STS-1: First Shuttle Launch
On April 12, 1981, twenty years ago today, the
space shuttle orbiter Columbia
became the first shuttle to orbit the Earth.
In this
gorgeous time exposure,
flood lights play on the Columbia and
service structures (left) as it rests atop
Complex 39's Pad A at
Kennedy Space Center in preparation for first launch.
Flown by
Commander John W. Young and Pilot Robert L. Crippen,
Columbia spent 2 days aloft on its check-out mission,
STS-1,
which ended in a smooth landing, airplane-style, at
Edwards Air Force Base in California.
Ferried back to Kennedy by a
modified Boeing 747, Columbia was
launched again seven months later on
STS-2, becoming the first
piloted reuseable orbiter.
The oldest operating shuttle orbiter, Columbia's 1981 debut was
followed by
Challenger in 1982
(destroyed in 1986),
Discovery in 1983,
Atlantis in 1985, and Challenger's replacement
Endeavour in 1991.
This shuttle orbiter fleet
has now
accomplished over 100 orbital missions.
Today also marks the 40th anniversary of the
first human in space,
Yuri Gagarin.