<p>America may now be aiming to put astronauts back on the Moon, but for years the United States turned its back on manned missions after the Columbia space shuttle disaster.</p>.<p>Its space programme suffered a catastrophic setback when all seven astronauts were killed when the shuttle broke up on re-entering the Earth's atmosphere 20 years ago on February 1, 2003.</p>.<p>It was the second shuttle disaster after the Challenger explosion of 1986 which also killed the crew and led to sharp criticism of the safety culture at NASA.</p>.<p>The shuttle fleet was grounded for two and a half years and it sparked a major shift in American space flights.</p>.<p>In 2004, president George W Bush announced that the eye-wateringly expensive programme would be retired.</p>.<p>For years after the last shuttle flight in 2011, NASA found itself dependent on Russia for transport to the International Space Station (ISS) until Elon Musk's Space X began flying passengers there in 2020.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-offbeat/buzz-aldrin-the-second-man-on-the-moon-marries-on-93rd-birthday-1183452.html" target="_blank">Buzz Aldrin, the second man on the Moon, marries on 93rd birthday</a></strong></p>.<p>As well as the Moon, Washington is now preparing for a manned mission to Mars, scheduled tentatively for the late 2030s or early 2040s.</p>.<p>Columbia broke up at 2,03,000 feet (61,900 metres) over eastern Texas just as the mission controller in Houston was talking to Columbia commander Rick Husband.</p>.<p>"To Columbia, here is Houston... we did not copy your last" message.</p>.<p>After a moment, Husband replied: "Roger but..."</p>.<p>After a brief crackling noise, contact was lost.</p>.<p>Columbia disappeared from radar screens at 9:00 am (1400 GMT), 16 minutes before it was due to land.</p>.<p>The flaming debris from the 80-tonne craft was caught streaking across the sky over the southern US by local TV stations, with parts scattered over Texas and Louisiana.</p>.<p>Bob Molter from Palestine, Texas, told National Public Radio how he saw the shuttle break up in the sky.</p>.<p>"There was a big boom that shook the house for more than a minute, and I went outside because I thought there had been a train accident on the nearby line."</p>.<p>"But there was nothing, and then I looked up and saw the trails of smoke zig-zagging, going across the sky."</p>.<p>Columbia was the oldest shuttle to fly in orbit.</p>.<p>When it took off on its 28th flight on January 16, 2003 for a 16-day mission to carry out experiments it had been in operation for over 20 years.</p>.<p>Flight STS-107 was launched under extremely tight security in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks and due to the presence on board of Israel's first astronaut, Ilan Ramon.</p>.<p>Bush cut short a stay at the Camp David presidential retreat and raced back to Washington following the tragedy. In a televised address he hailed the crew, two of whom were women, as heroes.</p>.<p>A probe revealed that the shuttle disintegrated due to damage caused by a piece of foam from the external fuel tank that took a chunk out of the orbiter's left wing during liftoff.</p>.<p>This left it unable to withstand the extreme temperatures generated by re-entry.</p>.<p>The shuttle programme was born in 1972 under president Richard Nixon and went on to become the major focus of US human spaceflight ambitions over the next four decades.</p>.<p>The fleet also acted like space trucks, carrying more than 1,500 tonnes of equipment to help build the first space telescope, Hubble, and the International Space Station.</p>.<p>After the Columbia disaster, NASA underwent sweeping changes aimed at improving its culture and safety.</p>.<p>The agency resumed shuttle flights in July 2005, with Discovery, then Endeavour and finally Atlantis continuing to fly missions to the ISS until 2011.</p>
<p>America may now be aiming to put astronauts back on the Moon, but for years the United States turned its back on manned missions after the Columbia space shuttle disaster.</p>.<p>Its space programme suffered a catastrophic setback when all seven astronauts were killed when the shuttle broke up on re-entering the Earth's atmosphere 20 years ago on February 1, 2003.</p>.<p>It was the second shuttle disaster after the Challenger explosion of 1986 which also killed the crew and led to sharp criticism of the safety culture at NASA.</p>.<p>The shuttle fleet was grounded for two and a half years and it sparked a major shift in American space flights.</p>.<p>In 2004, president George W Bush announced that the eye-wateringly expensive programme would be retired.</p>.<p>For years after the last shuttle flight in 2011, NASA found itself dependent on Russia for transport to the International Space Station (ISS) until Elon Musk's Space X began flying passengers there in 2020.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-offbeat/buzz-aldrin-the-second-man-on-the-moon-marries-on-93rd-birthday-1183452.html" target="_blank">Buzz Aldrin, the second man on the Moon, marries on 93rd birthday</a></strong></p>.<p>As well as the Moon, Washington is now preparing for a manned mission to Mars, scheduled tentatively for the late 2030s or early 2040s.</p>.<p>Columbia broke up at 2,03,000 feet (61,900 metres) over eastern Texas just as the mission controller in Houston was talking to Columbia commander Rick Husband.</p>.<p>"To Columbia, here is Houston... we did not copy your last" message.</p>.<p>After a moment, Husband replied: "Roger but..."</p>.<p>After a brief crackling noise, contact was lost.</p>.<p>Columbia disappeared from radar screens at 9:00 am (1400 GMT), 16 minutes before it was due to land.</p>.<p>The flaming debris from the 80-tonne craft was caught streaking across the sky over the southern US by local TV stations, with parts scattered over Texas and Louisiana.</p>.<p>Bob Molter from Palestine, Texas, told National Public Radio how he saw the shuttle break up in the sky.</p>.<p>"There was a big boom that shook the house for more than a minute, and I went outside because I thought there had been a train accident on the nearby line."</p>.<p>"But there was nothing, and then I looked up and saw the trails of smoke zig-zagging, going across the sky."</p>.<p>Columbia was the oldest shuttle to fly in orbit.</p>.<p>When it took off on its 28th flight on January 16, 2003 for a 16-day mission to carry out experiments it had been in operation for over 20 years.</p>.<p>Flight STS-107 was launched under extremely tight security in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks and due to the presence on board of Israel's first astronaut, Ilan Ramon.</p>.<p>Bush cut short a stay at the Camp David presidential retreat and raced back to Washington following the tragedy. In a televised address he hailed the crew, two of whom were women, as heroes.</p>.<p>A probe revealed that the shuttle disintegrated due to damage caused by a piece of foam from the external fuel tank that took a chunk out of the orbiter's left wing during liftoff.</p>.<p>This left it unable to withstand the extreme temperatures generated by re-entry.</p>.<p>The shuttle programme was born in 1972 under president Richard Nixon and went on to become the major focus of US human spaceflight ambitions over the next four decades.</p>.<p>The fleet also acted like space trucks, carrying more than 1,500 tonnes of equipment to help build the first space telescope, Hubble, and the International Space Station.</p>.<p>After the Columbia disaster, NASA underwent sweeping changes aimed at improving its culture and safety.</p>.<p>The agency resumed shuttle flights in July 2005, with Discovery, then Endeavour and finally Atlantis continuing to fly missions to the ISS until 2011.</p>