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Re: Zeev Hed post# 72722

Thursday, 02/06/2003 2:17:24 AM

Thursday, February 06, 2003 2:17:24 AM

Post# of 704019
Zeev. My neighbor who is a retired NASA engineer has his own theory.

a) The shuttle started its initial break up over CA - not Texas or even AZ.

b) The break up was caused by a confluence of events.
1. Missing tiles that left the shuttle vulnerable to heat spikes and would cause the aircraft to not operate/fly optimally.
2. The shuttle's problems were exacerbated when it hit a high pocket, or "bubble" as he calls it of atmospheric air over the Sierra mountains (possibly even over the Pacific ocean just off shore). Such atmospheric bubbles can extend to extreme altitudes in these regions.
3. He came to these conclusions various ways. 1) The missing heat tiles alone he feels wouldn't have brought the craft down. 2) A load explosion was heard in our area as the shuttle went overhead. It was NOT a sonic boom and was heard across a wide area around where I live (high in the Sierra mountains near the NV border).

My neighbor had other 'proof' to back his theory but it was over my head. He used to work with two of NASA's top atmospheric scientists so he knows a thing or two about this. Unfortunately they (and he) are retired now so they are trying to figure out how to get the info to NASA (and have someone listen!). By the way. He came to these conclusions 2 days ago. Before any of these videos or other evidence came forward to support his theory.


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