Johns Hopkins University Press
Thirteen: The Apollo Flight That Failed
Thirteen: The Apollo Flight That Failed
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On April 13, 1970, some 205,000 miles from Earth, an explosion rocked the moon-bound Apollo 13, taking our both engines of the command module and crippling the life-support system. Guided by the ground crew in Huston, the crew took refuge in the lunar module and used its engines, almost in the fashion of an outboard motor, to maneuver the craft around the moon and back toward Earth. With temperatures in the module below freezing, water in short supply, and one crew member seriously ill, the astronauts and the ground crew struggles to manuipulate machines into doing things they were never meant to do.
Long unavailable, Thirteen: The Apollo Flight That Failed ia a riveting, minute by minute acount of the only madded NASA mission to have malfunctioned outside Earth's orbit. Henry Cooper takes readers behind the scenes in this story of unprecedented crisis that severely tested NASA's button-down ethic of the time-forcing technological improvisation on an organization built on caution and procedure.
Author: Henry S. F. Cooper
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Published: 08/01/1995
Pages: 210
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.55lbs
Size: 8.44h x 5.48w x 0.48d
ISBN: 9780801850974
Review Citation(s):
New York Times 10/29/1995 pg. 52
About the Author
Henry S. F. Cooper Jr. (1933-2016) was the author of eight books about NASA and space exploration, including Before Lift Off The Making of a Space Shuttle Crew.
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