The Pulse

Triumph, Tragedy and Ennui: Three NASA Missions That Shaped the Future of Space Exploration

Jan 22, 2026
Join journalist Adam Higginbotham, who dives into the Challenger disaster's chilling details and its lasting impact on NASA. Science reporter Liz Tong discusses the Viking 1 mission that first landed on Mars, its quest to find life, and the debate sparked by its intriguing results. Health reporter Alan Yu recounts the thrilling journey of New Horizons, from near-misses to groundbreaking discoveries as it flew by Pluto, revealing Earth's icy cousin. Together, they explore the triumphs and tragedies that continue to shape space exploration.
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INSIGHT

Perchlorates Reframe Viking’s Findings

  • Later discoveries of perchlorates on Mars explain how Viking's GCMS could have destroyed organics during heating.
  • Re-evaluating Viking data with new chemistry suggests organics may have existed but were masked by experimental conditions.
ANECDOTE

A Teacher Becomes NASA’s Public Face

  • NASA ran a contest to send a teacher into space and selected Christa McAuliffe from over 11,000 applicants to boost public engagement.
  • McAuliffe became the public face of the mission and appeared on national TV talking about sharing the perspective of Earth with students.
INSIGHT

Risk Normalization Led To Disaster

  • Engineers gradually expanded their tolerance for risk, normalizing decisions that earlier teams would have rejected.
  • Multiple red flags about O-ring vulnerability, especially in cold, were raised years before Challenger but were marginalized.
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