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Seven people were killed, including
37 years (1948–1986)
Christa felt like a lab rat after answering almost 700 medical questions, submitting to blood tests, x-rays, a treadmill test, a complete physical exam, and having every inch of her body measured. … The judges’ vote was unanimous—Christa would be the first teacher in space.
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Previously, the last known words from the Challenger were those heard from Commander Dick Scobee to ground controllers, when he responded ″Roger, go at throttle up,″ confirming that the shuttle’s main engines had been raised to full power.
The seven crew members of the space shuttle Challenger probably remained conscious for at least 10 seconds after the disastrous Jan. 28 explosion and they switched on at least three emergency breathing packs, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said Monday.
Only the Jarvis and McAuliffe relatives had a right to sue the government; all the astronauts’ families could sue Morton Thiokol. … McNair, a NASA employee, the father of Jarvis and the mother of mission specialist Judith A. Resnik to file separate suits against Morton Thiokol only.
However, he was ultimately not selected by NASA to join an astronaut training class, so he never flew in space. … American fighter ace and test pilot Chuck Yeager, who famously was the first person to break the sound barrier, was not even considered for astronaut candidacy, as he was not a college graduate.
(Yeager himself had only a high school education, so he was not eligible to become an astronaut like those he trained.) In April 1962, Yeager flew for the only time with Neil Armstrong.
The pay grades for civilian astronauts are GS-11 through GS-14, based on academic achievements and experience. Currently, a GS-11 astronaut starts at $64,724 per year; a GS-14 astronaut can earn up to $141,715 in annual salary [source: NASA].
Teacher, 7th grade and American history, 8th grade. 1980-1982 Bow Memorial (Middle) School, Bow, New Hampshire. Teacher.
Today, Marcia Jarvis-Tinsley resides on a ranch in Pagosa Springs, Colorado, and serves as the Founding Director for the Challenger Center for Space Science Education. She had remarried, but her second husband, Ronald Keith Tinsley, passed away as well, in 2017.
In the immediate aftermath, seven astronauts died — including the first teacher in space (Christa McAuliffe), the second African-American in space (Ronald McNair), the second female NASA astronaut in space (Judith Resnik), the first Asian-American astronaut (Ellison Onizuka), Hughes Aircraft payload specialist Gregory …
The bodies of five of the seven crew of Columbia were found within three days of the shuttle’s breakup; the last two were found 10 days after that. In the months after the disaster, the largest-ever organized ground search took place.
Cabin, Remains of Astronauts Found : Divers Positively Identify Challenger Compartment on Floor of Atlantic. The crew compartment of the space shuttle Challenger, with the remains of astronauts aboard, has been found 100 feet beneath the sea off the coast of Florida, NASA officials announced Sunday.
The fated crew of the Space Shuttle Columbia could have been saved in theory, according to a NASA engineer, who spoke to the BBC. Israeli astronaut Ilan Ramon and six other crew members perished when their space shuttle attempted reentry into Earth’s atmosphere on February 1, 2003.
Roger Boisjoly | |
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Died | January 6, 2012 (aged 73) Nephi, Utah, U.S. |
Alma mater | University of Massachusetts Lowell |
Known for | Attempts to prevent the Challenger disaster |
Awards | AAAS Award for Scientific Freedom and Responsibility (1988) |
The Space Shuttle Challenger disaster was a fatal space program crash in the United States that occurred on January 28, 1986. A massive aerial explosion horrifically took the lives of seven crew members – five NASA astronauts, and two payload specialists.
These four spouses and six children shared in cash and annuities that cost $7,735,000. The government paid 40 percent; Thiokol, 60 percent. They had relied on informal advice from the law partner of McAuliffe’s husband, Steven, and they talked only with the government, never directly with the company.
Although all seven crew members aboard the space shuttle Challenger had signed routine waivers absolving the government of liability in the event of their deaths, schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe was covered by a $1-million life insurance policy presented to her as a gift by a firm that insures communications satellites …