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You are here: BBC > Science & Nature > TV & Radio Follow-up > Horizon
The Columbia crew, image courtesy of NASA
BBC Two, Thursday 27 November 2003, 9pm
Last Flight of the Columbia
Coming Up
Horizon investigates the hunt for the AIDS vaccine. BBC Two, 4th December, 9pm.

Last Flight of the Columbia - programme summary

Mixing powerful and deeply moving footage with telling forensic analysis, Horizon reveals what really went wrong on the Space Shuttle Columbia. The film's final revelation is telling. If NASA had acted differently, all seven astronauts could have been brought back to Earth alive.

"From the time when I was about four years old I wanted to be an astronaut"

Rick Husband, Commander for the Columbia Mission

The film begins with the astronauts' final moments and shows the haunting scenes at Mission Control at the moment the disaster struck.

What then follows is a disturbing detective story as the investigators gradually realise that the tragedy was caused by the failure of a small panel on the shuttle's left wing that had been built to be indestructible.

No one had ever thought such an accident was possible. It has led to the shuttle being grounded for the foreseeable future.

But that wasn't all. The film also shows that NASA had a number of options to bring the crew back safely - if only it had commandeered a spy telescope to visually inspect the damage. It could even have launched a rescue mission.

But instead, NASA chose to rely on a computer programme for damage assessment. The programme got it wrong; as a result, there was no hope for those seven crew members.


 
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