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Apollo 13 | Complete ✦ |

But the triumph was equally human. The flight controllers, led by Kranz, coined the phrase “tough and competent” as their new mantra. They rewrote the book on mission rules, contingency planning, and real-time problem-solving. The disaster forced NASA to redesign the entire service module, adding a third oxygen tank and a backup battery. It also instilled a culture of “stop and think” that would prove vital in later missions, including the Space Shuttle program.

Splashdown occurred within one nautical mile of the recovery ship, the USS Iwo Jima. The astronauts were weak, dehydrated, and suffering from hypothermia and urinary infections. But they were alive. The Apollo 13 Review Board concluded that the explosion was caused by a combination of poor design, inadequate testing, and a series of minor errors that cascaded into a catastrophe. The Teflon-insulated wires in the oxygen tank, the use of an incorrect thermostat, and the decision to use 65-volt ground support equipment on a 28-volt system—all were human errors. Apollo 13

They then transferred back into the frozen, dead command module Odyssey . They had to power it up from scratch, a procedure that had never been fully practiced. The batteries had to last. At 12:07 PM EST on April 17, 1970, the command module separated from the lunar module Aquarius —the little ship that had saved their lives. They aimed for the Pacific Ocean near Samoa. But the triumph was equally human

For the crew, life went on. Ken Mattingly, who had been grounded by the measles, later flew on Apollo 16 and walked on the Moon. Fred Haise was slated to command Apollo 18, but the final three missions were canceled. He never got his lunar walk. Jim Lovell never flew in space again, though he remained with NASA for years. The disaster forced NASA to redesign the entire

Then came the problem of navigation. Without the command module’s guidance computer, Lovell had to use the LM’s telescope to align the ship using the stars. But the explosion had left a debris field around the spacecraft, making star sightings impossible. The crew had to use the Sun’s terminator on Earth as a reference point. Lovell manually performed a burn that had never been simulated, using a wristwatch and a sextant.

It was meant to be the third lunar landing. A routine “mountain expedition” to the Fra Mauro highlands, a geologically rich area named after a 15th-century Italian monk. For the astronauts—James Lovell, Fred Haise, and Ken Mattingly—it was the culmination of years of relentless training. For the American public, weary of Vietnam War headlines and the gradual normalization of spaceflight, Apollo 13 was almost mundane. The networks had even ceased live coverage of the launch. But at 9:07 PM EST on April 11, 1970, the massive Saturn V rocket lifted off from Kennedy Space Center, carrying with it a crew and a spacecraft that would never touch the Moon, but would instead etch itself into history as NASA’s most harrowing and brilliant “successful failure.” The Crew: Experience and the Cruelty of a Measles Exposure The crew dynamics were critical to the survival that followed. Commander James A. Lovell Jr. was a space veteran, having flown on Gemini 7, Gemini 12, and Apollo 8—the first mission to orbit the Moon. For Lovell, Apollo 13 was deeply personal; it was his chance to finally walk on the lunar surface. Command Module Pilot (CMP) Thomas K. “Ken” Mattingly was the meticulous, brilliant navigator and systems expert. Lunar Module Pilot (LMP) Fred W. Haise Jr. was a former Marine Corps pilot and a civilian test pilot, making his first spaceflight.

Fate intervened just days before launch. Mattingly was exposed to German measles (rubella) via a friend, and while he showed no symptoms, NASA’s strict quarantine protocols demanded he be removed from the crew to protect the others. In a decision that would later seem prophetic, Mattingly was replaced by his backup, John L. “Jack” Swigert Jr. Swigert was a capable pilot, but he had only 48 hours to integrate into a tightly-knit team. The chemistry was slightly off; Lovell later recalled a moment of tension when Swigert used the wrong pronoun, saying “my” flight plan instead of “our.” That minor friction would soon dissolve into a life-or-death partnership. The first two days of the mission were unremarkable. The crew performed a trans-lunar injection burn, slingshotting them toward the Moon. On the evening of April 13—ironically, the 13th—the crew had just completed a television broadcast, showing the American public a somewhat sleepy view inside the spacecraft. Lovell signed off with a casual, “This is the crew of Apollo 13. Good night.”