http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/sts107_sound_030216.html

Recordings made by instruments sensitive to sound below the threshold of
human hearing may help investigators build a timeline of any
uncharacteristic movements made by the space shuttle Columbia minutes before
it broke apart, scientists say.
The instruments also captured an explosion high over Texas that one
scientist said could have been Columbia's cabin rupturing.

As parts of Columbia began to break off as the shuttle streaked across the
West, the flight behavior of the normally streamlined spacecraft would have
changed. Those changes would have generated distinctly different patterns of
sound waves compared to previous shuttle flights.

The patterns, recorded on the ground by instruments in Texas, Nevada and
elsewhere in the West, are now being examined as part of the Columbia
disaster investigation.

Any abnormal patterns can help investigators establish the timing of events
as the shuttle entered the Earth's atmosphere Feb. 1, said Keith Koper, a
geophysicist at Saint Louis University in Missouri.

Investigators already know from sensor data sent from the shuttle in its
final minutes _ supported by eyewitness reports, photographs and video
footage _ that Columbia's cascade of problems began while the spacecraft was
still over the Pacific Ocean.

The sensors indicated increasing heat as well as increased drag on shuttle's
left wing, suggesting it was somehow damaged, perhaps from the impact of a
chunk of hard foam that broke off the external fuel tank and hit the wing
shortly after liftoff Jan. 16.

Investigators have said they suspect that data mean Columbia was already
dropping debris over the West, several minutes and hundreds of miles before
it broke apart high over Texas. All seven crew members were killed.

One array of the sound-sensitive instruments, located near Big Bend National
Park in southwest Texas, recorded sound waves from Columbia as it was over
West Texas indicating an explosion equivalent to a few pounds of TNT, said
Eugene Herrin, a geophysicist at Southern Methodist University.

"Our guess is that it could have been caused by a rapid decompression, which
is what would have happened if you ruptured the crew compartment,'' Herrin
said.

He said an initial analysis of data collected in Columbia's wake by another
array of microbarometers, outside Mina, Nev., showed ``unusual'' patterns
when compared to data from other shuttle flights passing overhead. The
instruments record minute pressure changes caused by infrasound, or sound
waves below about four cycles per second that are inaudible to humans.

"There was something about this one. I am not going to speculate. What we
see are oscillations in the shock wave that we don't normally see. Whether
that's diagnostic or not, that's a NASA call,'' Herrin said.

Space agency spokesman William Jeffs said Sunday that NASA would consider
the information in the shuttle investigation.

Search crews have yet to find any confirmed shuttle debris more than 20
miles west of Fort Worth. A concentrated search in a canyon east of
Albuquerque, N.M., on Saturday turned up nothing from the shuttle, officials
there said.

Earthquake instruments throughout the West also picked up vibrations induced
by Columbia's supersonic flight overhead, said Andrew Michael, a U.S.
Geological Survey geophysicist in Menlo Park, Calif. That data also was sent
to NASA.

Such seismic data was used to study the bombing of the U.S. embassy in
Nairobi, the sinking of the Russian submarine Kursk and the collapse of the
World Trade Center towers.




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Listen Maru
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________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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