I was 19 years old in January of 1986. For just a moment the world stopping spinning. My mother was a 2nd grade school teacher battling cancer. After the Challenger accident NASA went on a 32 hiatus from and launches. The first launch after the hiatus was STS-26 on September 29, 1988. 13 days later, my mother had succombed to the cancer and joined fellow schoolteacher Christie McAuliffe.

Date and Time: The Space Shuttle Challenger disaster occurred on January 28, 1986, at 11:39:13 a.m. EST (16:39:13 UTC), just 73 seconds after liftoff from Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Cause of the Accident: The disaster was caused by the failure of an O-ring seal in the right Solid Rocket Booster (SRB). Unusually cold temperatures on the morning of the launch stiffened the rubber O-rings, compromising their ability to seal the joint. This allowed hot pressurized gas (over 5,000°F) to escape, burning through the external fuel tank and triggering a catastrophic structural failure. The resulting explosion tore the orbiter apart due to intense aerodynamic forces.
Crew and Mission: The shuttle was on its 10th mission (STS-51-L) and carried seven crew members, including Christa McAuliffe, a schoolteacher selected for NASA’s Teacher in Space Project. The crew members were:
- Dick Scobee, commander
- Michael J. Smith, pilot
- Ronald McNair, mission specialist
- Ellison Onizuka, mission specialist
- Judith Resnik, mission specialist
- Gregory Jarvis, payload specialist
- Christa McAuliffe, payload specialist
Immediate Aftermath: The explosion was broadcast live on television and witnessed by many schoolchildren across the U.S., as McAuliffe’s lessons were to be part of a national educational event. The crew cabin remained largely intact after the breakup, and some astronauts may have survived the initial explosion. However, the impact with the ocean surface at terminal velocity (about 207 mph) was unsurvivable. The remains of all seven astronauts were eventually recovered.
Investigation and Responsibility: The Rogers Commission was formed to investigate the disaster. It concluded that the accident was preventable and blamed NASA’s organizational culture and decision-making, as well as Morton Thiokol, the SRB manufacturer. Engineers had warned against launching in cold weather, but their concerns were not adequately communicated or heeded by management.
Outcome and Legacy: The disaster led to a 32-month hiatus in the Space Shuttle program. NASA implemented major safety reforms, including redesigning the SRBs, creating the Office of Safety, Reliability, and Quality Assurance, and requiring astronauts to wear pressurized suits during launch and reentry. The orbiter Endeavour was later built to replace Challenger. The tragedy remains a pivotal case study in engineering ethics and risk management.
Following the hiatus after the Challenger accident. STS-26, launched on September 29, 1988, was the first space shuttle mission after the 32-month hiatus following the Challenger disaster on January 28, 1986.
- The mission was flown by the orbiter Discovery and marked NASA’s return to human spaceflight after the loss of the Challenger crew.
- It was the seventh flight of Discovery and the 26th mission in the Space Shuttle program.
- The crew consisted entirely of veteran astronauts, the first such all-experienced team since Apollo 11, including Commander Frederick H. “Rick” Hauck and Pilot Richard O. “Dick” Covey.