On the evening of January 27th, 1986, an engineer at a little-known company told his wife, “It’s going to blow up.” That man was Bob Ebeling, an engineer for Morton Thiokol, which had been contracted to manufacture and maintain the solid rocket booster (SRB) used by NASA’s space shuttle program. On that night, he and his coworkers tirelessly pleaded with NASA officials to delay the launch of the space shuttle Challenger until temperatures were more favorable. Sadly, NASA officials did not heed these warnings, and all seven crew members of STS 51-L lost their lives.1
This story starts before that tragic day with the creation of the space shuttle program. As you can imagine, any vehicle designed for space undergoes rigorous testing and analysis before being put into use. During these early tests, engineers at the Marshall Space Flight Center saw a potentially catastrophic flaw in the two o-ring design that the SRB used in its joints and reported their concerns to NASA in 1971. NASA disregarded these concerns and did not pass this report onto Morton Thiokol for further evaluation. NASA approved the shuttle program and put the shuttles into production. By the second shuttle mission, there was serious evidence that supported the original concerns for the SRB o-ring failure. The evidence continued to stack up with each subsequent mission. In 1985 Morton Thiokol decided to redesign the joint to include an additional three inches of steel, which would grip the inner face of the joint and prevent it from rotating and potentially failing. Both NASA and Morton Thiokol agreed to continue with the launch schedule while they worked on this fix and accepted the potential for failure as an acceptable flight risk.2
Despite this risk, no shuttle had ever suffered a catastrophic failure during launch, orbit, re-entry, and no crew member had ever been injured or killed during a mission. The Challenger had already completed nine successful missions at this point and future missions were continuously being planned. This perfect record was a point of pride for NASA, and confidence continued to grow. This confidence caused NASA to be overly optimistic in their promise of how cost effective and efficient the shuttle program could be. These promises resulted in immense pressure from the government and tax payers to deliver on their promises with an overly ambitious launch schedule.3
The launch of STS 51-L had been planned as the first launch of 1986, and it would also put the first teacher in space. The addition of Christa McAuliffe, an elementary school teacher from New Hampshire, to the mission had garnered national and international attention. The launch was scheduled for January 22, 1986, but due to the delay of other missions, the launch of 51-L was pushed back several times — first to January 23rd, then to the 24th, 25th, 26th, and finally the 27th. On the morning of the 27th during regular countdown procedures, a micro switch indicated a failure of an exterior hatch-locking mechanism. By the time this issue was fixed, the winds had exceeded launch criteria. The launch was delayed yet again.4
Managers at Morton Thiokol had been watching the delays from their headquarters in Utah and were tracking the conditions with each delay. On the evening of the 27th, they saw the temperature would be below freezing at the launch site the next morning, which presented potential problems, raising concern. The shuttle and SRB had never been certified to operate in temperatures that low. Bob Ebeling had written an official memo for NASA titled “Help!” in 1985 where he described the extremely high potential for both o-rings to fail in temperatures below 40°F, but NASA had ignored it. That evening a manager at Morton Thiokol called Ebeling to ask if the shuttle could launch the following morning in the freezing temperatures. When Ebeling informed them of the extreme risk, they immediately started crunching the numbers and building their argument for the delay of the launch. Morton Thiokol and NASA held a teleconference. NASA opposed all arguments for a delay, and stated that if one o-ring failed there was a secondary mechanism that would stop a catastrophic failure from happening. Morton Thiokol engineers continued to explain that was an incorrect assumption that would surely lead to disaster. Sadly, NASA officials disagreed, and a second teleconference was scheduled. Except this time, the Morton Thiokol engineers were excluded, only management from NASA and Morton Thiokol were included. In this second call Morton Thiokol management disregarded the warnings of their own engineers and recommended that the launch proceed as scheduled.5
At 11:38AM on January 28th, 1986, STS 51-L launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida. On board were seven crew members: Francis Scobee, Michael Smith, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Judith Resnik, Gregory Jarvis and Christa McAuliffe. At 11:39:13AM, just 73 seconds after launch, the space shuttle Challenger broke apart at an altitude of 14,000 meters. All crew members were killed when their cabin plummeted into the Atlantic Ocean three minutes after the break up.6
This disaster led to the immediate grounding of all shuttle missions. President Reagan convened a commission, called the Rogers Commission, to investigate the Challenger disaster. The results of the investigation showed the mechanical cause of the break up was a failure in both o-ring seals, which led to catastrophic structural failure. The report more importantly considered the contributing causes of the accident. It concluded that both NASA and Morton Thiokol failed to respond adequately to the potential danger of the SRB design, and instead of taking immediate action they accepted it as a flight risk. It also uncovered the large disconnect between management and engineers, which led to people who didn’t truly understand the science and math making a decision that was based on pride instead of fact.7
These tragic events unfolded more than three decades ago but are relevant today more than ever. The first private civilian space mission is rapidly approaching, and as it draws closer, we have to look closely at our past mistakes. If we don’t we are destined to repeat them. The millions who watched these events unfold have not forgotten how horrified they were, and they also remember how much the nation was shaken from this tragedy. Ebeling sums these feelings up best when describing how he feels looking back at what happened, “I could have done more. I should have done more.”8 We need to do our best to get everything right the first time, especially when failure equates to lives lost. We need to continue to focus on this as space travel becomes more prevalent in our society, and like Morton Thiokol and NASA in the ’80s, we can’t value our pride more than human lives.
- Howard Berkes, “30 Years After Explosion, Challenger Engineer Still Blames Himself,” NPR, January 28, 2016, https://www.npr.org. ↵
- Wikipedia, 2018, s.v. “Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster,” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle_Challenger_disaster. ↵
- Howard Berkes, “30 Years After Explosion, Challenger Engineer Still Blames Himself,” NPR, January 28, 2016, https://www.npr.org. ↵
- Diane Vaughn, The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture and Deviance at NASA, Enlarged Edition (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2016), 1-3. ↵
- Wikipedia, 2018, s.v. “Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster,” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle_Challenger_disaster. ↵
- Funk & Wagnalls New World Encyclopedia, 2017, s.v. “Challenger Disaster.” ↵
- Wikipedia, 2018, s.v. “Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster,” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle_Challenger_disaster. ↵
- Howard Berkes, “30 Years After Explosion, Challenger Engineer Still Blames Himself,” NPR, January 28, 2016, https://www.npr.org. ↵
96 comments
Octaviano Huron
It is catastrophic to NASA that seven people had died because they did not heed the warnings of their own engineers. The crew members had family and friends that miss them dearly, and further blame is placed onto the space station when their deaths could’ve easily been prevented. Someone had to explain to a classroom of elementary schoolchildren why their teacher couldn’t return. I hope NASA continues to ensure that these wrongdoings will never repeat themselves.
Alexandra Lopez
Congratulations on your nomination. I enjoyed reading this article because I did not know much of really what caused the Space Shuttle Challenger to explode back in 1986. After reading the article, the
author picked a perfect title to this article and asked whether it was an accident or negligence? It was easy reading from beginning to end. (reposted)
Alexandra Lopez
Congratulations on your nomination. I enjoyed reading this article because I did not know much of really what caused the Space Shuttle Challenger to explode back in 1986. After reading the article, the
author picked a perfect title to this article and asked whether it was an accident or negligence? It was easy reading from beginning to end.
Daniel Reyes
I can easily see why this article was nominated for Best use of Images! I like the era in photography that this article takes advantage of. The grainy yet modern images depict a not so distant past, but the thing that this article executes at least for this reader is the selection of the photos used. I believe that the article’s use of the featured image accurately depicts the loss of life, but especially in those that could have been prevented. The purpose of the trail of smoke leaves the onlooker wondering what happened? Why? How can we stop it?
Samantha Luckey
Congratulations on being nominated for an award! This article was awfully tragic and informative. While I am aware of our great victories in space travel, I know less about our tragedies. Overall the writing was well done, and this author was able to engage the reader to continue reading on, as well as, informing the reader of important details over the destruction of NASA’s Challenger. Great work!
Stephanie Nava
It is very sad that these crew members died in ways that could have been prevented. All they needed to do was change the date, they should have practiced before, I wonder of they saw those icicles and thought that it would not make a difference? I never knew of this tragic event, but NASA should have been more careful. Even though these deaths were an accident, they were 100% preventable. I am glad NASA became more careful with what they were doing instead of trying to rush everything.
Robert Ruiz
This was a really good article, it was well written, had a great message, and really entertaining to read. This was a tragic event that occurred because people wanted to rush and not take their time to ensure the safety of everyone. As we should explore our universe, we should also ensure that the safety of our scientist and astronauts are highest priority. Now I’m sure NASA does a lot more to try to prevent these kind of events to happen again, I feel it should of been avoided and those poor lives could of been saved.
Gabriela Murillo Diaz
I knew very little about this incident prior to reading the article, but after reading it I understood its importance. The negligence of the people involved in this project cost the life of various people. I believe NASA learned a great lesson from this incident. They learned that they must be cautious and wary of others safety. Especially when they are attempting to be innovative because it can drive funding away from future projects.
Ximena Mondragon
Congratulations on your nomination, , overall, this article is well written and informative. It also keeps the reader engaged and it flows very nicely. The pictures give a visual of the shuttle and the crew which makes the article stronger. It also, gives a visual of the problem that the shuttle encounter and the consequences. It is so crazy to visualize how the shuttle can encounter frozen conditions despite no low temperatures.
Max Lerma
This was a well writing article that covered a tragic time for the nation. Space travel should be about discovery and learning, not mourning the loss of great people and great scientists. It is hard to imagine that this event could have been avoidable if people had just listened rather than rush. It is good to know that we learned from our mistakes and that launches after this one have been handled with more care and with more caution.