Astronauta podczas katastrofy Columbii przebywał na ISS.A Chat with the Space Station CrewAstronauts Share Thoughts on Columbia Tragedy February 22, 2003 12:00 AM ET
In the wake of the Feb. 1 loss of the space shuttle Columbia and its seven-person crew, NASA has suspended all manned flights to space. But a few humans remain in Earth orbit -- the three-man crew of the International Space Station. NPR's Scott Simon spoke with the ISS astronauts about their reaction to Columbia's loss.
"The whole situation was very personal for us because we knew those guys who were on [Columbia mission] STS-107 very well," Ken Bowersox, the American commander of the Expedition Six crew, told Simon. "They were good friends. We had contact with them here and we shared a mission -- a mission to explore and a mission to do science in space. So it was very painful." (...)
https://www.npr.org/2003/02/22/1171198/a-chat-with-the-space-station-crewDifficult re-entryMarcia Dunn,Associated Press | Portsmouth Herald
(...) Bowersox's oldest son, age 10, knew one of the Columbia astronaut's sons. Pettit had been playing chess in space, via e-mail, with Columbia's pilot. So there will be those families, and the five other Columbia astronauts? families, for Bowersox and Pettit to visit.
Because the accident occurred on the weekend, Bowersox, Pettit and Budarin were off duty. But by Monday, two days after the tragedy, they were hard at work again. Bowersox wanted the crew to be busy, and he wanted flight controllers to be busy, too.
As the days passed, Bowersox kept the radio conversations with Mission Control subdued, out of respect for what had happened. (...)
https://eu.seacoastonline.com/story/news/2003/05/11/difficult-re-entry/51272897007/https://abcnews.com/WNT/story?id=129830&page=1