[206] 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.
Following their swearing in by Chairman Rogers on February 6th, Commission members immediately began a series of hearings during which NASA officials outlined agency procedures covering the Shuttle program and the status of NASA's investigation of the accident.
Shortly thereafter, on February 10th, Dr. Alton G. Keel, Jr., Associate Director of the Office of' Management and Budget, was appointed Executive Director. Dr. Keel began gathering a staff of 15 experienced investigators from various government agencies and the military services, and administrative personnel to support Commission activities.
During a closed session on February 10, 1986, the Commission began to learn of the troubled history of the Solid Rocket Motor joint and seals. Moreover, it discovered the first indication that the contractor, Morton Thiokol, initially recommended against launch on January 27, 1986, the night before the launch of 51-L, because of concerns regarding low temperature effects on the joint and seal. To investigate this disturbing development, additional closed sessions were scheduled for February 13th and 14th at Kennedy. The February 13, 1986, session was an extensive presentation of film, video and telemetry data relating to the Challenger accident. It provided the Commission the first evidence that the Solid Rocket Motor joint and seal may have malfunctioned, initiating the accident.
The session on February 14th included NASA and contractor participants involved in the discussion on January 27, 1986, not to launch 51-L. After testimony was received, an executive session of the Commission was convened. The following statement was subsequently issued by the Chairman on February 15, 1986, reflecting the conclusion and view of the Commission:
"In recent days, the Commission has been investigating all aspects of the decision making process leading up to the launch of the Challenger and has found that the process may have been flawed. The President has been so advised.
"Dr. William Graham, Acting Administrator of NASA, has been asked not to include on the internal investigating teams at NASA, persons involved in that process.
"The Commission will, of course, continue its investigation and will make a full report to the President within 120 days."
The role of the Commissioners thus changed from that of overseers to that of active investigators and analysts of data presented by NASA and its contractors.
[207] 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.
By February 17th, the panel organization had been finalized and, on February 18th, Chairman Rogers described the Commission's new approach before Congress. Working groups were sent to Marshall, Kennedy and Thiokol to analyze data relating to the accident and to redirect efforts. NASA's investigation was also reorganized to reflect the structure of the Commission's panels.
A series of public hearings were planned on February 25th, 26th and 27th to assure an orderly and fair presentation of all the facts that the Commission had discovered concerning the launch decision making process for flight 51-L. At these hearings, additional information about the launch decision was obtained from the testimony of Thiokol, Rockwell and NASA officials. Details about the history of problems with the then suspect Solid Rocket Motor joints and seals also began emerging and served to focus the Commission's attention on a need to document fully the extent of knowledge and awareness about the problems within both Thiokol and NASA.
Following these hearings, a substantial portion of the investigative efforts of the Commission was conducted by the separate panels in parallel with full Commission hearings.
The Accident Analysis Panel, chaired by Major General Donald Kutyna, made several trips to both Kennedy and Marshall and traveled to Thiokol facilities in Utah to review photographic and telemetric evidence as well as the results of the salvage operation and to oversee the tests being conducted by NASA and Thiokol engineers.
The Accident Analysis Panel followed standard investigative procedures. An extensive effort was needed to establish the design, manufacturing and processing baseline configuration of the Shuttle vehicle for STS 51-L. A data base was established for the examination and analysis of information related to all flight elements and segments. From these data and a compilation of possible and observed deviations from the norm, scenarios that might have led to the accident were developed. Tests and analyses were then performed to determine the specific scenarios most likely to have caused loss of Challenger.
Early in March, at the request of the Chairman, this group assembled and directed the Commission's independent team of technical observers with extensive experience in Solid Rocket Motor technology and accident investigation to validate and interpret the tests and analyses performed on the Thiokol motor by NASA and Thiokol.
The Development and Production Panel, chaired by Joseph Sutter, centered its investigation on the production and testing activities of the Shuttle element contractors. Starting at Johnson, the panel and staff investigators looked at how these contractors and their NASA counterparts interact.
They next traveled to the Wasatch plant of Thiokol in Promontory, Utah. Thiokol personnel briefed the group on the details of the design, manufacturing, verification and certification of the Solid Rocket Motors. Similar sessions took place in April in Downey, California, at the headquarters of Rocketdyne, Inc., the Shuttle main engine contractor; in Canoga Park, California, at the facilities of Rockwell International, the Orbiter contractor; in Michoud, Louisiana, at the plant of Martin Marietta, the External Tank contractor; and in Berea, Kentucky, at the facilities of Parker Seal Company, the manufacturers of the O-ring seals of the Thiokol Solid Rocket Motors.
In addition, the panel traveled to Marshall to learn about Marshall's interaction with Thiokol and to discuss issues that had been raised during the visits to the contractors' plants.
The Pre-Launch Activities Panel, chaired by David Acheson, centered its investigation at Kennedy where the Shuttle elements are assembled and all other final launch preparations are completed. This panel, in conjunction with the Mission Planning and Operations Panel, chaired by Dr. Sally Ride, met with its NASA counterparts in early March. This series of meetings identified for the Commission the various aspects of the pre [208] launch process that required thorough review, not only for the purpose of the Challenger accident investigation but also to increase safety margins for the future.
Later in March the Pre-Launch Panel again met at Kennedy to receive the NASA Team's preliminary reports and to focus on the spare parts issue and Solid Rocket Booster assembly operations. Panel members also met with contractor personnel involved in Shuttle processing and Kennedy security work.
After the joint meeting at Kennedy with the Pre-Launch Activities Panel, the Mission Planning and Operations Panel traveled to Johnson to begin working with its NASA counterparts and to initiate its own investigative efforts. A specific focus of its work was the mission planning and crew preparation for STS 51-L and details of NASA's safety, reliability and quality assurance programs. Later meetings at both Johnson and Marshall dealt with range safety, weather criteria for launch, flight delays and hardware testing.
While the work of the individual panels and their investigative staffs was ongoing, a general investigative staff began a series of individual interviews to document fully the factual background of various areas of the Commission's interest, including the telecon between NASA and Thiokol officials the night before the launch; the history of joint design and O-ring problems; NASA safety, reliability and quality assurance functions; and the assembly of the right Solid Rocket Booster for STS 51-L. Subsequent investigative efforts by this group were directed in the area of the effectiveness of NASA's organizational structure, particularly the Shuttle program structure, and allegations that there had been external pressure on NASA to launch on January 28th.
More than 160 individuals were interviewed and more than 35 formal panel investigative sessions were held generating almost 12,000 pages of transcript (Table 1 and Table 2). 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.
Table 1
Commission
Investigative Interviews
.
Interviews of January
27, 1986 Teleconference (8:15 PM EST)
Participants
.
Ben Powers
John Schell
William Macbeth
Jerry E Mason
Frank Adams
Keith Coates
Brian Russell
Robert Lund
Larry Wear
George Hardy
Jack Kapp
Joseph Kilminster
James Smith
Jud Lovingood
Ron Ebeling
Roger Boisjoly
Boyd Brinton
Jack Buchanan
Calvin Wiggins
Arnold Thompson
Robert Schwinghamer
Allan McDonald
Larry Sayer
Jerry Peoples
William Reihl
Carver Kennedy
Joel Maw
James Kingsbury
Wayne Littles
Cecil Houston
Kyle Speas
John Q Miller
Lawrence Mulloy
Jerry Burn
John McCarty
Stanley Reinartz
Don Ketner
[209] Interviews of
Personnel Involved in Stacking of Right SRB for Flight
51-L
.
Howard Fichtl
Ed O'Neal
Mike Sestile
Jim Gardner
Jack Roberts
Leslie Lake
Granville Goad
John Taris
Curtis J. Newsome
Buddy Rogers
David Mumpower
Kenneth Koby
Mark Vigil
Mario Duran
Robin Nix
Allen R. Hyde
Bob Heinbaugh
Jim St. John
Glenn Charron
Jerry Wilkerson
Howard Christy
Billy Massey
Stewart Dalton
Alex McCool
Jackie Walden
Mike Sieglitz
Sharron Whitaker
Charles D. Newman
Alvie Hicks
Jim Jordan
Interviews on Ice on Pad
Interviews on Security
Interviews on History
of SRB Joint Design and Problem
.
Leon Ray
Robert Lindstrom
James Kingsbury
Ben Powers
Alex McCool
James Brier
Sam Lowry
Michael Mann
Jerry Peoples
Jesse Moore
Stanley Reinartz
Richard Kohrs
Glenn Eudy
Joseph Kilminster
Calvin Wiggins
Maurice Parker
Ben Powers
Arnold Thompson
Mark Salita
Keith Coates
John Miller
Irving Davids
Joe Pelham
John Schell
Bill Rice
Arnold Aldrich
Phillip Dykstera
James W. J homes
Bill Horton
Hans Mark
Ed Dorsey
Boyd Brinton
Jerry Cox
Glynn Lunney
Roger Boisjoly
James Abrahamson
Bill Bush
Walt C. Williams
Brian Russel
Jerry Mason
Paul Wetzel
George Hardy
Jack Kemp
Jack Kapp
David Winterhalter
Larry Mulloy
Robert Lund
Ronald Ebeling
William Hamby
Fred Uptagrafft
Howard McIntosh
Arnold Aldrich
Michael Weeks
Richard Cook
Glenn Eudy
Hazel Saunders
Paul Herr
Walter Dankhoff
Robert Gaffin
Interview on Launch Coverage Camera Failures
Charles Alsworth
Interviews on Outside
Pressure To Launch
.
Michael Weeks
Phil Culbertson
Jerry E. Mason
Karen Ehlers
Jesse Moore
George Hardy
Arnold Aldrich
George Johnson
Charles Kupperman
Larry Mulloy
Lawrence Wear
James Beggs
Shirley Green
Joseph Kilminster
John Q. Miller
William R. Graham
Vera Herschberg
Stanley Reinartz
James Smith
Richard Cook
Richard Smith
Robert Lund
Norman Terrell
Ben Powers
[210] Interviews on
Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance
.
David Brown
Jackie C. Walker
Howard Gittens
Wayne Frazier
Richard M. Henritze
Benny Nunnelly
Brian Russell
Norman R. Schulze
James 0. Batte
George Butler
Haggai Cohen
Stanley Reinartz
Arthur M. Carr
Henry P. Smith
Harry Quong
Milton Silveira
Wiley C. Bunn
Wesley Hawkins
Dallas N. Vickers
David Austin
John Maxson
Interviews on
Management Structure
.
Dick Kohrs
James Smith
Jerry Cox
Richard A. Colonna
Jesse Moore
Arnold Aldrich
Jerry Griffin
Walt C. Williams
Dr. Hans Mark
John J. McCarty
Stanley Reinartz
George Bridwell
William Hamby
Scott Simpkinson
James Kingsbury
George Johnson
Michael Weeks
James Brier
Thomas J. Lee
Richard Cook
Lawrence Wear
Jud A. Lovingood
William F. Taylor
Michael Mann
John Q. Miller
Bill Bush
William Lucas
Interviews on Human
Factors
.
Louis E. Toole
Jenny Howard
Ray Hallard
Gregory Haywood Williams
James B. Hill
Greg Oliver
Ken McCrary
Robert L. Brayant
Leonard J. Riche
Robert Yackovetsky
Joe Kenneth Patterson
Keith Coates
Heather M. Mitchell
Morton O'Hare
Interview on Wreckage Reconstruction
Terry Armentrout
Interview on Crew Activities
George Abbey
[211]
Table 2. Commission
Panel Sessions
.
.
Accident
Analysis Panel
.
March 3, 4, 5
Marshall
Accident Data Review, Fault
Tree Analysis
March 6, 7
Kennedy
Film & Wreckage
Review
March 11
Kennedy
Coordination with NASA Task
Force
March 12, 13
Marshall
Accident Data Review, Fault
Tree Analysis, Test Requirements
March 19
Thiokol-Utah
Test Coordination
March 26
Marshall
Test Review
April 10, 11
Marshall
Test Review
April 14, 15, 16, 17
Marshall
Final Review
.
Design,
Development and Production Panel
.
March 5
Johnson
Preliminary Briefing
March 17
Thiokol-Utah
Fact-Finding Session
March 18
Thiokol-Utah
Design-Production
April 2
Rocketdyne-California
Main Engines
April 3
Rocketdyne &
Rockwell-California
Development-Orbiter
April 4
Rockwell-California
Orbiter
April 7
Marshall
Development and
Production
April 8,9
Martin
Marietta-Louisiana
Development-External
Tank
April 11
Parker Seal-Kentucky
O-rings
.
Pre-Launch
Activities Panel
.
March 4, 5, 6
Kennedy
Training, Workload,
Schedule, Spares, Pre-launch Investigation Update,
Security
March 17, 18, l9
Kennedy
Manpower, Spare Parts,
Shuttle Processing, Security, Hold-down Post Spring 51-L,
Booster Flow, Salvage Status, SRB Recovery, Launch Readiness
Process
.
Mission
Planning and Operations Panel
.
March 4, 5
Kennedy
Preliminary Briefing
March 11, 12
Johnson
Crew Activity Planning,
Training, Abort Modes, Safety, Manifesting
March 20
Johnson
Objectives Review
March 24, 25
Johnson
Range Safety, Mission
Operations, Landing Operations, Weather, Tile Damage, Main
Engines, Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance
March 31, April 1
Johnson
Payload Safety, Hardware
Testing, Training, 51-L Flight Design
April 7
Marshall
Safety, Reliability and
Quality Assurance
April 8, 9
Johnson
Workload, Software,
Manifesting, Landing Considerations
April 14, 15
Johnson
Ascent/Entry Envelope,
Abort Option History, Safety, Reliability and Quality
Assurance
[212-213] Executive Order 12546, dated February 3, 1986, which established the Presidential Commission on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident.