http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scitech/DailyNews/shuttle_astronomer030201.html

Astronomer Spots Trouble
Astronomer Saw Shuttle Apparently in Trouble Over California

By John Antczak
The Associated Press
February 1, 2003

Los Angeles - Space shuttle Columbia appeared to begin trailing fiery
debris as it passed over Eastern California early today, well before its 
destruction over Texas, according to a California Institute of Technology 
astronomer who witnessed its fiery transit.

Anthony Beasley observed the shuttle's re-entry from outside his home in 
Bishop, Calif., near Caltech's Owens Valley Radio Observatory, where he is 
project manager of the Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave
Astronomy.

"As it tracked from west to east over the Owens Valley it was leaving a 
bright trail. As it actually moved over the valley there were a couple of 
flashes ... Then we could see there were things clearly trailing the 
orbiter subsequent to that," Beasley said.

Shuttle Was Clearly Visible

Beasley said he, his wife, Anne, and mother-in-law, Anne Finley, had gone 
outside in the early morning darkness to watch the re-entry from the small 
town 225 miles north of Los Angeles. He said the sky was clear and dark, and 
the shuttle was immediately visible when it cleared the Sierra Nevada peaks to 
the west of Bishop.

He said he had never witnessed a shuttle re-entry before and is not an 
authority on shuttles, but he immediately thought Columbia was having problems.

"In particular, there was one very clear event where there was a piece that 
backed off the orbiter ... It was giving off its own light, then it slowly 
fell from visibility," he said. 

Loss of Tiles?

Beasley said he thought the shuttle might be losing some of the heat-resistant 
tiles that protect it during the fiery re-entry. He said he did not 
learn of the shuttle's destruction until he went to the observatory and 
compared notes with two news photographers who had arranged to photograph 
the re-entry through a telescope.

Beasley said they compared notes and all agreed they had seen what he termed 
"the bright event, the third event."

"The analogy, I think, is it looked like the shuttle dropped a flare," he said.

He described the scene again: "Pretty soon after we started to see it track 
there were brief flashes of light. It would sort of flash a little bit and 
there was an indication of material trailing the orbiter. They would sort of 
disappear from view. ...That happened two or three times. One of these was 
very bright. It was a very clear thing. It separated itself from where the 
orbiter is. It sort of fell behind in the trail and it was burning itself. It 
was hot itself ... and then the orbiter continued heading toward Texas.

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