But that alone might not
have caused the spaceship to disintegrate 45,000 feet in the air,
killing co-pilot Michael Tyner Alsbury and injuring co-pilot Peter
Siebold, who managed to parachute to the ground.
While the the National
Transportation Safety Board said it is "months and months away" from
determining the cause, it outlined two problems involving the
spacecraft's "feathering" -- a process used to slow the spacecraft down
toward Earth.
In order for feathering
to start, two things have to happen: someone has to unlock the
feathering system, and someone has to activate the system with a
different handle.
The NTSB has said the
unlocking device was moved too early. On Monday night, the agency said
Alsbury was the one who unlocked the feathering system.
"... the copilot, who was in right seat, moved the lock/unlock handle into unlock position; he did not survive accident," the NTSB tweeted.Source:BBC

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