Signed by Commander Tom Stafford

“there would have been no 11 had 10 not succeeded, and in a few critical moments on the fifth day of the mission, that was very much in doubt, as astronauts Tom Stafford and Gene Cernan found themselves in a near-fatal barrel roll just 50,000 feet above the lunar surface, in a tin can of a spacecraft that had no business surviving such a crisis.” — TIME

After a few expletives on the live network broadcast, they regained control just a few rolls away from a crash landing on the lunar surface.

And NASA knew they could not let maverick Lunar Module Pilot Gene Cernan get so close to the lunar surface without a rogue attempt to go the whole way, so they just provided enough fuel on the LM to do the “dress rehearsal” mission. Had Gene taken the LM to the surface, he would not have had the ability to return (as you see in this photo, with the ascent stage rising up to dock with the Command Module one last time, the spacecraft that will take them back to Earth).

This is also the only flown Lunar Module ascent stage that is still in orbit; the rest crashed into the moon, or in the case of Apollo 13, Earth.

One response to “A cool perspective compression from Apollo X”

  1. And now, astronomers think they found this Apollo X Lunar Module in orbit around the sun. This is the only intact flown Lunar Module ascent stage, as all of the others crashed into the moon, or in the case of Apollo 9 and 13, burned up on reentry to Earth.

    "Certainly, Snoopy is one of the more curious objects man-made objects in solar orbit. Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster, which SpaceX launched into solar orbit via its inaugural Falcon Heavy flight in 2018, probably wins for "most curious." Musk is a big fan of the Apollo program, so maybe a salvage isn’t totally out of the question. The module has suffered from a half-century of continuous ultraviolet radiation exposure, but it should be relatively intact."
    Sky & Telescope

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