Remembering Challenger

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Mission Control: "Challenger, go at throttle up"

Commander Dick Scobee: "Roger go at throttle up"

Those were the last words heard from the

Challenger shuttle

crew on January 28, 1986. Then came an explosion, and the famous "Y" plume of smoke from the solid rocket boosters flying away aimlessly to nowhere.

Mission Control: "Flight Controllers looking carefully at the situation. Obviously a major malfunction."

Today we remember the

Challenger

crew, pictured above: (front row) Michael J. Smith, Dick Scobee, Ronald McNair; (back row) Ellison Onizuka, Christa McAuliffe, Gregory Jarvis, Judith Resnik.

Looking for a way to remember the crew, or want more insight on the mission or accident?

Read a UT article from Sept. 2008

of how Christa McAuliffe's lost lesson plans have been given new life by a caring NASA engineer. Read

a poem written by Stuart Atkinson

about the Challenger accident. On

Twitter,

people are writing short remembrances of where they were when they heard the news. Below are more ways to remember the crew, and if you'd like, add a comment on your thoughts about the accident/or your recollections from that day.

Space correspondent Miles O'Brien writes in his True Slant blog about the

Challenger disaster

.

Jim Oberg wrote a great article a couple of years ago about the

7 Myths About the Challenger Shuttle Disaster.

The Federation of American Scientists has an

extensive page on the 51 L mission

with loads of links and info.

Arlington Cemetery has a page

devoted to the Challenger Crew.