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But five years after the inaugural launch, the program averaged just five missions a year as the agency was forced to acknowledge that four orbiters weren’t enough for its original ambitious schedule.
There were some notable parts of the program: NASA had diversified its astronaut corps with scientists, women and people of color, but this wasn’t enough to sustain public interest. The missions were still esoteric and infrequent—which, coupled with NASA’s insistence that spaceflight was routine, gave people little reason to care.
When the world perked up at the news that a teacher would be flying in space, what NASA needed more than anything was a win. The mission had already been delayed from mid-1985 to early 1986, and that Tuesday was the only real option NASA had to launch. There were technical considerations: the satellites and science payloads on board had to be deployed at certain times.
The publicity goals, however, weighed heavier. According to the mission plan, Christa McAuliffe would broadcast a lesson live from orbit on her fourth day in space. A Tuesday launch meant a Friday broadcast, but a Wednesday launch meant a Saturday broadcast, when no students were in school. NASA needed the publicity of her broadcast.
Another factor was political. President Ronald Reagan was due to mention McAuliffe and the Teacher in Space in his State of the Union address on Tuesday night. If the launch was delayed, NASA would miss out on another big public mention. If the agency was going to justify continued spending on the program, Challenger had to launch on time.
originally posted by: AlexandrosOMegas
I simply think you have to be a real putz at this point to believe the challenger was anything but a rocket MEANT to explode, an unmanned one, and just a ploy to collect more black ops money and shut down having to put on a show for the world. They say that all the astronauts were, coincidentally, identical twins who took their dead siblings names to honor their passing!? Who changes a name to their dead brother or sister!? All alive and well and still working in their related fields.
five courageous engineers who warned NASA against launching the space shuttle due to cold weather conditions, risking failure of the O-rings on the Challenger's rocket boosters.