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New Challenger Video: Super 8 Film Of Space Shuttle Disaster Uncovered (EXCLUSIVE VIDEO)

First Posted: 03/09/12 12:44 PM ET Updated: 03/10/12 11:10 PM ET

Rare film of the 1986 Challenger explosion, taken by Jeffrey Ault of Orange City, Fla., has emerged. It is perhaps the only amateur recording of the event on film, and online it has been made available exclusively to The Huffington Post.

Jeffrey Ault built a 5-foot tall replica of an Apollo-era Saturn V rocket for an elementary school science project. In high school, when NASA was conducting tests of the space shuttle program, he routinely wrote to the space administration requesting mission reports, collecting them in a file that he still has to this day.

So when he had the opportunity to attend the launch of the Challenger space shuttle while visiting Florida in January 1986, he was thrilled.

SCROLL DOWN FOR PHOTOS

"The excitement leading up to the launch was something I had never felt before," Ault told The Huffington Post. "It was just great."

But that excitement turned to shock and sadness just 73 seconds after launch, when the space shuttle Challenger exploded, killing all seven astronauts on board and putting shuttle missions on hold for nearly three years.

Ault, who was 19 at the time and visiting from southern California, attended the launch with his parents, Bernice and Robert, and his friend Bill Graber. He filmed the event with his Chinon Super 8 film camera while Graber snapped photos.

Like many home movies, the film sat untouched in a box in Ault's house for decades. Until last week, it had been 26 years since he had seen the film, which The Huffington Post licensed from Ault.

VIDEO ABOVE

While two home videos (one Betamax and one VHS) of the Challenger tragedy have surfaced, Ault's film, shot from the Kennedy Space Center viewing site fewer than ten miles from the launch, offers a never before seen -- and significantly closer -- perspective.

The video begins with the countdown to launch, and as the Challenger lifts off, cheers and applause can be heard in the background. The camera follows the shuttle as it climbs, reaching a height of more than nine nautical miles. At 73 seconds, a fireball appears and a woman screams. It's not until 39 seconds later that Steve Nesbitt's chilling words can be heard from the Mission Control Center: "Flight control is here looking very carefully at the situation. Obviously a major malfunction."

The film ends moments after Nesbitt announces that the vehicle has exploded.

Reflecting on that tragic day, Ault recalled a long, solemn and confusing trip back to the hotel.

"I was hoping to see an event that I would remember for the rest of my life," Ault wrote in an email. "I did. Just not the way I would have liked to."

"Unfortunately it became one of those long lasting memories for all the wrong reasons."

LOOK: Photos from the Challenger launch.
Photos courtesy of Bill Graber, Jeffrey Ault and Debi McNabb

 
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11:06 PM on 03/10/2012
I was employed at Rockwell INT. Rocketdyne SSFL at the time. We tested that SSME engine and it was ready for flight when we cut it loose. We lost a lot of employees do to an O-ring frailer, no fault of ours. A lot of good people never came back. We were run thru the ringer by our customer trying to find fault & assign blame. To this day I believe seclude was to aggressive and steps were taken to just get it done. It was just to dame cold for the Solid Rocket Boosters O-rings to function properly. Joe B.
11:01 PM on 03/10/2012
At 1:40, the small white object with no smoke behind it right above the "H" is the crew cockpit. The astronauts were not killed by the explosion as this article states. They were killed when the cockpit crashed into the ocean after a nearly 4 minute free fall.
09:47 PM on 03/10/2012
I remember I was 9 and for some reason I wasn't in school that day. We were watching it at my grandparent's house as she was babysitting us. I remember how big of a deal it was that a teacher was going to fly into space. I sat there and watched it and was shocked, but as a 9-year old, it's hard to comprehend what happened. I remember that one of the ways us kids dealt with the situation, and this sounds silly, but we made jokes about it and that somehow helped us through the tragedy.
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iyamwhatiyam1
10:05 PM on 03/10/2012
Sadly, adults did the same thing.
09:12 PM on 03/10/2012
I happened to be visiting my old high school that day. We all went into the auditorium to watch this amazing event. I will never forget the complete silence that fell on over 800 students, 100 teachers and admin. when it exploded. We all knew we were witnessing the death of many people; people who were pioneers in their own right. This was our "Where were you when" day.
08:25 PM on 03/10/2012
I remember it too so well, I am from Orlando and we watched from our backyard. Having seen so many, we new instantly this was bad. I remember that teacher Christa McAuliffe's parents were in the VIP stands, and like these voices on the video, they did not know that this was abnormal and squealed with delight at the explosion, until all the families were suddenly ushered inside to a "special" room. This may seem dumb, but I also remember thinking she got doubly gypped. She not only died, but she died before she even got there. She was selected from so many who applied and did all this training and was such an exceptional person by all accounts and she never got to go. I thought even dieing on the way back would have somehow been better, because she would have at least been there.
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judgeholden79
You, Never? Did the Kenosha Kid?
08:19 PM on 03/10/2012
Anyone remember the post disaster inquiry? Richard Feynman soaking the O-ring material in ice water on national television has stuck with me all this time. Feynman was a national treasure.
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leftbehind2000
If money = speech, then no speech is free.
07:11 PM on 03/10/2012
What a strange feeling, to be virtually standing there, watching a disaster unfold, knowing, while being surrounded by the voice of people who had no idea what they were about to witness.
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Hope4us2change
06:49 PM on 03/10/2012
This was a very sobering sad day for America. The explosion was shown over and over on the tv that day. How shocking for the families of the astronauts to view their loved ones dieing before their eyes. Someone said at the time that it took great courage and faith for each of the astronauts to step into a rocket that was attached to boosters (each a potential bomb). One of the astronauts was a school teacher and her class was excitedly watching her on tv when it happened. Heartbreaking. They will be remembered.
06:46 PM on 03/10/2012
wow, this video is incredible! can anyone tell me what the onlookers are saying in spanish?
08:02 PM on 03/10/2012
it's italian, not spanish:) They're saying "oh, is it exploded?
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Hope4us2change
06:42 PM on 03/10/2012
This is a very sobering and sad video. I remember seeing the explosion video played over and over that day on the news. It broke my heart for the fine astronauts that died and for their families who must have watched in disbelief. Someone said at the time that the astronauts had great courage to step into a rocket, knowing it was attached to a booster that had all the power of a large bomb. They will always be remembered for their courage.
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maxout22
04:35 PM on 03/10/2012
I can't believe how long it's been. I remember it like it was yesterday.
03:56 PM on 03/10/2012
I remember where I was and what I was doing when NASA had the Apollo I, Challenger, and Columbia tragadies. I also remember thr rage I felt at NASA when the investigations when it was found all three were preventable, and only occured due to NASA Management incompetence.
09:13 PM on 03/10/2012
I'm an ex-professional aviation major, and I'm sorry to say that about 80%-90% of crashes could have been avoided. Most accidents happen because of miscommunication, arrogance, or people feeling like the problems they've found are not very big. You must understand that everyone makes mistakes; though, the mistakes that they make cost people their lives.
06:33 AM on 03/11/2012
Having spent more than 40 years in aviation, from flying military aircraft to running a major US international airport, I can say that is only a small part of the causes of airplane accidents. It is true most accidents are 'pilot error' but that was clearly not the case in both the Challenger and Columbia accidents. Both were caused by the failure of management decisions on the ground.
01:13 PM on 03/10/2012
How humbling it is to view this launch disaster again. This is a reminder of the courage possesed by all of our astronauts who were and are pioneers of space exploration. Their assumption of risk should never be taken for granted. We are indebted to them.
01:01 AM on 03/10/2012
And this is important. How?
09:49 AM on 03/10/2012
This guy thinks everything revolves around him. Your attitude disgusts me.
12:02 PM on 03/10/2012
Ass!!
10:35 PM on 03/09/2012
JFK, MLK, RFK, the Challenger - all moments you remember forever where you were - how you heard and what you saw. Thank you Huffington Post for making this public. Such moments pulled us together as a nation ... perhaps remembering will help us do so now.