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Investigation Continues Into Cause Of NASA Rocket Explosion Near Md. Line

CHINCOTEAGUE, Va. (AP/WJZ) -- Crews searched for scorched wreckage along the Virginia coast Wednesday in hopes of figuring out why an unmanned commercial rocket exploded in a blow to NASA's strategy of using private companies to fly supplies and, eventually, astronauts to the International Space Station.

Alex DeMetrick reports crews are taking stock. That includes sorting out the hit to a business, lost experiments and processing a blast no one saw coming.

When you see something like this, it's going to stay with you.

Bonnie Collier was visiting from Maryland when she saw the rocket explode over NASA's Wallop's Island launch site Tuesday evening.

"Five, ten seconds later and you could feel it, 'kaboom!' In your chest," Collier said.

Ed Sealing Jr. and his father flew from Queen Anne's County to watch the launch from the air.

"The second explosion hit, and man it was big. It just looked like a bomb went off," Sealing said.

A surprise he caught on his iPad from the cockpit.

"And that's the big one where it hit the ground," Sealing said.

It's been all over the internet ever since.

The rocket built by Orbital Sciences to fly a NASA payload to the space station included student science experiments from throughout the country.

Students from Ocean City, N.J. went to the launch.

"We counted down from five, four, three," a student said.

A school camera caught what came next.

The 140-foot Antares rocket blew up 15 seconds after lifting off for the space station Tuesday, lighting up the night sky and raining flaming debris on the launch site. No one was injured, but the $200 million-plus mission was a total loss.

The executive vice president talked with CBS.

"Oh, my heart went into my throat. We have a lot invested in this, and it's very difficult to watch something like that, which doesn't mean the company won't try launching again. A desire others share," said Frank Culbertson, VP of Orbital Sciences.

"I hope Orbital Sciences can recover. When they get wallops cleaned up and put another launch out there, I'm definitely planning flying and seeing one," Sealing said.

The blast not only incinerated the cargo -- 2 1/2 tons of space station food, clothes, equipment and science experiments dreamed up by schoolchildren -- but dealt a setback to the commercial spaceflight effort championed by NASA and the White House even before the shuttle was retired.

It was the first failure after an unbroken string of successful commercial cargo flights to the space station since 2012 -- three by Orbital and five by SpaceX, the other U.S. company hired by NASA to deliver supplies.

Although the cause of the blast is still unknown, several outside experts cast suspicion on the 1960s-era Russian-built engines used in the rocket's first stage. Orbital Sciences chairman David Thompson himself said the Russian engines had presented "some serious technical and supply challenges in the past."

He said he expects the investigation to zero in on the cause within a week or so. The launch pad on Wallops Island appeared to have been spared major damage.

As for launching again, Thompson said he expects a delay of at least three months in the company's next flight to the space station, which had been set for April.

"We are certainly disappointed by this failure, but in no way are we discouraged or dissuaded from our objectives," he told investors in a phone conference.

Former NASA Administrator Michael Griffin, who helped spearhead the commercial cargo effort, noted that the Antares rocket was still in development. He and others associated with the space agency went into the program knowing that failures were likely.

"It's obviously tragic and upsetting, but we'll move on," Griffin told The Associated Press.

In another few years, NASA hopes to launch astronauts again from U.S. soil -- aboard commercially supplied spacecraft.

Orbital Sciences has never intended to fly anything more for NASA than cargo. The political fallout from the blast is more likely to affect SpaceX and Boeing, both of which are under NASA contract to fly Americans to the space station by 2017.

"We can't allow the one incident of the Antares vehicle loss to smear space commercialization in Washington and on the Hill," Boston-based space analyst Charles Lurio said in an email.

The mood was somber 260 miles up, according to space station astronaut Butch Wilmore. He and his five crewmates were watching a live video feed of the launch and saw the whole thing.

"It's a great loss," Wilmore said, quickly adding that the station pantry contains four to six months' worth of food and that there is plenty of research to go around.

Debris -- potentially hazardous because of fuel -- plummeted into the Atlantic and onto the launch site, igniting fires. Helicopters took to the air at first light Wednesday to track down remnants. Authorities warned people to avoid touching any debris that might wash ashore.

Ash and other debris covered Chrissy Mullen's house, patio and yard on Chincoteague Island a few miles away. She spent the morning cleaning up.

"We thought it was raining, but then we're getting particles out of our hair," she said. "The ash, the debris that was hitting our head was a little freaky."

Carolyn Dalton watched the launch from the mainland while chaperoning four middle-school students from Colleton County, South Carolina, who had a milk-spoiling experiment aboard the rocket.

"People were screaming, people were crying, people were in shock," Dalton said.

Just hours after the accident, Russia launched a supply ship from Kazakhstan on a previously scheduled flight to the space station, and it docked smoothly. Another load of supplies should be on the way in December, delivered by SpaceX from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

NASA is paying $1.9 billion to Dulles, Virginia-based Orbital Sciences for eight cargo hauls and $1.6 billion to California's SpaceX for 12 shipments. Tuesday's flight was insured.

Even before Tuesday's failure, Orbital Sciences had been reviewing alternatives to the Russian-made engines, Thompson said. The company recently had selected a different main propulsion system for use in a couple of years, and the switch may be accelerated if the Russian engines prove to be the culprit, he said.

The AJ26 engines -- modified and tested in the U.S. -- originally were designed for the massive Soviet rockets meant to take cosmonauts to the moon during the late 1960s.

Three years ago, an AJ26 leaked kerosene fuel and ignited on the test stand at a NASA center in Mississippi. Just this past May, another of the engines exploded during a test firing there.

In 2012, SpaceX's billionaire founder and CEO, Elon Musk, called the Antares rocket "a punchline to a joke" because of the Russian engines. SpaceX, by contrast, makes its own rocket parts.

"I mean they start with engines that were literally made in the `60s and, like, packed away in Siberia somewhere," Musk said in an interview with Wired magazine.

What caused the blast, as well as the time needed to repair the Wallop's launch pad is still unknown.

(Copyright 2013 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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