Short answer: The latest widely reported incident is the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, when the shuttle broke up during reentry over Texas, killing all seven astronauts aboard.[7]
Details and context
- What happened: During reentry on STS-107, damage from a piece of external tank foam struck the left wing, allowing superheated air to penetrate and destroy the orbiter’s thermal protection system, leading to breakup.[1][7]
- When: Reentry and breakup occurred on February 1, 2003, with final breakup and loss of crew observed within minutes after entry interface.[7]
- Notable related incidents: The Challenger disaster in 1986 was another spaceflight loss during ascent (not reentry), caused by a booster O-ring failure; it remains a separate category from reentry failures.[3][8]
- Historical context: Other reentry-related discussions exist (e.g., public safety concerns from various incidents), but Columbia is the only major space-shuttle disaster on reentry in the Shuttle program’s history, up to the present coverage in 2026.[9][10]
If you want a concise timeline or a side-by-side comparison of reentry accidents across spaceflight history, I can assemble a focused chart or bullet list. Would you like a quick timeline or a visual summary?
Citations
- Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated upon reentry (2003)[1]
- Columbia disaster overview (Wikipedia) with reentry failure details[7]
- Challenger disaster (not reentry-related) context[8]
- Britannica entry on spacecraft explosions during reentry (Columbia cited)[9]
- Space journalist retrospectives on shuttle disasters[10]