NASA marks 10 years since loss of Columbia, crew

12:07 PM, Feb 1, 2013   |    comments
A banner showing the photos of the Columbia space shuttle crew hangs from a fence near a makeshift memorial set up at one of the gates of the Houston Space Center in Houston, Texas, 04 February, 2003. (Photo by JAMES NIELSEN/AFP/GettyImages)
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -- NASA will honor the seven astronauts who perished when the space shuttle Columbia was destroyed 10 years ago.
    
The space agency will mark the anniversary Friday at a public memorial service at Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Speakers include Evelyn Husband Thompson, who was married to the shuttle's commander.
    
The accident on Feb. 1, 2003, killed six Americans and Israel's first astronaut. They were returning home from a 16-day science mission when the shuttle disintegrated over Texas, just minutes from landing in Florida.
    
An investigation board later determined the cause was damage to the wing that occurred during liftoff. The shuttles were grounded for more than two years, and resumed flying with more safety features in place. The shuttles retired in 2011.
    
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NASA: http://www.nasa.gov

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2/1/2013 3:02:46 AM (GMT -5:00)

Associated Press