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								|   | History of the roles of some Star Trek heavy hitteSTS 51-L Mission Overview and Preface to Presidential CommissionReport on the Challenger Accident
 
 SPACELINK NOTE:  The 25th mission in the Space Shuttle program --
 flown by the Challenger -- ended tragically with the loss of its seven
 crew members and destruction of the vehicle when it exploded shortly
 after launch.
 
 The launch -- the first from Pad B at KSC's Launch Complex 39 --
 occurred at ll:38 a.m. EST, on Jan. 28, 1986.  The flight had been
 scheduled six times earlier, but was delayed because of technical
 problems and bad weather.
 
 One minute, 13 seconds after liftoff, the vehicle exploded and was
 destroyed.
 
 All seven members of the crew were killed.  They were Francis R.
 Scobee, commander; Michael J. Smith, pilot; three mission specialists:
 Judith A. Resnik, Ellison Onizuka and Ronald E. McNair; payload
 specialist, Gregory Jarvis of Hughes Aircraft, and payload specialist,
 S. Christa McAuliffe, a New Hampshire teacher -- the first Space
 Shuttle passenger/observer participating in the NASA Teacher in Space
 Program.  She had planned to teach planned lessons during live
 television transmissions.
 
 The primary cargo was the second Tracking and Data Relay Satellite
 (TDRS).  Also on board was another Spartan free-flying module which
 was to observe Halley's Comet.
 
 The preface from the report by The Presidential Commission on the
 Space Shuttle Accident (created by Executive Order 12546 of February
 3, 1986) follows:
 
 PREFACE
 
 The accident of Space Shuttle Challenger, mission 51-L, interrupting
 for a time one of the most productive engineering, scientific and
 exploratory programs in history, evoked a wide range of deeply felt
 public responses.  There was grief and sadness for the loss of seven
 brave members of the crew; firm national resolve that those men and
 women be forever enshrined in the annals of American heroes, and a
 determination, based on that resolve and in their memory to strengthen
 the Space Shuttle program so that this tragic event will become a
 milestone on the way to achieving the full potential that space offers
 to mankind.
 
 The President, who was moved and troubled by this accident in a very
 personal way, appointed an independent Commission made up of persons
 not connected with the mission to investigate it.  The mandate of the
 Commission was to:
 
 1. Review the circumstances surrounding the accident to establish
 the probable cause or causes of the accident; and
 2. Develop recommendations for corrective or other action based upon
 the Commission's findings and determinations.
 
 Immediately after being appointed, the Commission moved forward with
 its investigation and, with the full support of the White House, held
 public hearings dealing with the facts leading up to the accident.  In
 a closed society other options are available; in an open society --
 unless classified matters are involved -- other options are not,
 either as matter of law or as a practical matter.
 
 In this case a vigorous investigation and full disclosure of the facts
 were necessary.  The way to deal with a failure of this magnitude is
 to disclose all the facts fully and openly; to take immediate steps to
 correct mistakes that led to the failure; and to continue the program
 with renewed confidence and determination.
 
 The Commission construed its mandate somewhat broadly to include
 recommendations on safety matters not necessarily involved in this
 accident but which require attention to make future flights safer.
 Careful attention was given to concerns expressed by astronauts
 because the Space Shuttle program will only succeed if the highly
 qualified men and women who fly the Shuttle have confidence in the
 system.
 
 However, the Commission did not construe its mandate to require a
 detailed investigation of all aspects of the Space Shuttle program; to
 review budgetary matters; or to interfere with or supersede Congress
 in any way in the performance of its duties.  Rather, the Commission
 focused its attention on the safety aspects of future flights based on
 the lessons learned from the investigation with the objective being to
 return to safe flight.
 
 Congress recognized the desirability, in the first instance, of having
 a single investigation of this national tragedy.  It very responsibly
 agreed to await the Commission's findings before deciding what further
 action might be necessary to carry out its responsibilities.
 
 For the first several days after the accident -- possibly because of
 the trauma resulting from the accident -- NASA appeared to be
 withholding information about the accident from the public.  After the
 Commission began its work, and at its suggestion, NASA began releasing
 a great deal of information that helped to reassure the public that
 all aspects of the accident were being investigated and that the full
 story was being told in an orderly and thorough manner.
 
 Following the suggestion of the Commission, NASA established several
 teams of persons not involved in the mission 51-L launch process to
 support the Commission and its panels.  These NASA teams have
 cooperated with the Commission in every aspect of its work.  The
 result has been a comprehensive and complete investigation.
 
 The Commission believes that its investigation and report have been
 responsive to the request of the President and hopes that they will
 serve the best interests of the nation in restoring the United States
 space program to its preeminent position in the world.
 
 
 THE CHALLENGER ACCIDENT
 
 Just after liftoff at .678 seconds into the flight, photographic data
 show a strong puff of gray smoke was spurting from the vicinity of the
 aft field joint on the right Solid Rocket Booster.  The two pad 39B
 cameras that would have recorded the precise location of the puff were
 inoperative.  Computer graphic analysis of film from other cameras
 indicated the initial smoke came from the 270 to 310-degree sector of
 the circumference of the aft field joint of the right Solid Rocket
 Booster.  This area of the solid booster faces the External Tank.  The
 vaporized material streaming from the joint indicated there was not
 complete sealing action within the joint.
 
 Eight more distinctive puffs of increasingly blacker smoke were
 recorded between .836 and 2.500 seconds.  The smoke appeared to puff
 upwards from the joint.  While each smoke puff was being left behind
 by the upward flight of the Shuttle, the next fresh puff could be seen
 near the level of the joint.  The multiple smoke puffs in this
 sequence occurred at about four times per second, approximating the
 frequency of the structural load dynamics and resultant joint
 flexing.  Computer graphics applied to NASA photos from a variety of
 cameras in this sequence again placed the smoke puffs' origin in the
 270- to 310-degree sector of the original smoke spurt.
 
 As the Shuttle increased its upward velocity, it flew past the
 emerging and expanding smoke puffs.  The last smoke was seen above the
 field joint at 2.733 seconds.
 
 The black color and dense composition of the smoke puffs suggest that
 the grease, joint insulation and rubber O-rings in the joint seal were
 being burned and eroded by the hot propellant gases.
 
 At approximately 37 seconds, Challenger encountered the first of
 several high-altitude wind shear conditions, which lasted until about
 64 seconds.  The wind shear created forces on the vehicle with
 relatively large fluctuations.  These were immediately sensed and
 countered by the guidance, navigation and control system.
 
 The steering system (thrust vector control) of the Solid Rocket
 Booster responded to all commands and wind shear effects.  The wind
 shear caused the steering system to be more active than on any
 previous flight.
 
 Both the Shuttle main engines and the solid rockets operated at
 reduced thrust approaching and passing through the area of maximum
 dynamic pressure of 720 pounds per square foot.  Main engines had been
 throttled up to 104 percent thrust and the Solid Rocket Boosters were
 increasing their thrust when the first flickering flame appeared on
 the right Solid Rocket Booster in the area of the aft field joint.
 This first very small flame was detected on image enhanced film at
 58.788 seconds into the flight.  It appeared to originate at about 305
 degrees around the booster circumference at or near the aft field
 joint.
 
 One film frame later from the same camera, the flame was visible
 without image enhancement.  It grew into a continuous, well-defined
 plume at 59.262 seconds.  At about the same time (60 seconds),
 telemetry showed a pressure differential between the chamber pressures
 in the right and left boosters.  The right booster chamber pressure
 was lower, confirming the growing leak in the area of the field joint.
 
 As the flame plume increased in size, it was deflected rearward by the
 aerodynamic slipstream and circumferentially by the protruding
 structure of the upper ring attaching the booster to the External
 Tank.  These deflections directed the flame plume onto the surface of
 the External Tank.  This sequence of flame spreading is confirmed by
 analysis of the recovered wreckage.  The growing flame also impinged
 on the strut attaching the Solid Rocket Booster to the External Tank.
 
 The first visual indication that swirling flame from the right Solid
 Rocket Booster breached the External Tank was at 64.660 seconds when
 there was an abrupt change in the shape and color of the plume.  This
 indicated that it was mixing with leaking hydrogen from the External
 Tank.  Telemetered changes in the hydrogen tank pressurization
 confirmed the leak.  Within 45 milliseconds of the breach of the
 External Tank, a bright sustained glow developed on the black-tiled
 underside of the Challenger between it and the External Tank.
 
 Beginning at about 72 seconds, a series of events occurred extremely
 rapidly that terminated the flight.  Telemetered data indicate a wide
 variety of flight system actions that support the visual evidence of
 the photos as the Shuttle struggled futilely against the forces that
 were destroying it.
 
 At about 72.20 seconds the lower strut linking the Solid Rocket
 Booster and the External Tank was severed or pulled away from the
 weakened hydrogen tank permitting the right Solid Rocket Booster to
 rotate around the upper attachment strut.  This rotation is indicated
 by divergent yaw and pitch rates between the left and right Solid
 Rocket Boosters.
 
 At 73.124 seconds,. a circumferential white vapor pattern was observed
 blooming from the side of the External Tank bottom dome.  This was the
 beginning of the structural failure of hydrogen tank that culminated
 in the entire aft dome dropping away.  This released massive amounts
 of liquid hydrogen from the tank and created a sudden forward thrust
 of about 2.8 million pounds, pushing the hydrogen tank upward into the
 intertank structure.  At about the same time, the rotating right Solid
 Rocket Booster impacted the intertank structure and the lower part of
 the liquid oxygen tank.  These structures failed at 73.137 seconds as
 evidenced by the white vapors appearing in the intertank region.
 
 Within milliseconds there was massive, almost explosive, burning of
 the hydrogen streaming from the failed tank bottom and liquid oxygen
 breach in the area of the intertank.
 
 At this point in its trajectory, while traveling at a Mach number of
 1.92 at an altitude of 46,000 feet, the Challenger was totally
 enveloped in the explosive burn.  The Challenger's reaction control
 system ruptured and a hypergolic burn of its propellants occurred as
 it exited the oxygen-hydrogen flames.  The reddish brown colors of the
 hypergolic fuel burn are visible on the edge of the main fireball.
 The Orbiter, under severe aerodynamic loads, broke into several large
 sections which emerged from the fireball.  Separate sections that can
 be identified on film include the main engine/tail section with the
 engines still burning, one wing of the Orbiter, and the forward
 fuselage trailing a mass of umbilical lines pulled loose from the
 payload bay.
 
 SEQUENCE OF MAJOR EVENTS OF THE CHALLENGER ACCIDENT
 
 Mission Time                             Elapsed
 (GMT, in hr:min:sec)     Event           Time (secs.)    Source
 16:37:53.444  ME-3  Ignition Command              -6.566  GPC
 37:53.564  ME-2  Ignition Command              -6.446  GPC
 37:53.684  ME-1  Ignition Command              -6.326  GPC
 38:00.010  SRM Ignition Command (T=0)           0.000  GPC
 38:00.018  Holddown Post 2 PIC firing           0.008  E8 Camera
 38:00.260  First Continuous Vertical Motion     0.250  E9 Camera
 38:00.688  Confirmed smoke above field joint
 on RH SRM                            0.678  E60 Camera
 38:00.846  Eight puffs of smoke (from 0.836
 thru 2.500 sec MET)                0.836  E63 Camera
 38:02.743  Last positive evidence of smoke
 above right aft SRB/ET attach ring   2.733  CZR-1 Camera
 38:03.385  Last positive visual indication
 of smoke                         3.375  E60 Camera
 38:04.349  SSME 104% Command                    4.339  E41M2076D
 38:05.684  RH SRM pressure 11.8 psi above
 nominal                            5.674  B47P2302C
 38:07.734  Roll maneuver initiated              7.724  V90R5301C
 38:19.869  SSME 94% Command                    19.859  E41M2076D
 38:21.134  Roll maneuver completed             21.124  VP0R5301C
 38:35.389  SSME 65% Command                    35.379  E41M2076D
 38:37.000  Roll and Yaw Attitude Response to
 Wind (36.990 to 62.990 sec)         36.990  V95H352nC
 38:51.870  SSME 104% Command                   51.860  E41M2076D
 38:58.798  First evidence of flame on RH SRM   58.788  E207 Camera
 38:59.010  Reconstructed Max Q (720 psf)       59.000  BET
 38:59.272  Continuous well defined plume
 on RH SRM                     59.262  E207 Camera
 38:59.763  Flame from RH SRM in +Z direction
 (seen from south side of vehicle)   59.753  E204 Camera
 39:00.014  SRM pressure divergence (RH vs. LH) 60.004  B47P2302
 39:00.248  First evidence of plume deflection,
 intermittent                      60.238  E207 Camera
 39:00.258  First evidence of SRB  plume
 attaching to ET ring frame          60.248  E203 Camera
 39:00.998  First evidence of plume deflection,
 continuous                         60.988  E207 Camera
 39:01.734  Peak roll rate response to wind     61.724  V90R5301C
 39:02.094  Peak TVC response to wind           62.084  B58H1150C
 39:02.414  Peak yaw response to wind           62.404  V90R5341C
 39:02.494  RH outboard elevon actuator hinge
 moment spike                       62.484  V58P0966C
 39:03.934  RH outboard elevon actuator delta
 pressure change                   63.924  V58P0966C
 39:03.974  Start of planned pitch rate
 maneuver                          63.964  V90R5321C
 39:04.670  Change in anomalous plume shape
 (LH2 tank leak near 2058 ring
 frame)                              64.660  E204 Camera
 39:04.715  Bright sustained glow on sides
 of ET                              64.705  E204 Camera
 39:04.947  Start SSME gimbal angle large
 pitch variations                  64.937  V58H1100A
 39:05.174  Beginning of transient motion due
 to changes in aero forces due to
 plume                             65.164  V90R5321C
 39:06.774  Start ET LH2 ullage pressure
 deviations                         66.764  T41P1700C
 39:12.214  Start divergent yaw rates
 (RH vs. LH SRB)                    72.204  V90R2528C
 39:12.294  Start divergent pitch rates
 (RH vs. LH SRB)                    72.284  V90R2525C
 39:12.488  SRB major high-rate actuator
 command                           72.478  V79H2111A
 39:12.507  SSME roll gimball rates 5 deg/sec   72.497  V58H1100A
 39:12.535  Vehicle max +Y lateral
 acceleration (+.227 g)             72.525  V98A1581C
 39:12.574  SRB major high-rate actuator
 motion                              72.564  B58H1151C
 39:12.574  Start of H2 tank pressure decrease
 with 2 flow control valves open     72.564  T41P1700C
 39:12.634  Last state vector downlinked       72.624 Data reduction
 39:12.974  Start of sharp MPS LOX inlet
 pressure drop                       72.964  V41P1330C
 39:13.020  Last full computer frame of TDRS
 data                            73.010 Data reduction
 39:13.054  Start of sharp MPS LH2 inlet
 pressure drop                       73.044  V41P1100C
 39:13.055  Vehicle max -Y lateral
 accelerarion (-.254 g)            73.045  V98A1581C
 39:13.134  Circumferential white pattern on
 ET aft dome (LH2 tank failure)      73.124  E204 Camera
 39:13.134  RH SRM pressure 19 psi lower
 than LH SRM                         73.124  B47P2302C
 39:13.147  First hint of vapor at intertank    E207 Camera
 39:13.153  All engine systems start responding
 to loss of fuel and LOX inlet
 pressure                          73.143  SSME team
 39:13.172  Sudden cloud a long ET between
 intertank and aft dome              73.162  E207 Camera
 39:13.201  Flash between Orbiter & LH2 tank    73.191  E204 Camera
 39:13.221  SSME telemetry data interference
 from 73.211 to 73.303               73.211
 39:13.223  Flash near SRB fwd attach and
 brightening of flash between
 Orbiter and ET                     73.213  E204 Camera
 39:13.292  First indication intense white
 flash at SRB fwd attach point       73.282  E204 Camera
 39:13.337  Greatly increased intensity of
 white flash                        73.327  E204 Camera
 39:13.387  Start RCS jet chamber pressure
 fluctuations                      73.377  V42P1552A
 39:13.393  All engines approaching HPFT
 discharge temp redline limits       73.383  E41Tn010D
 39:13.492  ME-2 HPFT disch. temp Chan. A vote
 for shutdown; 2 strikes on Chan. B   73.482  MEC data
 39:13.492  ME-2 controller last time word
 update                            73.482  MEC data
 39:13.513  ME-3 in shutdown due to HPFT discharge
 temperature redline exceedance      73.503  MEC data
 39:13.513  ME-3 controller last time word
 update                           73.503  MEC data
 39:13.533  ME-1 in shutdown due to HPFT discharge
 temperature redline exceedance      73.523  Calculation
 39:13.553  ME-1 last telemetered data point    73.543  Calculation
 39:13.628  Last validated Orbiter telemetry
 measurement                         73.618  V46P0120A
 39:13.641  End of last reconstructured data
 frame with valid synchronization
 and frame count                    73.631 Data reduction
 39:14.140  Last radio frequency signal from
 Orbiter                          74.130 Data reduction
 39:14.597  Bright flash in vicinity of Orbiter
 nose                             74.587  E204 Camera
 39:16.447  RH SRB nose cap sep/chute
 deployment                       76.437  E207 Camera
 39:50.260  RH SRB RSS destruct               110.250  E202 Camera
 39:50.262  LH SRB RSS destruct               110.252  E230 Camera
 
 ACT POS -- Actuator Position
 APU     -- Auxilixary Power Unit
 BET     -- Best Estimated Trajectory
 CH      -- Channel
 DISC    -- Discharge
 ET      -- External Tank
 GG      -- Gas Generator
 GPC     -- General Purpose Computer
 GMT     -- Greenwich Mean Time
 HPFT    -- High Pressure Fuel Turbopump
 LH      -- Lefthand
 LH2     -- Liquid Hydrogen
 LO2     -- Liquid Oxygen (same as LOX)
 MAX Q   -- Maximum Dynamic Pressure
 ME      -- Main Engine (same as SSME)
 MEC     -- Main Engine Controller
 MET     -- Mission Elapsed Time
 MPS     -- Main Propulsion System
 PC      -- Chamber Pressure
 PIC     -- Pyrotechnics Initiator Controller
 psf     -- Pounds per square foot
 RCS     -- Reaction Control System
 RGA     -- Rate Gyro Assembly
 RH      -- Righthand
 RSS     -- Range Safety System
 SRM     -- Solid Rocket Motor
 SSME    -- Space Shuttle Main Engine
 TEMP    -- Temperature
 TVC     -- Thrust Vector Control
 
 NOTE:  The Shuttle coordinate system used is relative to the Orbiter,
 as follows:
 
 +X direction = forward (tail to nose)
 -X direction = rearward (nose to tail)
 +Y direction = right (toward the right wing tip)
 -Y direction = left (toward the left wing tip)
 +Z direction = down
 -Z direction = up
 
 
 THE CAUSE OF THE ACCIDENT
 
 The consensus of the Commission and participating investigative
 agencies is that the loss of the Space Shuttle Challenger was caused
 by a failure in the joint between the two lower segments of the right
 Solid Rocket Motor.  The specific failure was the destruction of the
 seals that are intended to prevent hot gases from leaking through the
 joint during the propellant burn of the rocket motor.  The evidence
 assembled by the Commission indicates that no other element of the
 Space Shuttle system contributed to this failure.
 
 In arriving at this conclusion, the Commission reviewed in detail all
 available data, reports and records; directed and supervised numerous
 tests, analyses, and experiments by NASA, civilian contractors and
 various government agencies; and then developed specific scenarios and
 the range of most probable causative factors.
 
 FINDINGS
 1.  A combustion gas leak through the right Solid Rocket Motor aft
 field joint initiated at or shortly after ignition eventually weakened
 and/or penetrated the External Tank initiating vehicle structural
 breakup and loss of the Space Shuttle Challenger during STS Mission
 51-L.
 
 2. The evidence shows that no other STS 51-L Shuttle element or the
 payload contributed to the causes of the right Solid Rocket Motor aft
 field joint combustion gas leak.  Sabotage was not a factor.
 
 3.  Evidence examined in the review of Space Shuttle material,
 manufacturing, assembly, quality control, and processing on
 non-conformance reports found no flight hardware shipped to the launch
 site that fell outside the limits of Shuttle design specifications.
 
 4.  Launch site activities, including assembly and preparation, from
 receipt of the flight hardware to launch were generally in accord with
 established procedures and were not considered a factor in the
 accident.
 
 5. Launch site records show that the right Solid Rocket Motor segments
 were assembled using approved procedures.  However, significant
 out-of-round conditions existed between the two segments joined at the
 right Solid Rocket Motor aft field joint (the joint that failed).
 
 a. While the assembly conditions had the potential of generating
 debris or damage that could cause O-ring seal failure, these were not
 considered factors in this accident.
 
 b. The diameters of the two Solid Rocket Motor segments had grown as
 a result of prior use.
 
 c. The growth resulted in a condition at time of launch wherein the
 maximum gap between the tang and clevis in the region of the joint's
 O-rings was no more than .008 inches and the average gap would have
 been .004 inches.
 
 d. With a tang-to-clevis gap of .004 inches, the O-ring in the joint
 would be compressed to the extent that it pressed against all three
 walls of the O-ring retaining channel.
 
 e. The lack of roundness of the segments was such that the smallest
 tang-to-clevis clearance occurred at the initiation of the assembly
 operation at positions of 120 degrees and 300 degrees around the
 circumference of the aft field joint.  It is uncertain if this tight
 condition and the resultant greater compression of the O-rings at
 these points persisted to the time of launch.
 
 6. The ambient temperature at time of launch was 36 degrees
 Fahrenheit, or 15 degrees lower than the next coldest previous launch.
 
 a.  The temperature at the 300 degree position on the right aft
 field joint circumference was estimated to be 28 degrees plus or minus
 5 degrees Fahrenheit.  This was the coldest point on the joint.
 
 b.  Temperature on the opposite side of the right Solid Rocket
 Booster facing the sun was estimated to be about 50 degrees
 Fahrenheit.
 
 7.  Other joints on the left and right Solid Rocket Boosters
 experienced similar combinations of tang-to-clevis gap clearance and
 temperature.  It is not known whether these joints experienced
 distress during the flight of 51-L.
 
 8. Experimental evidence indicates that due to several effects
 associated with the Solid Rocket Booster's ignition and combustion
 pressures and associated vehicle motions, the gap between the tang and
 the clevis will open as much as .017 and .029 inches at the secondary
 and primary O-rings, respectively.
 
 a.  This opening begins upon ignition, reaches its maximum rate of
 opening at about 200-300 milliseconds, and is essentially complete at
 600 milliseconds when the Solid Rocket Booster reaches its operating
 pressure.
 
 b.  The External Tank and right Solid Rocket Booster are connected
 by several struts, including one at 310 degrees near the aft field
 joint that failed.  This strut's effect on the joint dynamics is to
 enhance the opening of the gap between the tang and clevis by about
 10-20 percent in the region of 300-320 degrees.
 
 9.  O-ring resiliency is directly related to its temperature.
 
 a. A warm O-ring that has been compressed will return to its
 original shape much quicker than will a cold O-ring when compression
 is relieved.  Thus, a warm O-ring will follow the opening of the
 tang-to-clevis gap.  A cold O-ring may not.
 
 b.  A compressed O-ring at 75 degrees Fahrenheit is five times more
 responsive in returning to its uncompressed shape than a cold O-ring
 at 30 degrees Fahrenheit.
 
 c.  As a result it is probable that the O-rings in the right solid
 booster aft field joint were not following the opening of the gap
 between the tang and cleavis at time of ignition.
 
 10. Experiments indicate that the primary mechanism that actuates
 O-ring sealing is the application of gas pressure to the upstream
 (high-pressure) side of the O-ring as it sits in its groove or
 channel.
 
 a. For this pressure actuation to work most effectively, a space
 between the O-ring and its upstream channel wall should exist during
 pressurization.
 
 b.  A tang-to-clevis gap of .004 inches, as probably existed in the
 failed joint, would have initially compressed the O-ring to the degree
 that no clearance existed between the O-ring and its upstream channel
 wall and the other two surfaces of the channel.
 
 c. At the cold launch temperature experienced, the O-ring would be
 very slow in returning to its normal rounded shape.  It would not
 follow the opening of the tang-to-clevis gap.  It would remain in its
 compressed position in the O-ring channel and not provide a space
 between itself and the upstream channel wall.  Thus, it is probable
 the O-ring would not be pressure actuated to seal the gap in time to
 preclude joint failure due to blow-by and erosion from hot combustion
 gases.
 
 11.  The sealing characteristics of the Solid Rocket Booster O-rings
 are enhanced by timely application of motor pressure.
 
 a.  Ideally, motor pressure should be applied to actuate the O-ring
 and seal the joint prior to significant opening of the tang-to-clevis
 gap (100 to 200 milliseconds after motor ignition).
 
 b.  Experimental evidence indicates that temperature, humidity and
 other variables in the putty compound used to seal the joint can delay
 pressure application to the joint by 500 milliseconds or more.
 
 c.  This delay in pressure could be a factor in initial joint
 failure.
 
 12.  Of 21 launches with ambient temperatures of 61 degrees Fahrenheit
 or greater, only four showed signs of O-ring thermal distress; i.e.,
 erosion or blow-by and soot.  Each of the launches below 61 degrees
 Fahrenheit resulted in one or more O-rings showing signs of thermal
 distress.
 
 a.  Of these improper joint sealing actions, one-half occurred in
 the aft field joints, 20 percent in the center field joints, and 30
 percent in the upper field joints.  The division between left and
 right Solid Rocket Boosters was roughly equal.
 
 b.  Each instance of thermal O-ring distress was accompanied by a
 leak path in the insulating putty.  The leak path connects the
 rocket's combustion chamber with the O-ring region of the tang and
 clevis.  Joints that actuated without incident may also have had these
 leak paths.
 
 13.  There is a possibility that there was water in the clevis of the
 STS 51-L joints since water was found in the STS-9 joints during a
 destack operation after exposure to less rainfall than STS 51-L.  At
 time of launch, it was cold enough that water present in the joint
 would freeze.  Tests show that ice in the joint can inhibit proper
 secondary seal performance.
 
 14.  A series of puffs of smoke were observed emanating from the 51-L
 aft field joint area of the right Solid Rocket Booster between 0.678
 and 2.500 seconds after ignition of the Shuttle Solid Rocket Motors.
 
 a. The puffs appeared at a frequency of about three puffs per
 second.  This roughly matches the natural structural frequency of the
 solids at lift off and is reflected in slight cyclic changes of the
 tang-to-clevis gap opening.
 
 b.  The puffs were seen to be moving upward along the surface of the
 booster above the aft field joint.
 
 c.  The smoke was estimated to originate at a circumferential
 position of between 270 degrees and 315 degrees on the booster aft
 field joint, emerging from the top of the joint.
 
 15.  This smoke from the aft field joint at Shuttle lift off was the
 first sign of the failure of the Solid Rocket Booster O-ring seals on
 STS 51-L.
 
 16.  The leak was again clearly evident as a flame at approximately 58
 seconds into the flight.  It is possible that the leak was continuous
 but unobservable or non-existent in portions of the intervening
 period.  It is possible in either case that thrust vectoring and
 normal vehicle response to wind shear as well as planned maneuvers
 reinitiated or magnified the leakage from a degraded seal in the
 period preceding the observed flames.  The estimated position of the
 flame, centered at a point 307 degrees around the circumference of the
 aft field joint, was confirmed by the recovery of two fragments of the
 right Solid Rocket Booster.
 
 a.  A small leak could have been present that may have grown to
 breach the joint in flame at a time on the order of 58 to 60 seconds
 after lift off.
 
 b.  Alternatively, the O-ring gap could have been resealed by
 deposition of a fragile buildup of aluminum oxide and other combustion
 debris.  This resealed section of the joint could have been disturbed
 by thrust vectoring, Space Shuttle motion and flight loads inducted by
 changing winds aloft.
 
 c.  The winds aloft caused control actions in the time interval of
 32 seconds to 62 seconds into the flight that were typical of the
 largest values experienced on previous missions.
 
 CONCLUSION
 In view of the findings, the Commission concluded that the cause of
 the Challenger accident was the failure of the pressure seal in the
 aft field joint of the right Solid Rocket Booster.  The failure was
 due to a faulty design unacceptably sensitive to a number of factors.
 These factors were the effects of temperature, physical dimensions,
 the character of materials, the effects of reusability, processing and
 the reaction of the joint to dynamic loading.
 
 
 THE CONTRIBUTING CAUSE OF THE ACCIDENT
 
 The decision to launch the Challenger was flawed.  Those who made that
 decision were unaware of the recent history of problems concerning the
 O-rings and the joint and were unaware of the initial written
 recommendation of the contractor advising against the launch at
 temperatures below 53 degrees Fahrenheit and the continuing opposition
 of the engineers at Thiokol after the management reversed its
 position.  They did not have a clear understanding of Rockwell's
 concern that it was not safe to launch because of ice on the pad.  If
 the decision makers had known all of the facts, it is highly unlikely
 that they would have decided to launch 51-L on January 28, 1986.
 
 FINDINGS
 1.  The Commission concluded that there was a serious flaw in the
 decision making process leading up to the launch of flight 51-L.  A
 well structured and managed system emphasizing safety would have
 flagged the rising doubts about the Solid Rocket Booster joint seal.
 Had these matters been clearly stated and emphasized in the flight
 readiness process in terms reflecting the views of most of the Thiokol
 engineers and at least some of the Marshall engineers, it seems likely
 that the launch of 51-L  might not have occurred when it did.
 
 2.  The waiving of launch constraints appears to have been at the
 expense of flight safety.  There was no system which made it
 imperative that launch constraints and waivers of launch constraints
 be considered by all levels of management.
 
 3.  The Commission is troubled by what appears to be a propensity of
 management at Marshall to contain potentially serious problems and to
 attempt to resolve them internally rather than communicate them
 forward.  This tendency is altogether at odds with the need for
 Marshall to function as part of a system working toward successful
 flight missions, interfacing and communicating with the other parts of
 the system that work to the same end.
 
 4.  The Commission concluded that the Thiokol Management reversed its
 position and recommended the launch of 51-L, at the urging of Marshall
 and contrary to the views of its engineers in order to accommodate a
 major customer.
 
 Findings
 The Commission is concerned about three aspects of the ice-on-the-pad
 issue.
 
 1.  An Analysis of all of the testimony and interviews establishes
 that Rockwell's recommendation on launch was ambiguous.  The
 Commission finds it difficult, as did Mr. Aldrich, to conclude that
 there was a no-launch recommendation.  Moreover, all parties were
 asked specifically to contact Aldrich or other NASA officials after
 the 9:00 Mission Management Team meeting and subsequent to the
 resumption of the countdown.
 
 2.  The Commission is also concerned about the NASA response to the
 Rockwell position at the 9:00 a.m. meeting.  While it is understood
 that decisions have to be made in launching a Shuttle, the Commission
 is not convinced Levels I and II appropriately considered Rockwell's
 concern about the ice.  However ambiguous Rockwell's position was, it
 is clear that they did tell NASA that the ice was an unknown
 condition.  Given the extent of the ice on the pad, the admitted
 unknown effect of the Solid Rocket Motor and Space Shuttle Main
 Engines ignition on the ice, as well as the fact that debris striking
 the Orbiter was a potential flight safety hazard, the Commission finds
 the decision to launch questionable under those circumstances.  In
 this situation, NASA appeared to be requiring a contractor to prove
 that it was not safe to launch, rather than proving it was safe.
 Nevertheless, the Commission has determined that the ice was not a
 cause of the 51-L accident and does not conclude that NASA's decision
 to launch specifically overrode a no-launch recommendation by an
 element contractor.
 
 3.  The Commission concluded that the freeze protection plan for
 launch pad 39B was inadequate.  The Commission believes that the
 severe cold and presence of so much ice on the fixed service structure
 made it inadvisable to launch on the morning of January 28, and that
 margins of safety were whittled down too far.
 
 Additionally, access to the crew emergency slide wire baskets was
 hazardous due to ice conditions.  Had the crew been required to
 evacuate the Orbiter on the launch pad, they would have been running
 on an icy surface.  The Commission believes the crew should have been
 made aware of the condition, greater consideration should have been
 given to delaying the launch.
 
 
 AN ACCIDENT ROOTED IN HISTORY
 
 EARLY DESIGN
 The Space Shuttle's Solid Rocket Booster problem began with the faulty
 design of its joint and increased as both NASA and contractor
 management first failed to recognize it as a problem, then failed to
 fix it and finally treated it as an acceptable flight risk.
 
 Morton Thiokol, Inc., the contractor, did not accept the implication
 of tests early in the program that the design had a serious and
 unanticipated flaw.  NASA did not accept the judgment of its engineers
 that the design was unacceptable, and as the joint problems grew in
 number and severity NASA minimized them in management briefings and
 reports.  Thiokol's stated position was that "the condition is not
 desirable but is acceptable."
 
 Neither Thiokol nor NASA expected the rubber O-rings sealing the
 joints to be touched by hot gases of motor ignition, much less to be
 partially burned.  However, as tests and then flights confirmed damage
 to the sealing rings, the reaction by both NASA and Thiokol was to
 increase the amount of damage considered "acceptable."  At no time did
 management either recommend a redesign of the joint or call for the
 Shuttle's grounding until the problem was solved.
 
 FINDINGS
 The genesis of the Challenger accident -- the failure of the joint of
 the right Solid Rocket Motor -- began with decisions made in the
 design of the joint and in the failure by both Thiokol and NASA's
 Solid Rocket Booster project office to understand and respond to facts
 obtained during testing.
 
 The Commission has concluded that neither Thiokol nor NASA responded
 adequately to internal warnings about the faulty seal design.
 Furthermore, Thiokol and NASA did not make a timely attempt to develop
 and verify a new seal after the initial design was shown to be
 deficient.  Neither organization developed a solution to the
 unexpected occurrences of O-ring erosion and blow-by even though this
 problem was experienced frequently during the Shuttle flight history.
 Instead, Thiokol and NASA management came to accept erosion and
 blow-by as unavoidable and an acceptable flight risk.  Specifically,
 the Commission has found that:
 
 1.  The joint test and certification program was inadequate.  There
 was no requirement to configure the qualifications test motor as it
 would be in flight, and the motors were static tested in a horizontal
 position, not in the vertical flight position.
 
 2.  Prior to the accident, neither NASA nor Thiokol fully understood
 the mechanism by which the joint sealing action took place.
 
 3.  NASA and Thiokol accepted escalating risk apparently because they
 "got away with it last time."  As Commissioner Feynman observed, the
 decision making was:
 
 "a kind of Russian roulette. ...  (The Shuttle) flies (with O-ring
 erosion) and nothing happens.  Then it is suggested, therefore, that
 the risk is no longer so high for the next flights.  We can lower our
 standards a little bit because we got away with it last time. ... You
 got away with it, but it shouldn't be done over and over again like
 that."
 
 4. NASA's system for tracking anomalies for Flight Readiness Reviews
 failed in that, despite a history of persistent O-ring erosion and
 blow-by, flight was still permitted.  It failed again in the strange
 sequence of six consecutive launch constraint waivers prior to 51-L,
 permitting it to fly without any record of a waiver, or even of an
 explicit constraint.  Tracking and continuing only anomalies that are
 "outside the data base" of prior flight allowed major problems to be
 removed from and lost by the reporting system.
 
 5.  The O-ring erosion history presented to Level I at NASA
 Headquarters in August 1985 was sufficiently detailed to require
 corrective action prior to the next flight.
 
 6.  A careful analysis of the flight history of O-ring performance
 would have revealed the correlation of O-ring damage and low
 temperature.  Neither NASA nor Thiokol carried out such an analysis;
 consequently, they were unprepared to properly evaluate the risks of
 launching the 51-L mission in conditions more extreme than they had
 encountered before.
 
 
 THE SILENT SAFETY PROGRAM
 
 The Commission was surprised to realize after many hours of testimony
 that NASA's safety staff was never mentioned.  No witness related the
 approval or disapproval of the reliability engineers, and none
 expressed the satisfaction or dissatisfaction of the quality assurance
 staff.  No one thought to invite a safety representative or a
 reliability and quality assurance engineer to the January 27, 1986,
 teleconference between Marshall and Thiokol.  Similarly, there was no
 representative of safety on the Mission Management Team that made key
 decisions during the countdown on January 28, 1986.  The Commission is
 concerned about the symptoms that it sees.
 
 The unrelenting pressure to meet the demands of an accelerating flight
 schedule might have been adequately handled by NASA if it had insisted
 upon the exactingly thorough procedures that were its hallmark during
 the Apollo program.  An extensive and redundant safety program
 comprising interdependent safety, reliability and quality assurance
 functions existed during and after the lunar program to discover any
 potential safety problems.  Between that period and 1986, however, the
 program became ineffective.  This loss of effectiveness seriously
 degraded the checks and balances essential for maintaining flight
 safety.
 
 On April 3, 1986, Arnold Aldrich, the Space Shuttle program manager,
 appeared before the Commission at a public hearing in Washington,
 D.C.  He described five different communication or organization
 failures that affected the launch decision on January 28, 1986.  Four
 of those failures relate directly to faults within the safety
 program.  These faults include a lack of problem reporting
 requirements, inadequate trend analysis, misrepresentation of
 criticality and lack of involvement in critical discussions.  A
 properly staffed, supported, and robust safety organization might well
 have avoided these faults and thus eliminated the communication
 failures.
 
 NASA has a safety program to ensure that the communication failures to
 which Mr. Aldrich referred do not occur.  In the case of mission 51-L,
 that program fell short.
 
 FINDINGS
 
 1.  Reductions in the safety, reliability and quality assurance work
 force at Marshall and NASA Headquarters have seriously limited
 capability in those vital functions.
 
 2. Organizational structures at Kennedy and Marshall have placed
 safety, reliability and quality assurance offices under the
 supervision of the very organizations and activities whose efforts
 they are to check.
 
 3.  Problem reporting requirements are not concise and fail to get
 critical information to the proper levels of management.
 
 4.  Little or no trend analysis was performed on O-ring erosion and
 blow-by problems.
 
 5.  As the flight rate increased, the Marshall safety, reliability and
 quality assurance work force was decreasing, which adversely affected
 mission safety.
 
 6.  Five weeks after the 51-L accident, the criticality of the Solid
 Rocket Motor field joint was still not properly documented in the
 problem reporting system at Marshall.
 
 
 PRESSURES ON THE SYSTEM
 
 With the 1982 completion of the orbital flight test series, NASA began
 a planned acceleration of the Space Shuttle launch schedule.  One
 early plan contemplated an eventual rate of a mission a week, but
 realism forced several downward revisions.  In 1985, NASA published a
 projection calling for an annual rate of 24 flights by 1990.  Long
 before the Challenger accident, however, it was becoming obvious that
 even the modified goal of two flights a month was overambitious.
 
 In establishing the schedule, NASA had not provided adequate resources
 for its attainment.  As a result, the capabilities of the system were
 strained by the modest nine-mission rate of 1985, and the evidence
 suggests that NASA would not have been able to accomplish the 14
 flights scheduled for 1986.  These are the major conclusions of a
 Commission examination of the pressures and problems attendant upon
 the accelerated launch schedule.
 
 FINDINGS
 1.  The capabilities of the system were stretched to the limit to
 support the flight rate in winter 1985/1986.  Projections into the
 spring and summer of 1986 showed a clear trend; the system, as it
 existed, would have been unable to deliver crew training software for
 scheduled flights by the designated dates.  The result would have been
 an unacceptable compression of the time available for the crews to
 accomplish their required training.
 
 2.  Spare parts are in critically short supply.  The Shuttle program
 made a conscious decision to postpone spare parts procurements in
 favor of budget items of perceived higher priority.  Lack of spare
 parts would likely have limited flight operations in 1986.
 
 3.  Stated manifesting policies are not enforced.  Numerous late
 manifest changes (after the cargo integration review) have been made
 to both major payloads and minor payloads throughout the Shuttle
 program.
 
 Late changes to major payloads or program requirements can require
 extensive resources (money, manpower, facilities) to implement.
 
 If many late changes to "minor" payloads occur, resources are
 quickly absorbed.
 
 Payload specialists frequently were added to a flight well after
 announced deadlines.
 
 Late changes to a mission adversely affect the training and
 development of procedures for subsequent missions.
 
 4.  The scheduled flight rate did not accurately reflect the
 capabilities and resources.
 
 The flight rate was not reduced to accommodate periods of
 adjustment in the capacity of the work force.  There was no margin in
 the system to accommodate unforeseen hardware problems.
 
 Resources were primarily directed toward supporting the flights
 and thus not enough were available to improve and expand facilities
 needed to support a higher flight rate.
 
 5.  Training simulators may be the limiting factor on the flight rate:
 the two current simulators cannot train crews for more than 12-15
 flights per year.
 
 6.  When flights come in rapid succession, current requirements do not
 ensure that critical anomalies occurring during one flight are
 identified and addressed appropriately before the next flight.
 
 
 OTHER SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS
 
 In the course of its investigation, the Commission became aware of a
 number of matters that played no part in the mission 51-L accident but
 nonetheless hold a potential for safety problems in the future.
 
 Some of these matters, those involving operational concerns, were
 brought directly to the Commission's attention by the NASA astronaut
 office.  They were the subject of a special hearing.
 
 Other areas of concern came to light as the Commission pursued various
 lines of investigation in its attempt to isolate the cause of the
 accident.  These inquiries examined such aspects as the development
 and operation of each of the elements of the Space Shuttle -- the
 Orbiter, its main engines and the External Tank; the procedures
 employed in the processing and assembly of 51-L, and launch damage.
 
 This chapter examines potential risks in two general areas. The first
 embraces critical aspects of a Shuttle flight; for example,
 considerations related to a possible premature mission termination
 during the ascent phase and the risk factors connected with the
 demanding approach and landing phase.  The other focuses on testing,
 processing and assembling the various elements of the Shuttle.
 
 ASCENT:  A Critical Phase
 The events of flight 51-L dramatically illustrated the dangers of the
 first stage of a Space Shuttle ascent.  The accident also focused
 attention on the issues of Orbiter abort capabilities and crew
 escape.  Of particular concern to the Commission are the current abort
 capabilities, options to improve those capabilities, options for crew
 escape and the performance of the range safety system.
 
 It is not the Commission's intent to second-guess the Space Shuttle
 design or try to depict escape provisions that might have saved the
 51-L crew.  In fact, the events that led to destruction of the
 Challenger progressed very rapidly and without warning.  Under those
 circumstances, the Commission believes it is highly unlikely that any
 of the systems discussed below, or any combination of those systems,
 would have saved the flight 51-L crew.
 
 FINDINGS
 
 1.  The Space Shuttle System was not designed to survive a failure of
 the Solid Rocket Boosters.  There are no corrective actions that can
 be taken if the boosters do not operate properly after ignition, i.e.,
 there is no ability to separate an Orbiter safely from thrusting
 boosters and no ability for the crew to escape the vehicle during
 first-stage ascent.
 
 Neither the Mission Control Team not the 51-L crew had any warning
 of impending disaster.
 
 Even if there had been warning, there were no actions available to
 the crew of the Mission Control Team to avert the disaster.
 
 LANDING:  Another Critical Phase
 
 The consequences of faulty performance in any dynamic and demanding
 flight environment can be catastrophic.  The Commission was concerned
 that an insufficient safety margin may have existed in areas other
 than Shuttle ascent.  Entry and landing of the Shuttle are dynamic and
 demanding with all the risks and complications inherent in flying a
 heavyweight glider with a very steep glide path.  Since the Shuttle
 crew cannot divert to any alternate landing site after entry, the
 landing decision must be both timely and accurate.  In addition, the
 landing gear, which includes wheels, tires and brakes, must function
 properly.
 
 In summary, although there are valid programmatic reasons to land
 routinely at Kennedy, there are concerns that suggest that this is not
 wise under the present circumstances.  While planned landings at
 Edwards carry a cost in dollars and days, the realities of weather
 cannot be ignored.  Shuttle program officials must recognize that
 Edwards is a permanent, essential part of the program.  The cost
 associated with regular scheduled landing and turnaround operations at
 Edwards is thus a necessary program cost.
 
 Decisions governing Space Shuttle operations must be consistent with
 the philosophy that unnecessary risks have to be eliminated.  Such
 decisions cannot be made without a clear understanding of margins of
 safety in each part of the system.
 
 Unfortunately, margins of safety cannot be assured if performance
 characteristics are not thoroughly understood, nor can they be deduced
 from a previous flight's "success."
 
 The Shuttle program cannot afford to operate outside its experience in
 the areas of tires, brakes and weather, with the capabilities of the
 system today.  Pending a clear understanding of all landing and
 deceleration systems, and a resolution of the problems encountered to
 date in Shuttle landings, the most conservative course must be
 followed in order to minimize risk during this dynamic phase of
 flight.
 
 SHUTTLE ELEMENTS
 The Space Shuttle Main Engine teams at Marshall and Rocketdyne have
 developed engines that have achieved their performance goals and have
 performed extremely well.  Nevertheless the main engines continue to
 be highly complex and critical components of the Shuttle that involve
 an element of risk principally because important components of the
 engines degrade more rapidly with flight use than anticipated.  Both
 NASA and Rocketdyne have taken steps to contain that risk.  An
 important aspect of the main engine program has been the extensive
 "hot fire" ground tests.  Unfortunately, the vitality of the test
 program has been reduced because of budgetary constraints.
 
 The number of engine test firings per month has decreased over the
 past two years.  Yet this test program has not yet demonstrated the
 limits of engine operation parameters or included tests over the full
 operating envelope to show full engine capability.  In addition, tests
 have not yet been deliberately conducted to the point of failure to
 determine actual engine operating margins.
 
 
 PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION ON THE SPACE SHUTTLE CHALLENGER ACCIDENT
 
 William P. Rogers, Chairman
 Former Secretary of State under President Nixon (1969-1973), and
 Attorney General under President Eisenhower (1957-1961), currently a
 practicing attorney and senior partner in the law firm of Rogers &
 Wells.  Born in Norfolk, New York, he was awarded the Medal of Freedom
 in 1973.  He holds a J.D. from Cornell University (1937) and served as
 LCDR, U.S. Navy (1942-1946).
 
 Neil A. Armstrong, Vice Chairman
 Former astronaut, currently Chairman of the Board of Computing
 Technologies for Aviation, Inc.  Born in Wapakoneta, Ohio, Mr.
 Armstrong was spacecraft commander for Apollo 11, July 16-24, 1969,
 the first manned lunar landing mission.  He was Professor of
 Aeronautical Engineering at the University of Cincinnati from 1971 to
 1980 and was appointed to the National Commission on Space in 1985.
 
 David C. Acheson
 Former Senior Vice President and General Counsel, Communications
 Satellite Corporation (1967-1974), currently a partner in the law firm
 of Drinker Biddle & Reath.  Born in Washington, DC, he previously
 served as an attorney with the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
 (1948-1950) and was U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia
 (1961-1965).  He holds an LL.B. from Harvard University (1948) and
 served as LT, U.S. Navy (1942-1946).
 
 Dr. Eugene E. Covert
 Educator and engineer.  Born in Rapid City, South Dakota, he is
 currently Professor and Head, Department of Aeronautics and
 Astronautics, at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  Member of the
 National Academy of Engineering, he was a recipient of the Exceptional
 Civilian Service Award, USAF, in 1973 and the NASA Public Service
 Award in 1980.  He holds a Doctorate in Science from Massachusetts
 Institute of Technology.
 
 Dr. Richard P. Feynman
 Physicist.  Born in New York City, he is Professor of Theoretical
 Physics at California Institute of Technology.  Nobel Prize winner in
 Physics, 1965, he also received the Einstein Award in 1954, the
 Oersted Medal in 1972 and the Niels Bohr International Gold Medal in
 1973.  He holds a Doctorate in Physics from Princeton (1942).
 
 Robert B. Hotz
 Editor, publisher.  Born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  He is a graduate of
 Northwestern University.  He was the editor-in-chief of Aviation Week
 & Space Technology magazine (1953-1980).  He served in the Air Force
 in World War II and was awarded the Air Medal with Oak Leaf Cluster.
 Since 1982, he has been a member of the General Advisory Committee to
 the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency.
 
 Major General Donald J. Kutyna, USAF
 Director of Space Systems and Command, Control, Communications.  Born
 in Chicago, Illinois, and graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, he
 holds a Master of Science degree from Massachusetts Institute of
 Technology (1965).  A command pilot with over 4,000 flight hours, he
 is a recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal, Distinguished
 Flying Cross, Legion of Merit and nine air medals.
 
 Dr. Sally K. Ride
 Astronaut.  Born in Los Angeles, California, she was a mission
 specialist on STS-7, launched on June 18, 1983, becoming the first
 American woman in space.  She also flew on mission 41-G launched
 October 5, 1984.  She holds a Doctorate in Physics from Stanford
 University (1978) and is still an active astronaut.
 
 Robert W. Rummel
 Space expert and aerospace engineer.  Born in Dakota, Illinois, and
 former Vice President of Trans World Airlines, he is currently
 President of Robert W. Rummel Associates, Inc., of Mesa, Arizona.  He
 is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and is holder of
 the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal.
 
 Joseph F. Sutter
 Aeronautical engineer.  Currently Executive Vice President of the
 Boeing Commercial Airplane Company.  Born in Seattle, he has been with
 Boeing since 1945 and was a principal figure in the development of
 three generations of jet aircraft.  In 1984, he was elected to the
 National Academy of Engineering.  In 1985, President Reagan conferred
 on him the U.S. National Medal of Technology.
 
 Dr. Arthur B. C. Walker, Jr.
 Astronomer.  Born in Cleveland, Ohio, he is currently Professor of
 Applied Physics and was formerly Associate Dean of the Graduate
 Division at Stanford University.  Consultant to Aerospace Corporation,
 Rand Corporation and the National Science Foundation, he is a member
 of the American Physical Society, American Geophysical Union, and the
 American Astronomy Society.  He holds a Doctorate in Physics from the
 University of Illinois (1962).
 
 Dr. Albert D. Wheelon
 Physicist.  Born in Moline, Illinois, he is currently Executive Vice
 President, Hughes Aircraft Company.  Also a member of the President's
 Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, he served as a consultant to the
 President's Science Advisory Council from 1961 to 1974.  He holds a
 Doctorate in Physics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology
 (1952).
 
 Brigadier General Charles Yeager, USAF (Retired)
 Former experimental test pilot.  Born in Myra, West Virginia, he was
 appointed in 1985 as a member of the National Commission on Space.  He
 was the first person to penetrate the sound barrier and the first to
 fly at a speed of more than 1,600 miles an hour.
 
 Dr. Alton G. Keel, Jr., Executive Director
 Detailed to the Commission from his position in the Executive Office
 of the President, Office of Management and Budget, as Associate
 Director for National Security and International Affairs; formerly
 Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Research, Development and
 Logistics; and Senate Staff.  Born in Newport News, Virginia, he
 holds a Doctorate in Engineering Physics from the University of
 Virginia (1970).
 
 PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION STAFF
 Dr. Alton G. Keel, Jr.  Executive Director        White House
 Thomas T. Reinhardt     Executive Secretary       MAJ, USA/OMB
 
 Special Assistants
 Marie C. Hunter         Executive Assistant       Rogers & Wells
 to the Chairman
 M. M. Black             Personal Secretary        OMB
 to Vice Chairman &
 Executive Director
 Mark D. Weinberg        Media Relations           White House
 Herb Hetu               Media Relations           Consultant
 John T. Shepherd        NASA Tasking        CAPT, USN(Ret)/Atty.
 Coordination
 
 Administrative Staff
 Steven B. Hyle          Administrative Officer          LTC, USAF
 Patt Sullivan           Administrative Assistant        NASA
 Marilyn Stumpf          Travel Coordination             NASA
 Joleen A. B. Bottalico  Travel Coordination             NASA
 Jane M. Green           Secretary                       NASA
 Lorraine K. Walton      Secretary                       NASA
 Vera A. Barnes          Secretary                       NASA
 Virginia A. James       Receptionist               Contract Support
 
 Investigative Staff
 William G. Dupree         Investigator, Development     DOD IG
 and Production
 John B. Hungerford, Jr.   Investigator, Development     LTC, USAF
 and Production
 John P. Chase             Investigator,            MAJ, USMC/DOD IG
 Pre-Launch Activities
 Brewster Shaw             Investigator,            LTC, USAF/NASA
 Pre-Launch Activities    Astronaut
 John C. Macidull          Investigator, Accident   FAA/CDR, USNR-R
 Analysis
 Ron Waite                 Investigator, Accident   Engineering
 Analysis                 Consultant
 John Fabian               Investigator Mission     COL, USAF/Former
 Planning & Operations     Astronaut
 Emily M. Trapnell         Coordinator, General     FAA Atty.
 Investigative Activities
 Randy R. Kehrli           Evidence Analysis        DOJ Atty.
 E. Thomas Almon           Investigator             Special Agent, FBI
 Patrick J. Maley          Investigator             Special Agent, FBI
 John R. Molesworth, Jr.   Investigator             Special Agent, FBI
 Robert C. Thompson        Investigator             Special Agent, FBI
 Dr. R. Curtis Graeber     Human Factors Specialist   LTC, USA/NASA
 Michael L. Marx           Metallurgist             NTSB
 
 Writing Support
 Woods Hansen           Editor                      Free Lance
 James Haggerty         Writer                      Free Lance
 Anthony E. Hartle      Writer                      COL, USA/USMA
 William Bauman         Writer                      CAPT, USAF/USAFA
 Frank Gillen           Word Processing Supervisor  Contract Support
 Lawrence J. Herb       Art Layout                  Free Lance
 Willis Rickert         Printer                     NASA
 Lynne Komai            Design                      Contract Support
 
 Documentation Support
 Clarisse Abramidis     Case Manager                DOJ
 Fritz Geurtsen         Project Manager             DOJ
 John Dunbar            Contract Representative     Contract Support
 Valarie Lease          Support Center Supervisor   Contract Support
 Stephen M. Croll       Correspondence Support      Contract Support
 
 Independent Test Observers
 Eugene G. Haberman     Rocket Propulsion Lab          USAF
 Wilbur W. Wells        Rocket Propulsion Lab          USAF
 Don E. Kennedy         TRW Ballistic Missile Office   Pro Bono
 Laddie E.Dufka         Aerospace Corp                 Pro Bono
 Mohan Aswani           Aerospace Corp                 Pro Bono
 Michael L. Marx        Metallurgist                   NTSB
 
 
 COMMISSION ACTIVITIES
 An Overview
 President Reagan, seeking to ensure a thorough and unbiased
 investigation of the Challenger accident, announced the formation of
 the Commission on February 3, 1986.  The mandate given by the
 President, contained in Executive Order 12546, required Commission
 members to:
 (1)  Review the circumstances surrounding the accident to establish
 the probable cause or causes of the accident; and,
 (2)  Develop recommendations for corrective or other action based
 upon the Commission's findings and determinations.
 
 The Commission itself divided into four investigative panels:
 
 1.  Development and Production, responsible for investigating the
 acquisition and test and evaluation processes for the Space Shuttle
 elements;
 
 2.  Pre-Launch Activities, responsible for assessing the Shuttle
 system processing, launch readiness process and pre-launch security;
 
 3.  Mission Planning and Operations, responsible for investigating
 mission planning and operations, schedule pressures and crew safety
 areas; and
 
 4.  Accident Analysis, charged with analyzing the accident data and
 developing both an anomaly tree and accident scenarios.
 
 More than 160 individuals were interviewed and more than 35 formal
 panel investigative sessions were held generating almost 12,000 pages
 of transcript.  Almost 6,300 documents, totaling more than 122,000
 pages, and hundreds of photographs were examined and made a part of
 the Commission's permanent data base and archives.  These sessions and
 all the data gathered added to the 2,800 pages of hearing transcript
 generated by the Commission in both closed and open sessions.
 
 In addition to the work of the Commission and the Commission staff,
 NASA personnel expended a vast effort in the investigation.  More than
 1,300 employees from all NASA facilities were involved and were
 supported by more than 1,600 people from other government agencies and
 over 3,100 from NASA's contractor organizations.  Particularly
 significant were the activities of the military, the Coast Guard and
 the NTSB in the salvage and analysis of the Shuttle wreckage.
 
 
 RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION
 
 The Commission has conducted an extensive investigation of the
 Challenger accident to determine the probable cause and necessary
 corrective actions.  Based on the findings and determinations of its
 investigation, the Commission has unanimously adopted recommendations
 to help assure the return to safe flight.
 
 The Commission urges that the Administrator of NASA submit, one year
 from now, a report to the President on the progress that NASA has made
 in effecting the Commission's recommendations set forth below:
 
 I
 DESIGN
 The faulty Solid Rocket Motor joint and seal must be changed.  This
 could be a new design eliminating the joint or a redesign of the
 current joint and seal.  No design options should be prematurely
 precluded because of schedule, cost or reliance on existing hardware.
 All Solid Rocket Motor joints should satisfy the following
 requirements:
 
 The joints should be fully understood, tested and verified.
 
 The integrity of the structure and of the seals of all joints should
 be not less than that of the case walls throughout the design
 envelope.
 
 The integrity of the joints should be insensitive to:
 --Dimensional tolerances.
 --Transportation and handling.
 --Assembly procedures.
 --Inspection and test procedures.
 --Environmental effects.
 --Internal case operating pressure.
 --Recovery and reuse effects.
 --Flight and water impact loads.
 
 The certification of the new design should include:
 --Tests which duplicate the actual launch configuration as closely
 as possible.
 --Tests over the full range of operating conditions, including
 temperature.
 
 Full consideration should be given to conducting static firings of
 the exact flight configuration in a vertical attitude.
 
 INDEPENDENT OVERSIGHT
 The Administrator of NASA should request the National Research Council
 to form an independent Solid Rocket Motor design oversight committee
 to implement the Commission's design recommendations and oversee the
 design effort.  This committee should:
 
 Review and evaluate certification requirements.
 Provide technical oversight of the design, test program and
 certification.
 Report to the Administrator of NASA on the adequacy of the design
 and make appropriate recommendations.
 
 II
 SHUTTLE MANAGEMENT STRUCTURE
 The Shuttle Program Structure should be reviewed.  The project
 managers for the various elements of the Shuttle program felt more
 accountable to their center management than to the Shuttle program
 organization.  Shuttle element funding, work package definition, and
 vital program information frequently bypass the National STS (Shuttle)
 Program Manager.
 
 A redefinition of the Program Manager's responsibility is essential.
 This redefinition should give the Program Manager the requisite
 authority for all ongoing STS operations.  Program funding and all
 Shuttle Program work at the centers should be placed clearly under the
 Program Manager's authority.
 
 ASTRONAUTS IN MANAGEMENT
 The Commission observes that there appears to be a departure from the
 philosophy of the 1960s and 1970s relating to the use of astronauts in
 management positions.  These individuals brought to their positions
 flight experience and a keen appreciation of operations and flight
 safety.
 
 NASA should encourage the transition of qualified astronauts into
 agency management positions.
 
 The function of the Flight Crew Operations director should be
 elevated in the NASA organization structure.
 
 SHUTTLE SAFETY PANEL
 NASA should establish an STS Safety Advisory Panel reporting to the
 STS Program Manager.  The Charter of this panel should include Shuttle
 operational issues, launch commit criteria, flight rules, flight
 readiness and risk management.  The panel should include
 representation from the safety organization, mission operations, and
 the astronaut office.
 
 III
 CRITICALITY REVIEW AND HAZARD ANALYSIS
 NASA and the primary Shuttle contractors should review all Criticality
 1, 1R, 2, and 2R items and hazard analyses.  This review should
 identify those items that must be improved prior to flight to ensure
 mission safety.  An Audit Panel, appointed by the National Research
 Council, should verify the adequacy of the effort and report directly
 to the Administrator of NASA.
 
 IV
 SAFETY ORGANIZATION
 NASA should establish an Office of Safety, Reliability and Quality
 Assurance to be headed by an Associate administrator, reporting
 directly to the NASA Administrator.  It would have direct authority
 for safety, reliability, and quality assurance throughout the agency.
 The office should be assigned the work force to ensure adequate
 oversight of its functions and should be independent of other NASA
 functional and program responsibilities.
 
 The responsibilities of this office should include:
 
 The safety, reliability and quality assurance functions as they
 relate to all NASA activities and programs.
 
 Direction of reporting and documentation of problems, problem
 resolution and trends associated with flight safety.
 
 V
 IMPROVED COMMUNICATIONS
 The Commission found that Marshall Space Flight Center project
 managers, because of a tendency at Marshall to management isolation,
 failed to provide full and timely information bearing on the safety of
 flight 51-L to other vital elements of Shuttle program management.
 
 NASA should take energetic steps to eliminate this tendency at
 Marshall Space Flight Center, whether by changes of personnel,
 organization, indoctrination or all three.
 
 A policy should be developed which governs the imposition and
 removal of Shuttle launch constraints.
 
 Flight Readiness Reviews and Mission Management Team meetings should
 be recorded.
 
 The flight crew commander, or a designated representative, should
 attend the Flight Readiness Review, participate in acceptance of the
 vehicle for flight, and certify that the crew is properly prepared for
 flight.
 
 VI
 LANDING SAFETY
 NASA must take actions to improve landing safety.
 
 The tire, brake and nosewheel steering systems must be improved.
 These systems do not have sufficient safety margin, particularly at
 abort landing sites.
 
 The specific conditions under which planned landings at Kennedy
 would be acceptable should be determined.  Criteria must be
 established for tires, brakes and nosewheel steering.  Until the
 systems meet those criteria in high fidelity testing that is verified
 at Edwards, landing at Kennedy should not be planned.
 
 Committing to a specific landing site requires that landing area
 weather be forecast more than an hour in advance.  During
 unpredictable weather periods at Kennedy, program officials should
 plan on Edwards landings.  Increased landings at Edwards may
 necessitate a dual ferry capability.
 
 VII
 LAUNCH ABORT AND CREW ESCAPE
 The Shuttle program management considered first-stage abort options
 and crew escape options several times during the history of the
 program, but because of limited utility, technical infeasibility, or
 program cost and schedule, no systems were implemented.  The
 Commission recommends that NASA:
 
 Make all efforts to provide a crew escape system for use during
 controlled gliding flight.
 
 Make every effort to increase the range of flight conditions under
 which an emergency runway landing can be successfully conducted in the
 event that two or three main engines fail early in ascent.
 
 VIII
 FLIGHT RATE
 The nation's reliance on the Shuttle as its principal space launch
 capability created a relentless pressure on NASA to increase the
 flight rate.  Such reliance on a single launch capability should be
 avoided in the future.
 
 NASA must establish a flight rate that is consistent with its
 resources.  A firm payload assignment policy should be established.
 The policy should include rigorous controls on cargo manifest changes
 to limit the pressures such changes exert on schedules and crew
 training.
 
 IX
 MAINTENANCE SAFEGUARDS
 Installation, test, and maintenance procedures must be especially
 rigorous for Space Shuttle items designated Criticality 1.  NASA
 should establish a system of analyzing and reporting performance
 trends of such items.
 
 Maintenance procedures for such items should be specified in the
 Critical Items List, especially for those such as the liquid-fueled
 main engines, which require unstinting maintenance and overhaul.
 
 With regard to the Orbiters, NASA should:
 
 Develop and execute a comprehensive maintenance inspection plan.
 
 Perform periodic structural inspections when scheduled and not
 permit them to be waived.
 
 Restore and support the maintenance and spare parts programs, and
 stop the practice of removing parts from one Orbiter to supply
 another.
 
 CONCLUDING THOUGHT
 The Commission urges that NASA continue to receive the support of the
 Administration and the nation.  The agency constitutes a national
 resource that plays a critical role in space exploration and
 development.  It also provides a symbol of national pride and
 technological leadership.
 
 The Commission applauds NASA's spectacular achievements of the past
 and anticipates impressive achievements to come.  The findings and
 recommendations presented in this report are intended to contribute to
 the future NASA successes that the nation both expects and requires as
 the 21st century approaches.
 
 
 NASA ACTIONS TO IMPLEMENT COMMISSION RECOMMENDATIONS
 (Source:  Actions to Implement the Recommendations of The Presidential
 Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident, Executive Summary, July
 14, 1986, NASA Headquarters)
 
 On June 13, 1986, the President directed NASA to implement, as soon as
 possible, the recommendations of the Presidential Commission on the
 Space Shuttle Challenger Accident.  The President requested that NASA
 report, within 30 days, how and when the recommendations will be
 implemented, including milestones by which progress can be measured.
 
 In the months since the Challenger accident, the NASA team has spent
 many hours in support of the Presidential Commission on the Space
 Shuttle Challenger Accident and in planning for a return of the
 Shuttle to safe flight status.  Chairman William P. Rogers and the
 other members of the Commission have rendered the Nation and NASA an
 exceptional service.  The work of the Commission was extremely
 thorough and comprehensive.  NASA agrees with the Commission's
 recommendations and is vigorously pursuing the actions required to
 implement and comply with them.
 
 As a result of the efforts in support of the Commission, many of the
 actions required to safely return the Space Shuttle to flight status
 have been under way since March.  On March 24, 1986, the Associate
 Administrator for Space Flight outlined a comprehensive strategy, and
 defined major actions, for safely returning to flight status.  The
 March 24 memorandum (Commission Activities:  An Overview) provided
 guidance on the following subjects:
 
 actions required prior to next flight,
 first flight/first year operations, and
 development of sustainable safe flight rate.
 
 The Commission report was submitted to the President on June 9, 1986.
 Since that time, NASA has taken additional actions and provided
 direction required to comply with the Commission's recommendations.
 
 The NASA Administrator and the Associate Administrator for Space
 Flight will participate in the key management decisions required for
 implementing the Commission recommendations and for returning the
 Space Shuttle to flight status.  NASA will report to the President on
 the status of the implementation program in June 1987.
 
 The Commission report included nine recommendations, and a summary of
 the implementation status for each is provided:
 
 RECOMMENDATION I
 Solid Rocket Motor Design:
 
 On March 24, 1986, the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) was
 directed to form a Solid Rocket Motor (SSRM) joint redesign team to
 include participation from MSFC and other NASA centers as well as
 individuals from outside NASA.  The team includes personnel from
 Johnson Space Center, Kennedy Space Center, Langley Research Center,
 industry, and the Astronaut Office.  To assist the redesign team, an
 expert advisory panel was appointed which includes 12 people with six
 coming from outside NASA.
 
 The team has evaluated several design alternatives, and analysis and
 testing are in progress to determine the preferred approaches which
 minimize hardware redesign.  To ensure adequate program contingency in
 this effort, the redesign team will also develop, at least through
 concept definition, a totally new design which does not utilize
 existing hardware.  The design verification and certification program
 will be emphasized and will include tests which duplicate the actual
 launch loads as closely as feasible and provide for tests over the
 full range of operating conditions.  The verification effort includes
 a trade study which has been under way for several weeks to determine
 the preferred test orientation (vertical or horizontal) of the
 full-scale motor firings.  The Solid Rocket Motor redesign and
 certification schedule is under review to fully understand and plan
 for the implementation of the design solutions as they are finalized
 and assessed.  The schedule will be reassessed after the SRM
 Preliminary Design Review in September 1986.  At this time it appears
 that the first launch will not occur prior to the first quarter of
 1988.
 
 Independent Oversight:
 In accordance with the Commission's recommendation, the National
 Research Council (NRC) has established an Independent Oversight Group
 chaired by Dr. H. Guyford Stever and reporting to the NASA
 Administrator.  The NRC Oversight Group has been briefed on Shuttle
 system requirements, implementation, and control; Solid Rocket Motor
 background; and candidate modifications.  The group has established a
 near-term plan that includes briefings and visits to review inflight
 loads; assembly processing; redesign status; and other solid rocket
 motor designs, including participation in the Solid Rocket Motor
 preliminary design review in September 1986.
 
 RECOMMENDATION II
 Shuttle Management Structure:
 
 The Administrator has appointed General Sam Phillips, who served as
 Apollo Program Director, to study every aspect of how NASA manages its
 programs, including relationships between various field centers and
 NASA Headquarters.  General Phillips has broad authority from the
 Administrator to explore every aspect of NASA organization, management
 and procedures.  His activities will include a review of the Space
 Shuttle management structure.
 
 On June 25, 1986, Astronaut Robert Crippen was directed to form a
 fact-finding group to assess the Space Shuttle management structure.
 The group will report recommendations to the Associate Administrator
 for Space Flight by August 15, 1986.  Specifically, this group will
 address the roles and responsibilities of the Space Shuttle Program
 Manager to assure that the position has the authority commensurate
 with its responsibilities.  In addition, roles and responsibilities at
 all levels of program management will be reviewed to specify the
 relationship between the program organization and the field center
 organizations.  The results of this study will be reviewed with
 General Phillips and the Administrator with a decision on
 implementation of the recommendations by October 1, 1986.
 
 Astronauts in Management
 Rear Admiral Richard Truly, a former astronaut, has been appointed as
 Associate Administrator for the Office of Space Flight.  Several
 active astronauts are currently serving in management positions in the
 agency.  The Crippen group will address means to stimulate the
 transition of astronauts into other management positions.  It will
 also determine the appropriate position for the Flight Crew Operations
 Directorate within the NASA organizational structure.
 
 Shuttle Safety Panel
 A Shuttle Safety Panel will be established by the Associate
 Administrator for Space Flight not later than September 1, 1986, with
 direct access to the Space Shuttle Program Manager.  This date allows
 time to determine the structure and function of this panel, including
 an assessment of its relationship to the newly formed Office of
 Safety, Reliability, and Quality Assurance, and to the existing
 Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel.
 
 RECOMMENDATION III
 Critical Item Review and Hazard Analysis
 
 On March 13, 1986, NASA initiated a complete review of all Space
 Shuttle program failure modes and effects analyses (FEMEA's) and
 associated critical item lists (CIL's).  Each Space Shuttle project
 element and associated prime contractor is conducting separate
 comprehensive reviews which will culminate in a program-wide review
 with the Space Shuttle program have been assigned as formal members of
 each of these review teams.  All Criticality 1 and 1R critical item
 waivers have been cancelled.  The teams are required to reassess and
 resubmit waivers in categories recommended for continued program
 applicability.  Items which cannot be revalidated will be redesigned,
 qualified, and certified for flight.  All Criticality 2 and 3 CIL's
 are being reviewed for reacceptance and proper categorization.  This
 activity will culminate in a comprehensive final review with NASA
 Headquarters beginning in March 1987.
 
 As recommended by the Commission, the National Research Council has
 agreed to form an Independent Audit Panel, reporting to the NASA
 Administrator, to verify the adequacy of this effort.
 
 RECOMMENDATION IV
 Safety Organization
 The NASA Administrator announced the appointment of Mr. George A.
 Rodney to the position of Associate Administrator for Safety,
 Reliability, and Quality Assurance on July 8, 1986.  The
 responsibilities of this office will include the oversight of safety,
 reliability, and quality assurance functions related to all NASA
 activities and programs and the implementation of a system for anomaly
 documentation and resolution to include a trend analysis program.  One
 of the first activities to be undertaken by the new Associate
 Administrator will be an assessment of the resources including
 workforce required to ensure adequate execution of the safety
 organization functions.  In addition, the new Associate Administrator
 will assure appropriate interfaces between the functions of the new
 safety organization and the Shuttle Safety Panel which will be
 established in response to the Commission Recommendation II.
 
 RECOMMENDATION V
 
 Improved Communications
 On June 25, 1986, Astronaut Robert Crippen was directed to form a team
 to develop plans and recommended policies for the following:
 
 Implementation of effective management communications at all levels.
 
 Standardization of the imposition and removal of STS launch
 constraints and other operational constraints.
 
 Conduct of Flight Readiness Review and Mission Management Team
 meetings, including requirements for documentation and flight crew
 participation.
 
 Since this recommendation is closely linked with the recommendation on
 Shuttle management structure, the study team will incorporate the plan
 for improved communications with that for management restructure.
 
 This review of effective communications will consider the activities
 and information flow at NASA Headquarters and the field centers which
 support the Shuttle program.  The study team will present findings and
 recommendations to the Associate Administrator for Space Flight by
 August 15, 1986.
 
 RECOMMENDATION VI
 Landing Safety
 
 A Landing Safety Team has been established to review and implement the
 Commission's findings and recommendations on landing safety.  All
 Shuttle hardware and systems are undergoing design reviews to insure
 compliance with the specifications and safety concerns.  The tires,
 brakes, and nose wheel steering system are included in this activity,
 and funding for a new carbon brakes system has been approved.  Runway
 surface tests and landing aid requirement reviews had been under way
 for some time prior to the accident and are continuing.  Landing aid
 implementation will be complete by July 1987.  The interim brake
 system will be delivered by August 1987.  Improved methods of local
 weather forecasting and weather-related support are being developed.
 Until the Shuttle program has demonstrated satisfactory safety margins
 through high fidelity testing and during actual landings at Edwards
 Air Force Base, the Kennedy Space Center landing site will not be used
 for nominal end-of-mission landings.  Dual Orbiter ferry capability
 has been an issue for some time and will be thoroughly considered
 during the upcoming months.
 
 RECOMMENDATION VII
 Launch Abort and Crew Escape
 
 On April 7, 1986, NASA initiated a Shuttle Crew Egress and Escape
 review.  The scope of this analysis includes egress and escape
 capabilities from launch through landing and will provide analyses,
 concepts, feasibility assessments, cost, and schedules for pad abort,
 bailout, ejection systems, water landings, and powered flight
 separation.  This review will specifically assess options for crew
 escape during controlled gliding flight and options for extending the
 intact abort flight envelope to include failure of 2 or 3 main engines
 during the early ascent phase.  In conjunction with this activity, a
 Launch Abort Reassessment Team was established to review all launch
 and launch abort rules to ensure that launch commit criteria, flight
 rules, range safety systems and procedures, landing aids, runway
 configurations and lengths, performance versus abort exposure, abort
 and end-of-mission landing weights, runway surfaces, and other
 landing-related capabilities provide the proper margin of safety to
 the vehicle and crew.  Crew escape and launch abort studies will be
 complete on October 1, 1986, with an implementation decision in
 December 1986.
 
 RECOMMENDATION VIII
 Flight Rate
 
 In March 1986 NASA established a Flight Rate Capability Working
 Group.  Two flight rate capability studies are under way:
 
 (1) a study of capabilities and constraints which govern the Shuttle
 processing flows at the Kennedy Space Center and
 
 (2) a study by the Johnson Space Center to assess the impact of
 flight specific crew training and software delivery/certification on
 flight rates.
 
 The working group will present flight rate recommendations to the
 Office of Space Flight by August 15, 1986.  Other collateral studies
 are still in progress which address Presidential Commission
 recommendations related to spares provisioning, maintenance, and
 structural inspection.  This effort will also consider the National
 Research Council independent review of flight rate which is under way
 as a result of a Congressional Subcommittee request.
 
 NASA  strongly supports a mixed fleet to satisfy launch requirements
 and actions to revitalize the United States expendable launch vehicle
 capabilities.
 
 Additionally, a new cargo manifest policy is being formulated by NASA
 Headquarters which will establish manifest ground rules and impose
 constraints to late changes.  Manifest control policy recommendations
 will be completed in November 1986.
 
 RECOMMENDATION IX
 Maintenance Safeguards
 
 A Maintenance Safeguards Team has been established to develop a
 comprehensive plan for defining and implementing actions to comply
 with the Commission recommendations concerning maintenance
 activities.  A Maintenance Plan is being prepared to ensure that
 uniform maintenance requirements are imposed on all elements of the
 Space Shuttle program.  This plan will define the structure that will
 be used to document
 (1) hardware inspections and schedules,
 (2) planned maintenance activities,
 (3) Maintenance procedures configuration control, and
 (4) Maintenance logistics.
 
 The plan will also define organizational responsibilities, reporting,
 and control requirements for Space Shuttle maintenance activities.
 The maintenance plan will be completed by September 30, 1986.
 
 A number of other activities are underway which will contribute to a
 return to safe flight and strengthening the NASA organization.  A
 Space Shuttle Design Requirements Review Team headed by the Space
 Shuttle Systems Integration Office at Johnson Space Center has been
 assigned to review all Shuttle design requirements and associated
 technical verification.  The team will focus on each Shuttle project
 element and on total Space Shuttle system design requirements.  This
 activity will culminate in a Space Shuttle Incremental Design
 Certification Review approximately 3 months prior to the next Space
 Shuttle Launch.
 
 In consideration of the number, complexity, and interrelationships
 between the many activities leading to the next flight, the Space
 Shuttle Program Manager at Johnson Space Center has initiated a series
 of formal Program Management Reviews for the Space Shuttle program.
 These reviews are structured to be regular face-to-face discussions
 involving the managers of all major Space Shuttle program activities.
 Specific subjects to be discussed at each meeting will focus on
 progress, schedules, and actions associated with each of the major
 program review activities and will be tailored directly to current
 program activity for the time period involved.  The first of these
 meetings was held at Marshall Space Flight Center on May 5-6, 1986,
 with the second at Kennedy Space Center on June 25, 1986.  Follow-on
 reviews will be held approximately every 6 weeks.  Results of these
 reviews will be reported to the Associate Administrator for Space
 Flight and to the NASA Administrator.
 
 On June 19, 1986, the NASA Administrator announced termination of the
 development of the Centaur upper stage for use aboard the Space
 Shuttle.  Use of the Centaur upper stage was planned for NASA
 planetary spacecraft launches as well as for certain national security
 satellite launches.  Majority safety reviews of the Centaur system
 were under way at the time of the Challenger accident, and these
 reviews were intensified in recent months to determine if the program
 should be continued.  The final decision to terminate the Centaur
 stage for use with the Shuttle was made on the basis that even
 following certain modifications identified by the ongoing reviews, the
 resultant stage would not meet safety criteria being applied to other
 cargo or elements of the Space Shuttle System.  NASA has initiated
 efforts to examine other launch vehicle alternatives for the major
 NASA planetary and scientific payloads which were scheduled to utilize
 the Centaur upper stage.  NASA is providing assistance to the
 Department of Defense as it examines alternatives for those national
 security missions which had planned to use the Shuttle/Centaur.
 
 The NASA Administrator has announced a number of Space Station
 organizational and management structural actions designed to
 strengthen technical and management capabilities in preparation for
 moving into the development phase of the Space Station program.  The
 decision to create the new structure is the result of recommendations
 made to the Administrator by a committee, headed by General Phillips,
 which is conducting a long range assessment of NASA's overall
 capabilities and requirements.
 
 Finally, NASA is developing plans for increased staffing in critical
 areas and is working closely with the Office of Personnel Management
 to develop a NASA specific proposal which would provide for needed
 changes to the NASA personnel management system to strengthen our
 ability to attract, retain, and motivate the quality workforce
 required to conduct the NASA mission.
 
 
 (Source:  The Presidential Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger
 Accident Report, June 6, 1986)
 
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