Operation AXIOM:The 67th Anniversary of "The Day the Music Died"
Ritchie Valens, "La Bamba" from the The Best of Ritchie Valens compilation (Mike Papa Whiskey)
Est. 2002 | "This was a Golden Age, a time of high adventure, rich living, and hard dying… but nobody thought so." —Alfred Bester
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Sunday, February 1, 2026
The Stars My Destination: The Columbia Disaster
Operation AXIOM: The Space Age—The 23rd Anniversary of S.T.S.-107
Twenty-three years ago to the day, 1 February 2003, the Space Shuttle Columbia OV-102, the first Orbiter to orbit (S.T.S.-1, 1981), disintegrated during atmospheric re-entry, killing all seven of her crew: Commander Rick Husband, Pilot William McCool, Mission Specialist 1 David Brown, Mission Specialist 2/Flight Engineer Kalpana Chawla, Mission Specialist 3 Michael Anderson, Mission Specialist 4 Laurel Clark, & Payload Specialist 1 Ilan Ramon. Husband (STS-96), Chalwa (STS-87), & Anderson (STS-89) were spaceflight veterans; McCool, Brown, Clark, & Ramon were rookies. Ramon was the first Israeli in space.The Columbia suffered the ultimately fatal damage to her heat shielding during launch, a fortnight earlier on 16 January 2003: a piece of thermal insulating foam was shaken off the massive burnt orange External Fuel Tank by the titanic forces involved in boosting a Space Shuttle into low earth orbit & struck the Columbia's left wing, compromising the composite-material heat shield. When the Columbia re-entered the atmosphere on 1 February, hot gases penetrated the wing, leading to the disintegration of the Shuttle & the deaths of all seven on board. The Space Shuttle Atlantis OV-104 had suffered similar heat shield damage during the launch of S.T.S.-27 (1988), but by the grace of God had returned to earth safely, becoming the most-damaged Space Shuttle ever to make a successful landing.The falling foam phenomenon was common enough to be known as "foam shedding" & had been observed on S.T.S.-7 (1983), S.T.S.-32 (1990), S.T.S.-50 (1992), S.T.S.-52 (1992), S.T.S.-62 (1994), & S.T.S.-112 (2002), but foam shedding was not perceived as posing a danger. Subsequent to the disaster, Space Shuttle missions launched without the foam, suffering no ill effects from its absence. The hideous irony is that the thermal insulation was on the External Fuel Tank to prevent the build up of ice that could be shaken loose during launch, striking & damaging the Shuttle.The Space Shuttle Columbia suffered a catastrophic loss of structural integrity during re-entry, leading to the deaths of all seven aboard, 1 February 2003, twenty-three years ago today.
Bonus! Space Age Song o' the Day: The Columbia Disaster
The Phenomenauts, "Heroes" from For All Mankind (Space Cadet Mike Papa Whiskey)
The Wayback Machine Tour of the Columbia Disaster
Wayback Machine '25 | Wayback Machine '24
Wayback Machine '23 | Wayback Machine '22
Wayback Machine '21 | Wayback Machine '20
Wayback Machine '19 | Wayback Machine '18
Wayback Machine '17 | Wayback Machine '16
Twenty-three years ago to the day, 1 February 2003, the Space Shuttle Columbia OV-102, the first Orbiter to orbit (S.T.S.-1, 1981), disintegrated during atmospheric re-entry, killing all seven of her crew: Commander Rick Husband, Pilot William McCool, Mission Specialist 1 David Brown, Mission Specialist 2/Flight Engineer Kalpana Chawla, Mission Specialist 3 Michael Anderson, Mission Specialist 4 Laurel Clark, & Payload Specialist 1 Ilan Ramon. Husband (STS-96), Chalwa (STS-87), & Anderson (STS-89) were spaceflight veterans; McCool, Brown, Clark, & Ramon were rookies. Ramon was the first Israeli in space.The Columbia suffered the ultimately fatal damage to her heat shielding during launch, a fortnight earlier on 16 January 2003: a piece of thermal insulating foam was shaken off the massive burnt orange External Fuel Tank by the titanic forces involved in boosting a Space Shuttle into low earth orbit & struck the Columbia's left wing, compromising the composite-material heat shield. When the Columbia re-entered the atmosphere on 1 February, hot gases penetrated the wing, leading to the disintegration of the Shuttle & the deaths of all seven on board. The Space Shuttle Atlantis OV-104 had suffered similar heat shield damage during the launch of S.T.S.-27 (1988), but by the grace of God had returned to earth safely, becoming the most-damaged Space Shuttle ever to make a successful landing.The falling foam phenomenon was common enough to be known as "foam shedding" & had been observed on S.T.S.-7 (1983), S.T.S.-32 (1990), S.T.S.-50 (1992), S.T.S.-52 (1992), S.T.S.-62 (1994), & S.T.S.-112 (2002), but foam shedding was not perceived as posing a danger. Subsequent to the disaster, Space Shuttle missions launched without the foam, suffering no ill effects from its absence. The hideous irony is that the thermal insulation was on the External Fuel Tank to prevent the build up of ice that could be shaken loose during launch, striking & damaging the Shuttle.The Space Shuttle Columbia suffered a catastrophic loss of structural integrity during re-entry, leading to the deaths of all seven aboard, 1 February 2003, twenty-three years ago today.
Bonus! Space Age Song o' the Day: The Columbia Disaster
The Phenomenauts, "Heroes" from For All Mankind (Space Cadet Mike Papa Whiskey)
The Wayback Machine Tour of the Columbia Disaster
Wayback Machine '25 | Wayback Machine '24
Wayback Machine '23 | Wayback Machine '22
Wayback Machine '21 | Wayback Machine '20
Wayback Machine '19 | Wayback Machine '18
Wayback Machine '17 | Wayback Machine '16
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