Apollo 13: Houston, We've Got A Problem, Part 1On the 12th of April, 1970 - one day after the launch of Apollo 13 - the astronauts were faced with a major malfunction onboard their spacecraft. Later, people wondered: Did the crew ever contemplate taking "poison pills?" Jim Lovell always laughed at the stories about "poison pills." Who, he wondered, would actually take a poison pill if something went wrong during a space mission? Lovell should know. During the flight of Apollo 13 (the link takes you to rare NASA photos of the mission and its aftermath), he and his crew members endured a life-threatening situation where the outcome could easily have been death. This video presents highlights from NASA's film - "Houston, We've Got a Problem" - and includes the moment when a rupture, in oxygen tank number two, occurred nearly 200,000 miles from Earth. See, also: Apollo 13: Houston, We've Got A Problem, Part 2
CreditsQuoted passage, from Jim Lovel and Jeffrey Kluger (1994) - Apollo 13 (previously published [1994] as Lost Moon), page 1. Online, courtesy Google Books. Highlights from NASA Film HQ-200 - "Houston, We've Got a Problem." |
Table of Contents
|
Biographies
History
- American Colonies
- American Revolution - Highlights
- Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
- Assassination of John F. Kennedy
- Auschwitz: Place of Horrors
- Book Burning and Censorship
Disasters
- America Attacked: 9/11
- Black Death
- Challenger Disaster
- Columbia Space Shuttle Explosion
- Deepwater Horizon: Disaster in the Gulf
- Fatal Voyage: The Titanic


















