Extract from CNN
(CNN)Saturday
afternoon marks the 50th anniversary of the launch of the Apollo 13
mission, dubbed the "successful failure" of the Apollo program.
Although
an explosion prevented astronauts James Lovell Jr., John Swigert Jr.
and Fred Haise Jr. from participating in the third planned lunar
landing, NASA's engineers and flight control teams at the Apollo Mission
Control Center worked with the astronauts to safely return them to
Earth.
Perhaps you
watched the afternoon launch on TV when it happened on April 11, 1970,
or first learned about the mission watching the 1995 "Apollo 13" film.
Regardless, you can now relive the Apollo 13 mission in real-time, beginning with the launch as it happened at 2:13 p.m. ET on April 11.
NASA
software engineer and historian Ben Feist, along with a dedicated team
of historians, researchers and audio, film and visual experts, have
digitized and restored footage and audio from the mission.
Everything
is organized in the order it happened during the mission, from launch
to the celebrated return of the astronauts to Earth.
Mission
Control footage is married with film taken by the astronauts during
their flight, as well as broadcasts about the mission. Every photo has
been inserted when it was taken.
More than 7,200 hours from 50 different channels of Mission Control audio are synchronized to play out as they were spoken.
Included is newly digitized and restored audio, according to the apolloinrealtime.org site.
There
were four missing tapes from Apollo 13 Mission Control that were
recovered from the National Archives in fall 2019. They contain the
audio from the time of the explosion aboard Apollo 13.
After
being digitized and restored, it's the first time the recordings have
been heard since they were used in the investigation of the accident in
1970.
The tapes disappeared for so
long because they were packed away with the rest of the accident
investigation material in 1972, according to an article by Catherine
Baldwin, the NASA History Center's editor and social media coordinator.
The article appeared in the latest edition of NASA History's News and Notes Newsletter.
The
intriguing audio captures the range of emotions and magnitude of stress
experienced by the astronauts and ground teams as they worked together
to safely return the three men. It's a race against time over five days,
22 hours and 54 minutes.
At
the beginning of the mission, there are jokes and fun, humanizing
exchanges. After the success of the Apollo 11 mission in 1969, certain
aspects of spaceflight had started to feel routine and it's palpable in
the crew.
Everything takes a drastic shift when the explosion occurs on April 13, 1970. Tension, strain and long pauses as they search for words mark the exchanges between the astronauts and Mission Control.
Historic
moments stand out, such as the infamous words spoken by Lovell of
"Houston, we've had a problem," or Haise saying, "I didn't think I'd be
back here this soon" as he and Lovell entered the lunar module after the
explosion, preparing to use it as a "lifeboat."
The Apollo 13 project joins two others on Feist's site, a NASA-funded project including real-time explorations of the Apollo 11 and Apollo 17 missions.
Feist also performed audio restoration for the "Apollo 11" documentary, directed by Todd Douglas Miller, that aired on CNN in 2019 for the 50th anniversary of the mission.
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