200,000 miles from home - 13 Minutes to the Moon podcast, Season 2, Episode 6

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  • čas přidán 23. 04. 2020
  • The crew are off course, 200,000 miles from home and without a guidance computer. Their lives now depend on their flying skills - and Jim Lovell’s wristwatch. Astronauts Lovell, Haise and Swigert need to manually steer their spacecraft back on course for Earth. Even the smallest error will stop them from making it home alive.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 18

  • @imagereader_9
    @imagereader_9 Před měsícem

    The more I come to know of his work, I am convinced that John Aaron was the best and brightest man in Mission Control. Just an opinion of course. 😀

    • @user-dh6bj2me5p
      @user-dh6bj2me5p Před 23 dny

      There were many "best and brightest."
      Most, we've never heard of.

  • @jorymil
    @jorymil Před 3 měsíci

    2 1/2 hours is a heckuva tech support call. I've been on longer, but never close to anything like this.

  • @kalidass1429
    @kalidass1429 Před 4 lety +1

    I love so much this story i love so much bbc world sirvice

  • @michaeldinkins9145
    @michaeldinkins9145 Před 23 dny

    It's hard to believe there were no DC motors

  • @AndrewBlacker-wr2ve
    @AndrewBlacker-wr2ve Před 8 měsíci

    The off trajectory "drift" confuses me.
    For anything to change to trajectory, it has to be a force... a pressure causing the opposite reaction.
    But if there's something venting causing the deviation, it shouldn't have been a problem because the stack was put into a slow constant roll to aid passive heating from the sun. So any consistent venting would constantly be cancelled out by the repetitive rolling.

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 Před 3 měsíci

      I read they discovered a water jet or something when they got back to earth. I bet it bothered them too!

    • @user-dh6bj2me5p
      @user-dh6bj2me5p Před 23 dny

      ​@@animula6908"discovered?"
      There was nothing to do an investigation on. It was all burned up... The Service Module and the LM.
      Water? They didn't have water. When the fuel cells were wrecked, the water production was lost.
      Again, the SM/LM stack was in a slow roll to maintain some solar heating so any and all venting would have been cancelled out.

  • @BBCWorldService
    @BBCWorldService  Před 3 lety

    Watch Season 2 of 13 minutes to the Moon here: czcams.com/play/PLz_B0PFGIn4daEaUX-8ZJHv40rGAINzFy.html

  • @michaeldinkins9145
    @michaeldinkins9145 Před měsícem

    There would have been many parts that could have been scavenged and made a devi that would have charged up the batteries

    • @imagereader_9
      @imagereader_9 Před měsícem

      Uh.... They had enough complexities to deal with at the time. If this procedure would have been as simple as you try to make it sound, why not describe it in a way that was used to cobble together the air filter system. List the components and the sequence involved in assembling and using them and then practice sending them up by radio.

    • @michaeldinkins9145
      @michaeldinkins9145 Před měsícem

      All you have to have is a magnet spinning close to coils of copper wire . There would have been many of those throughout the service module and people in Houston that could have told them where they were

    • @michaeldinkins9145
      @michaeldinkins9145 Před měsícem

      There's a dude in England named Robert Murray Smith that can do remarkable things with parts that were intended for other purposes.. There's a term for that but I don't remember what it is

    • @michaeldinkins9145
      @michaeldinkins9145 Před měsícem

      The term is " bricoleur"

    • @user-dh6bj2me5p
      @user-dh6bj2me5p Před 23 dny

      ​@@michaeldinkins9145magnets and coils of copper?
      "NONE AVAILABLE."
      Just because you think something doesn't make it true.