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Draft #11117 quality rejected Created May 25, 2026, 21:41:24

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Generated note

Nov. 28 was STS-9’s launch day; NASA says Columbia landed Dec. 8. NASA’s incident page says two APUs caught fire during rollout, with detonations minutes after landing. https://www.nasa.gov/history/40-years-ago-sts-9-the-first-spacelab-science-mission/ https://sma.nasa.gov/SignificantIncidents/lessons-learned.html

Source post

Fire on the Runway: The Hidden Inferno of STS-9November 28, 1983. Space Shuttle Columbia was gliding home from orbit after the first Spacelab mission — a soaring success carrying six crew members and a European astronaut. But as the massive orbiter sliced through the final minutes of descent toward Edwards Air Force Base, an invisible nightmare was unfolding in its tail.The Space Shuttle’s three Auxiliary Power Units (APUs) — essentially compact, ferocious jet engines powered by highly toxic and explosive hydrazine — provide the hydraulic muscle for flight controls, brakes, and landing gear. Without them, the orbiter is little more than a 100-ton unpowered glider with no steering.Roughly two minutes before touchdown, a hydrazine fuel leak ignited. Two of the three APUs burst into flames inside the aft compartment. The crew, led by commander John Young, had no warning. No fire lights. No alarms that reached the cockpit in time. They flew the approach and executed a flawless landing at over 200 mph, completely unaware they were piloting a spacecraft with a raging fire in its rear.The wheels touched down. Columbia rolled to a stop on the dry lakebed runway.Only then did the real danger peak. About fifteen minutes after landing, trapped hydrazine in the APU valves detonated. The explosion blew the engine covers off, destroyed critical steering components, and scorched wiring and structure in the aft compartment. The fire had been burning during those final critical minutes of flight — had the explosion or loss of hydraulics happened just moments earlier while still airborne, Columbia would have lost all flight control and likely disintegrated in a high-speed crash.Instead, the fire eventually burned itself out once the leaked fuel was exhausted. NASA quietly ushered the astronauts away, covered the blackened and charred rear of the orbiter, and kept the full drama largely out of public view. Technicians only discovered the extent of the damage the next day when they opened access panels to a blackened, scorched https://t.co/bo0FTRj7V2 remains one of the closest calls in Space Shuttle history — a silent, invisible fire that nearly claimed the vehicle and crew on what should have been a triumphant return.A miracle landing… with flames licking at its heels the entire way down.

May 25, 2026, 08:25:00 Open on X →

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Started
May 25, 2026, 21:41:24
Finished
May 25, 2026, 21:41:30
Duration
5.88 s

Input snapshot

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Output snapshot

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