Exactly.

      @blackpanther696936@blackpanther696936Ай бұрын
    • Because in the real world, risk vs reward is a factor. Sometimes people are blinded by the reward.

      @awesomeferret@awesomeferretАй бұрын
  • A friend of who used to work for NASA launch control in the early 80'a told me about one of the boosters having an catastrophic o ring failure 3 missions before the Challenger disaster when a 6ft by 9 inch section of the booster seal burned through, but it just happened to be facing the opposite of the fuel tank- so they just kept launghing without bothering to redesigning the seals !!?? PERFECT-

    @stevebigansky9372@stevebigansky93728 ай бұрын
  • I was woken by my mother because it was the end of the xmas holidays in NZ and we watched in disbelief the coverage of the disaster all day.

    @hecklepig@hecklepig8 ай бұрын
  • The underlying problem is whistle blowers lose their careers, and their reputation is damaged beyond repair. This was true with Alaska flight 261 when an engineer blew the whistle to the FAA over safety concerns at Alaskan Airlines. He was proven right with the tragic loss of 261, yet no management types were ever prosecuted for their gross negligence.

    @jimtrack3786@jimtrack37865 ай бұрын
    • True

      @semoneg2826@semoneg28263 ай бұрын
  • As much as I respect these engineers for standing up I still can't believe not one person said "look, when rubber gets cold it looseses it's resiliency. If rubber is cold it will not bounce back."

    @djbeezy@djbeezy8 ай бұрын
    • Well that’s exactly what the engineers did. They laid it all out for NASA and explained to them in very simple terms that this could happen. It was NASA that signed off on it. They were more concerned with getting that shuttle up then the actual safety of the crew

      @Boyso5407@Boyso54078 ай бұрын
    • NASA had this pitfall since STS-1 when they kept damage on Columbia from Young and Crippen that called for them to eject over Edwards AFB. (Of which John Young said he most definitely would have bailed out with Crip.) NASA knew the shuttle was underfunded and overpromised and they couldn't get off the ponzi scheme of their self-rationalizing processes.

      @gogamarra@gogamarra8 ай бұрын
    • Exactly!!!!!!!!!

      @blackpanther696936@blackpanther696936Ай бұрын
    • They couldn't have said it any simpler well maybe if they wrote it in crayon

      @blackpanther696936@blackpanther696936Ай бұрын
    • Then maybe nasal would have understood

      @blackpanther696936@blackpanther696936Ай бұрын
  • And the guy who told the truth was demoted... This dynamic occurs repeatedly in organizations large and small...

    @conradsieber7883@conradsieber78838 ай бұрын
    • The Soviets followed the same playbook (deny, coverup, and punish truth tellers) when Chernobyl happened a few months later. It turns out communists and capitalists do have things in common.

      @MakerInMotion@MakerInMotion3 ай бұрын
  • "I don't care if it blows up, as long as it's not my fault." -NASA employee 👏...👏....👏....😳😑

    @Itsonlyfriday@Itsonlyfriday8 ай бұрын
    • I was really stewing on this comment

      @wanniluv8671@wanniluv86716 ай бұрын
  • The sad thing here, apart from this actual tragedy of course, is that while NASA learned this lesson, they only did so for a short time, before they fell back into their old habits, and in 2002, they lost another seven crew members on Columbia through _"normalization of deviance"_ - in that case, knowing about the tendency for chunks of foam insulation to break off during launch, but not investigating or modelling the possible consequences. Now I know the private space haters will not like to hear this, but one of the reasons why the SpaceX Falcon 9 team has such a good safety record (so far) is because they have a philosophy that their engineers are to be insulated/isolated from pressure from the bean counters - it is the engineering team who have the final say on launch go no/go decisions. This is why it so often happens that their launches are aborted at the last moment. That might be annoying, but its why they have (as of today) a 257/259 (99.23%) success rate for Falcon 9.

    @davidanderson4091@davidanderson40918 ай бұрын
    • The private space people are, by comparison, derivative only and like little boys playing with expensive toys. Better to eradicate mosquitoes or end world hunger.

      @nora22000@nora220008 ай бұрын
    • @@nora22000 Whatever honey 🤣🙄

      @davidanderson4091@davidanderson40918 ай бұрын
    • If used wisely technology like Falcon 9 launches can help with world hunger as satellites can monitor the environment and help with crop forecasting. Too many people do not realize how important space technology is to helping deal with problems, and world hunger would not end if rocket launches and spaceflight ended right now.

      @olivergrumitt2601@olivergrumitt26017 ай бұрын
    • It was 2003, not 2002.

      @mcmlxii4419@mcmlxii44195 ай бұрын
    • @@mcmlxii4419 Yes, the Columbia accident happened in 2003 but this is an unnecessary nitpick. The falling _"back into their old habits"_ began well before that, in at least 2002 if not earlier. They knew large chunks of foam were falling off at supersonic speeds by at least the fall of 2001. They saw it happening on the launches of STS-105 (Discovery, Aug 2001), and again on STS-109 (Columbia, March 2002), and again on STS-113 (Endeavour, Nov 2002, the mission immediately before the Columbia disaster). They did nothing about it - this was a deviation from the expected profile of the flight - they normalized that deviation, and the seven orbiter crew members paid with their lives.

      @davidanderson4091@davidanderson40915 ай бұрын
  • The tradgedy had nothing to do with exploration and discovery but was yet another failure by administrators to follow the rules. The decision makers for this launch in contradiction to previously agreed no-go points should still be serving a prison sentence for murder of 7 people.

    @michaelreid2329@michaelreid23298 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely astonishing, how much catastrophe was caused by group-think, dismissal of expert opinion and putting task-schedules ahead of people's lives! I was motivated to read Professor Feynman's "What Do You Care What Other People Think? - and learned the value of holding that same attitude in my own life.

    @rgarlinyc@rgarlinyc6 ай бұрын
  • I got exactly 2 seconds in the this video, and my face just fell flat when I saw the "Challenger" monicker.... I witnessed this live, on TV because I had the flu and was at my Grandparents' house when it happened, and had to explain, as an 11 year old child, I immediately said when the booster blew up as we watched, "That's not right..." "Nannie, Papa, that's not what's supposed to happen," to people 2 generations separated from me. I still look back like it hurt to do so, as they had seen the moon landing 6 years before I was even born... Nannie said I started crying about 10 minutes later.

    @philstuf@philstuf7 ай бұрын
  • Engineers should be able to override managers. Managers overriding engineers is a recipe for this kind of disaster.

    @gailward3720@gailward37206 ай бұрын
    • True but who should override the white house.. interference came feom the top for this because the white house had a press conference..my thoughts are even if they wanted to call it off they were pressured

      @semoneg2826@semoneg28263 ай бұрын
  • Challenger actually survived the conflagration we saw on TV (which was deemed not combustive). Rather, it broke apart afterward due to tumbling at Mach 1+ speeds, for which it was never designed for. This is why the crew initially survived the conflagration we saw on TV and activated their emergency oxygen packs. Specifically, the controls belonging to Onizuka and Resnik had been manually switched to the ON position when the cockpit was recovered. There was no accidental way for this to happen. These are all official findings noted in the Rogers Investigation Commission Report.

    @gogamarra@gogamarra8 ай бұрын
    • Yes daddy

      @SunBear69420@SunBear694208 ай бұрын
  • I remember this so well. It was indeed so sad day & the loss of seven amazing people who was just irreplacable. I was watching from our home in Norge then & although so many year ago, once brought back to mind, feels just like the yesterday. May these 7 people RIP. Tusen takk for sharing.

    @MYLOVEOFIRELAND2303@MYLOVEOFIRELAND23038 ай бұрын
  • Watch this live in high school USA. The media had hyped the 1st teacher astronaut. Adult at work were not watching this people didn't care about this stuff. It was nothing like 9/11. But if you say most watch by children than yes most classrooms across America had this on.

    @abreak5048@abreak50488 ай бұрын
    • I came here to say almost the same thing. No disaster was more warched then the second plane hitting the twin towers.

      @napoleonbonerfart278@napoleonbonerfart2788 ай бұрын
    • Two different events, two totally different eras. Incredibly important to show how messed up management and politics are; well before 9/11 so comparing the two is stupid.

      @Scraggledust@Scraggledust8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ScraggledustI would tend to agree about eras if that was the context but the title says most watched in human history. That was definitely 9/11 at least in the US

      @jsteezy80@jsteezy808 ай бұрын
  • They should have rolled another shuttle out the next day loaded it with NASA executives and launched on an even colder day. That would have fixed NASA management...

    @conradsieber7883@conradsieber78838 ай бұрын
    • Had I been in power I would’ve fired the top management that signed the order of go ahead.

      @Miguel195211@Miguel1952114 ай бұрын
    • If that is your mentality, then you would never be put in charge of a coffee maker.

      @seanwilliamson1775@seanwilliamson17754 ай бұрын
    • Perfect!

      @nicknac1980@nicknac19804 ай бұрын
    • I’ll take Ignorant Comments for $800, Alex

      @JMG717@JMG7173 ай бұрын
    • Gently tiptoeing around the single manager responsible for the go ahead order. And those who hired that manager.

      @michaelpettett3087@michaelpettett3087Ай бұрын
  • How no one went to prison is absolutely ridiculous

    @sammysam2615@sammysam26154 ай бұрын
    • Because am sure they were getting pressure from the white house to launch...how do you fight that......they said the president has a press conference which include the event

      @semoneg2826@semoneg28263 ай бұрын
  • I still vividly remember the morning this happened. A service coordinator in our office yelled out, "hey guys, the space shuttle just blew up". At first I thought she was kidding. As soon as I saw she wasn't, the first thing I said was, "Well, I guess they kept flying until an SRB finally failed". As more info came out, my work colleagues wondered how I was instantly so sure it was an SRB failure. I followed everything space related from the time I was in elementary school. At the time of the loss of Challenger, it was no big secret that the SRB's were a serious failure risk on launch, especially at low temperatures. Several years before Challenger, I had a cartoon in a space related publication that pointed some of this out. NASA was living on borrowed time with the entire shuttle design and many insiders knew it. Prior to the loss of Challenger, there were other missions that had near burn throughs of the "O" ring seals. I think either STS 8 or 9 was one of those near failures. NASA's handlin of the "O" ring issue was just like how NASA management continued to ignore heat tile damage on multpile launches right up until they lost a second shuttle on reentry. NASA engineers knew these problems needed fixing but they were overridden and silenced by get it done management.

    @FlyMIfYouGotM@FlyMIfYouGotM8 ай бұрын
    • It was STS-8, using Challenger and the first Shuttle night launch, that had a near disaster with the Solid Rocket Boosters, although the cause was not related to O ring failure. STS 8 was lucky. STS 51L was not.

      @olivergrumitt2601@olivergrumitt26017 ай бұрын
  • I watched it from home I was 20. It took me a few minutes to even realize what happened. I was horrified. It seemed unreal. Love to all who witness Ed or lost someone in this traumatic event

    @dottiegillespie8067@dottiegillespie80678 ай бұрын
    • You must be old now frfr

      @SunBear69420@SunBear694208 ай бұрын
    • @@SunBear69420 your a genius

      @dottiegillespie8067@dottiegillespie80678 ай бұрын
    • I’m not calling you out or anything because it seems to be a common theme that many people (even the families on the ground) didn’t realize it had exploded right away, but I can’t help but wonder why that was the case. While I wasn’t alive at the time (born in ‘98), it looked pretty clearly like a catastrophic explosion to me the first time I saw video of it. Maybe it was just a case of the brain trying to find a rationalization, not wanting to accept that an unspeakable tragedy had just occurred.

      @tommyl.dayandtherunaways820@tommyl.dayandtherunaways8207 ай бұрын
    • @@tommyl.dayandtherunaways820 For me it was because I had never seen a shuttle lift off before. At first I thought that's what it looked like when it separated. Now I watch it and realize something went wrong. Have a great day!

      @dottiegillespie8067@dottiegillespie80677 ай бұрын
  • Travelling into space is inherently risky, as so much can go wrong, even if missions are perfectly planned and executed. However, what is unforgivable is to become "risk accepting" at the detriment of the crew and the mission. Safety always and every time has to be priority number 1 - nothing is more important than this when sending astronauts into space. We also need to remember all those astronauts & cosmonauts who lost their lives in pushing the boundaries for the human race - they are the real heroes who gave their lives for the good of mankind. RIP folks, and fly high, very high.

    @florianwolf9380@florianwolf93808 ай бұрын
  • Next up how NASA did it again in 2003 with Columbia based on all the same dynamics that brought Challenger down killing another group of astronauts...

    @conradsieber7883@conradsieber78838 ай бұрын
    • Hummm..thats scary

      @semoneg2826@semoneg28263 ай бұрын
  • Man it's been a while, I was at Lewis elementary in Iowa watching it live in the gym when this happened, tears me up and I was confused then. Now he just tears me up to see it again.

    @flr_klar9325@flr_klar93258 ай бұрын
  • Did you know, Big Bird from Sesame Street was going to be on the Challenger but instead they sent a school teacher

    @damonculbert5853@damonculbert58533 ай бұрын
    • Yes..heard so

      @semoneg2826@semoneg28263 ай бұрын
    • WTF man....and the Count from Sesame Street was going to do the final countdown!!!😂

      @christopherjohnson1803@christopherjohnson18033 ай бұрын
  • R.I.P. Allan McDonald.

    @LatinBostonH8ter79@LatinBostonH8ter798 ай бұрын
  • Wow, I remember this. I was in college, walking to class and I heard some other students talking about it as I passed. So, I skipped class and headed over to the Student Union where they had a TV room. Up to that point, the shuttle program had been safe, almost routine, so I was shocked by what happened. Years later with Columbia, I was no longer shocked.

    @rbilleaud@rbilleaud2 ай бұрын
  • I was working for a electrical contractor on a condominium on the beach in satellite beach florida the day this happened... I was on the 10th floor Working in one of the units. I had seen the launches before So I didn't go out to Watch . after finishing up what I was doing. I walked out onto the walkway. And I saw traffic pulled over on The side of A1A And people out of their cars looking up toward the north.. Then I looked down and saw a big crowd of construction workers in front of the condo looking up to the Northeast.. I walked down to The north end Of the walkway And looked up and saw the big swirling plumes from the solid rocket boosters.. I knew something had happened. I looked below me and saw 4 guys… I yelled down to them what had happened And they yelled back that the shuttle had blown up. Sad day in history.

    @russellsandidge4210@russellsandidge42105 ай бұрын
  • Growing up with imperial units makes it difficult to comprehend metric units. Pausing and converting units from metric to imperial while watching videos like this is difficult. I wish they implemented a simple text overlay for Americans who were taught imperial as we grew up.

    @TerryMundy@TerryMundy2 ай бұрын
  • It’s outrageous that Challenger launched.

    @nenblom@nenblom8 ай бұрын
  • I was watvhing it when that happened to them!! 😢😢😢

    @suzanplayer1231@suzanplayer12318 ай бұрын
    • The whole country was watching!

      @auntissie@auntissie8 ай бұрын
  • That was heart breaking to see!!

    @suzanplayer1231@suzanplayer12318 ай бұрын
    • What's more heart breaking is that it something u still beLIEve

      @GodOfFuck777@GodOfFuck7778 ай бұрын
    • @@GodOfFuck777 Found another conspiracy idiot.

      @CaptainSpicard@CaptainSpicard8 ай бұрын
  • Not only was this disaster criminally negligent, costing 7 lives of people who depended on NASA doing their utmost to keep the mission safe, but how many more suffered because of this negligence? The astronauts' family and friends, NASA personnel who knew what was wrong and were powerless to do more than they did to alert the higher ups, and the millions of children here and abroad who witnessed the whole thing on live tv? And honestly, I feel for the poor teachers who watched one of their own die on live tv, then were left trying to help the children in their care cope with the trauma. What an awful mess we all went through because some people at NASA placed their precious launch schedule about the safety of their astronauts. 😨

    @VeracityLH@VeracityLH19 күн бұрын
  • Always remember u our 7 space Heroes 💓💓💓💓💓

    @ashishbarthwal9010@ashishbarthwal90108 ай бұрын
  • My grandmother and I watched this together, we both loved aircraft, she retired from Lockheed. We both commented at the same time, it looks like it’s lifting off slower than usual.

    @johncamp7679@johncamp76794 ай бұрын
  • Wow, this made me tear up. I was 10 years old. When we returned from lunch, our substitute teacher said he had bad news for us -we thought it was about our teacher who had been out sick. It was not. He showed us video of the shuttle launch and explained what happened. Honestly, we could have done without the coverage with no mental health support, but alas, it was the 80s, and everyone just expected us to buck up. I was numb. I was just glad it wasn't about our teacher. But it was about someone else's teacher...I felt very sad for those children. Completely avoidable tragedy.

    @carabeingblue4016@carabeingblue40164 ай бұрын
  • I was in the 6th grade in Mrs. Greenwalds' English class watching the shuttle go up on TV .... I'm 47 years old now

    @o0o-jd-o0o95@o0o-jd-o0o958 ай бұрын
  • Things did not always go right on other flights , so it would be more accurate to say it was during 2 flights that things went disastrously wrong. At the time the Shuttle was conceived and approved, it was planned that every American launch would be using the Shuttle and expendable rockets were to cease. This was a very foolish idea, as the Shuttle had not even been proved to be able to carry out the number of launches planned for it and delays would only increase the pressures on the Shuttle to deliver. The Shuttle was not able to launch nearly as often as had been advertised and promised, and thus those pressures on the Shuttle grew stronger and stronger every passing year. Those pressures meant that NASA management became so desperate to launch that they were willing to press on with those launches despite warnings from engineers like Roger Bojoly. Management knew they were taking a huge gamble with astronaut lives, so much so, that launching on the Shuttle effectively meant each crew was playing a game of Russian roulette. The bulletin was in the firing chamber of the gun on the 2 flights that ended in disaster. Professional astronauts were well aware of the risks but non-professional crew members were deceived into thinking that flying on the Shuttle was just as easy and safe as flying on a Boeing 747 jumbo jet, with tragic consequences for Christa McAuliffe and Gregory Jarvis.

    @olivergrumitt2601@olivergrumitt26017 ай бұрын
  • I was in science class in middle school. I remember kids just walking out of classrooms, everyone silent and stunned. Teachers crying. I think we may have gone home for the day.

    @dsmoke1972@dsmoke1972Ай бұрын
  • The anticipation two years after to retry a launch must’ve been agonising

    @Xamry@Xamry7 ай бұрын
  • Interesting video

    @aaronaustrie@aaronaustrie8 ай бұрын
  • I’m 71yo retired Corporate Pilot and was based in NY. On a cross country trip to LA I was lucky enough to see a test of a solid rocket booster over Utah. I’m at 36,000 feet and I could swear I felt our aircraft shake. Maybe it was my imagination but I prefer to think it was real.

    @marksamuelsen2750@marksamuelsen2750Ай бұрын
  • No launch below 53 degrees. It does not take a rocket scientist to understand that.

    @TrustJesus333@TrustJesus333Ай бұрын
  • I was in elementary school, in Florida, and watched the shuttle explode with my very eyes. I will never forget that day. It's as clear as 9/11 in my memory. 😢

    @onemoresamadams@onemoresamadams7 күн бұрын
  • I would think that Pearl Harbor Invasion has been watched more. Even Atomic Bombs in Japan were a bigger more watched disaster. However, Challenger was a disaster

    @kenrdavis2266@kenrdavis22668 ай бұрын
  • There is a great documentary on this called challenger: a rush to launch

    @hammerlane3871@hammerlane3871Ай бұрын
  • Every bad event has an “I told you so” guy who proudly speaks about making the safest of possible bets.

    @mikemck4796@mikemck47964 ай бұрын
    • To be fair, he really did tell them so.

      @lindsayschmidt2177@lindsayschmidt2177Ай бұрын
    • @@lindsayschmidt2177 I have little doubt. On a project like that, I’d bet there was at least 20 people who said/warned about something.

      @mikemck4796@mikemck4796Ай бұрын
  • The highest level managers and engineers over-ruled the strong recommendations of the employees that were doing their job and that included the weather conditions at liftoff. Add to that all of the school children watching live on TV, with a school teacher as part of the 7-person crew. Tragedy of multiple, dramatic proportions.

    @garysangiacomo8016@garysangiacomo8016Ай бұрын
  • I so remember watching being in SHOCK. I couldn't believe it was real....

    @rebeccahylant7695@rebeccahylant76958 ай бұрын
  • Space shuttle takeoffs used to be such a religious experience that people would actually countdown for them and kids were genuinely excited about it and paying attention.

    @Xamry@Xamry7 ай бұрын
  • So who was charged with manslaughter? Nobody? But corporations are people, my friend.

    @rongenise7006@rongenise70068 ай бұрын
  • This was extremely sad 😢 I’ll never forget this. Since then I have witnessed mega Rockets 🚀 launched, as I live near NASA. It’s now 2023🇺🇸

    @FLIPPER1439@FLIPPER14398 ай бұрын
  • I was in the 4th grade when this happened. We didn't find out about it until after lunch when our teacher came in crying and told us what happened. We lived just outside of Houston at the time.

    @trekkie1995@trekkie19958 ай бұрын
  • 1986 was not a good year! Late January 1986, the NASA Space Shuttle Challenger exploded. Then later in spring, April 26, 1986, a nuclear reactor at Chernobyl went out of control and exploded. The Cold War was still continuing. Both Super Power countries suffered greatly!

    @ChristianCentury2000@ChristianCentury20002 ай бұрын
  • These people who overruled the engineers should have been told "Ok. But realize one thing; if the shuttle explodes due to the O ring failure because of the cold temperatures, and these people die you WILL be criminally charged and prosecuted and you WILL do 25 years prison time. Are you SURE you want to overrule these engineers, who have told you the shuttle will explode, if you try to launch in these cold temperatures? Here's your ONE chance to decide what's most important in your life." Edit I guarantee you they would have a different perspective come launch day

    @JamesStreet-tp1vb@JamesStreet-tp1vb4 күн бұрын
  • This had to have been filmed BEFORE we lost Columbia. THAT was the death knell of the space shuttle program. Oh, and it's spelled Christa, FYI.

    @SirBarth@SirBarth8 ай бұрын
  • I was at lunch in 6th grade the day this happened. I was watching it going up then the 'puff' as I call it. Following the puff cloud came 'Y' shaped split. I was confused for a few minutes until the principal came on the intercom and told us the shuttle had exploded. All classes were suspended and we were sent to study hall until they could arrange for the buses to get us or notify our families.

    @leeblack6139@leeblack61394 ай бұрын
  • OOOPPS ?? It was always the MONEY and the HELL with people's LIVES - GOOD JOB, NASA !!

    @stevebigansky9372@stevebigansky93728 ай бұрын
  • 34:33 they often asked me... But did the astronaut know to ask the right question?

    @MJGonzalez99@MJGonzalez99Ай бұрын
  • I think you meant to say: The Second Most Watched Disaster in Human History. The 9/11 attacks has definitely surpassed that.

    @darkdante9@darkdante93 ай бұрын
  • @21:30 this has got to be one of the best descriptions of what a launch would feel like I've ever heard

    @manmeetworld@manmeetworld4 ай бұрын
  • I was only 4 on this day, in preschool. My brother was watching, like all school age kids were that day. His teacher was actually one of the finalists in the program. He was in 3rd grade. I didn’t see the launch, that I remember, until I was an adult. But remember Christmas the month before, being cold and it snowing at Disney World. I’m sure my parents left the TV off that day, bad enough my brother watched it…why relive it?

    @WickedlyMe328@WickedlyMe328Ай бұрын
  • I was a kid growing up in Orlando florida leading up to the challenger explosion .my next door neighbor was a NASA electrical engineer for years working his way up to the 2nd in command at Cape Canaverals Kennedy Space Central .the Kennedy crew were in charge of everything to getting the shuttle off the ground and once it made liftoff everything switches over to Houston making them in complete control once the shuttle is the air .my neighbors name was either Peter Minderman .i wanted to say it was Donald Minderman but about positive it was Peter .if any one on here was actually a Nasa employee and have heard of Mr Minderman please let me kno .i do kno he passed away back some years ago but think his son Donald Minderman my childhood best friend followed in his fathers footsteps and was a engineer for NASA

    @johnhagan582@johnhagan5824 ай бұрын
  • In 1986, they didn’t have immediate counseling at schools, etc. School was in session next day and there was a brief assembly to watch Pres. Reagan and we sang some patriotic songs plus Amazing Grace. Then we returned to class as usual.

    @mariekatherine5238@mariekatherine5238Ай бұрын
  • As technical as it was it was a marvelous feat of engineering. Nothing has come close to it since. The Buran Energia was definitely a better design. To bad it lost its financing.

    @rancosteel@rancosteel8 ай бұрын
    • Having already spent the money to design and produce the Energia and Buran I would be surprised if one of its successors was not still flying today, had the bureaucracy not pulled the pin.

      @michaelreid2329@michaelreid23298 ай бұрын
  • I was 6, but I remember it really clearly. I was on the floor at my cousins house, we both had chicken pox, while we all watched it happen. I remember my uncle sitting on the couch and just saying, "oh my God". What really warped my mind was years later when they announced that the crew most likely lived through the explosion and died on impact between the pod and the ocean. 😢

    @new_comment@new_comment3 ай бұрын
  • It is remarked at 21:00 that the shuttle weighed 20,000 metric tons. Surely that is 2,000 tons, AT MOST.

    @revanwallace@revanwallace29 күн бұрын
    • I know right? lol even a Boeing 737 only weighs 50 tons.

      @justincarroll1313@justincarroll131326 күн бұрын
  • I was 17 at the time and we all watched it happen live at school that morning. There were a couple minutes of stunned silence. It took a while to wrap your mind around what just happened.

    @mattsmith1137@mattsmith11378 ай бұрын
  • “I don’t mind if the Challenger blows up as long as it’s not my fault”. Ummmmm… WTF!!!!!!

    @bestdadever9195@bestdadever9195Ай бұрын
  • So much warning. Inexcusable. This was money over lives.

    @Steve-tc2pi@Steve-tc2pi5 ай бұрын
  • 8th grade here when it happened. Still sad.

    @Lordestroyer@Lordestroyer8 ай бұрын
  • Isn’t the most watched disaster 911? That was surely the most watched event of all time

    @1211home@1211home4 ай бұрын
    • Before 9/11, the Challenger disaster was the most watched ever. But 9/11 has surpassed that. Not sure why they didn't say the second most watched disaster.

      @darkdante9@darkdante93 ай бұрын
  • A big, brittle rubber band destroyed the most complex vehicle ever built by man.

    @SamM-gl9zc@SamM-gl9zc4 ай бұрын
  • Wasnt it an o ring costing mere few dollars that failed due to the cold temperatures and was warned about but the pressures to launch after previous delays Typical nasa complacency

    @markmitchell450@markmitchell4506 ай бұрын
  • It was tragic, horrific to watch. I couldn’t sleep for aweek

    @nancydavis4618@nancydavis4618Ай бұрын
  • I’m wondering if it had blown up on the launch pad, if the crew would’ve survived.

    @heidifedor@heidifedor8 ай бұрын
    • The Challenger itself, survived the loss of the rockets, initially - However the external pressures tore the orbiter apart. A blast on the launchpad would have just made it quicker.

      @SirBarth@SirBarth8 ай бұрын
    • I would think the shuttle would’ve been engulfed in the explosion. They would’ve been killed instantly, a more merciful fate than what actually happened honestly.

      @tommyl.dayandtherunaways820@tommyl.dayandtherunaways8207 ай бұрын
  • 1:54 Disgusting! ….smh 🤦‍♂️ Thank goodness people have learned (for the most part), any situation that can turn catastrophic, can’t have any minor detail brushed aside for stupid SCHEDULING !

    @MartinAston00@MartinAston008 ай бұрын
  • As a gov. safety manager, this is almost textbook disaster: time pressure AND cavalier leadership. I remember watching in 1st grade, it was a trip…

    @Underacactus@Underacactus2 ай бұрын
  • Basic idea that the shuttle had no parameters or restrictions for air temperature at launch prior to the DAY BEFORE is wild. Probably was due to Florida having warm temps for all the other launches. Anywhere else would’ve had temp parameters.

    @rxw5520@rxw552023 күн бұрын
  • I was born when it blew up

    @melonieadams237@melonieadams2378 ай бұрын
  • I was In The third grade watching the lift off in an assembly…Didn’t realize what I was actually watching or fully understood..I got they died and went home and watched all day..My little sister told me it was ok because they were already close to heaven 😢

    @Tajha003@Tajha0034 ай бұрын
  • Looking back, it's actually insane they even lat that teacher on board. Is there any record that someone from NASA sat down with her and literally said, "this is rocket science, but it's new rocket science and you could possibly die on this trip"? I would imagine she was surrounded by Yes Men who did all they could to ensure her this was a routine thing and that danger was minimal since they needed the PR of a teacher going to space.

    @ddespair@ddespair4 ай бұрын
    • She was highly trained just like the other astronauts. I'm sure she and her family were fully aware of the dangers. Just like we are all aware of a plane can crash when we get on.

      @mothershelper1981@mothershelper1981Ай бұрын
  • I remember this day very well this happened a day after my 10th birthday i was at school at Hyde Park Elementary School in Jacksonville Florida My dad was at work at Navel Air Station Cecil Field just west of Jacksonville He recalls standing on the roof of his Squadron Hanger and he saw the entire event unfold he told me he watched the shuttle explode and i do remember it was freezing that morning my mom had to bundle me up before she sent me off to school and after the tragedy happened the Principal came on the school intercom to tell the entire school the breaking news

    @williambeverly8337@williambeverly83372 ай бұрын
  • Did he say he didn't care if the shuttle blew up as long as it wasn't his fault???

    @takeysha2332@takeysha23323 ай бұрын
  • I read that at the start of the Shuttle it eas estimated by scientist that it would be 98 percent successful. Of the 135 missions, two failed. That's about two percent.

    @SKF358@SKF3588 ай бұрын
  • The mission simply much too important to be postponed 🤨

    @rthelionheart@rthelionheart8 ай бұрын
  • They showed this to young kids in schools. Unlike today,

    @mariekatherine5238@mariekatherine5238Ай бұрын
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