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Apollo 13 (AS-508)
Houston, we have a problem.
The Apollo 13 mission was launched at 2:13 p.m. EST,
April 11, 1970 from launch
complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center. The space vehicle crew consisted of
James A. Lovell, Jr.commander, John L. Swigert, Jr., command module
pilot and Fred W.
Haise, Jr. lunar module pilot. The Apollo 13 Mission was planned as a
lunar landing mission but was aborted en route to the moon after about
56 hours of flight due to loss
of service module cryogenic oxygen and consequent loss of capability to
generate electrical power, to provide oxygen and to produce water.
Spacecraft systems performance was nominal until the fans in cryogenic
oxygen tank 2 were turned on at 55:53:18 ground elapsed time (GET).
About 2 seconds after energizing the fan circuit,
a short was indicated in the current from fuel cell 3, which was
supplying power to cryogenic oxygen tank 2 fans. Within several
additional seconds, two other shorted conditions occurred. Electrical
shorts in the fan circuit ignited the wire insulation, causing
temperature and pressure to increase within cryogenic oxygen tank 2.
When pressure reached the cryogenic oxygen tank 2 relief valve full-flow
conditions of 1008 psi, the pressure began decreasing for about 9
seconds, at which time the relief valve probably reseated, causing the
pressure to rise again momentarily. About a quarter of a second later, a
vibration disturbance was noted on the command module accelerometers.
The
next series of events occurred within a fraction of a second between the
accelerometer disturbances and the data loss. A tank line burst, because
of heat, in the
vacuum jacket pressurizing the annulus and, in turn, causing the
blow-out plug on the
vacuum jacket to rupture. Some mechanism in bay 4 combined with the
oxygen buildup in that bay to cause a rapid pressure rise which resulted
in separation of the outer panel. The panel struck one of the dishes of
the high-gain antenna. The panel separation shock closed the fuel cell 1
and 3 oxygen reactant shut-off valves and several propellant and helium
isolation valves in the reaction control system. Data were lost for
about 1.8 seconds as the high-gain antenna switched from narrow beam to
wide beam, because of the antenna being hit and damaged.
As a result of these occurrences, the CM was powered down and the LM was
configured
to supply the necessary power and other consumables. The CSM was powered
down at approximately 58:40 GET. The surge tank and repressurization
package were isolated with approximately 860 psi residual pressure
(approx. 6.5 lbs of oxygen total). The primary water glycol system was
left with radiators bypassed.
All LM systems performed satisfactorily in providing the necessary power
and
environmental control to the spacecraft. The requirement for lithium
hydroxide to remove carbon dioxide from the spacecraft atmosphere was
met by a combination of the CM and LM cartridges since the LM cartridges
alone would not satisfy the total requirement. The crew, with direction
from Mission Control, built an adapter for the CM cartridges to accept
LM hoses.
The service module was jettisoned at approximately 138 hours GET, and
the crew observed and photographed the bay-4 area where the cryogenic
tank anomaly had occurred. At this time, the crew remarked that the
outer skin covering for bay-4 had been severely damaged, with a large
portion missing. The LM was jettisoned about 1 hour before entry, which
was performed nominally using primary guidance and navigation system.
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