Apollo 13 Mission: A 'Successful Failure' by Ron Cole


Apollo 13 Mission: A "Successful Failure"

Apollo 13, launched on April 11, 1970, was the seventh crewed mission in NASA's Apollo space program and intended to be the third lunar landing. The mission's primary objective was to explore the Fra Mauro formation on the Moon. However, approximately 56 hours into the mission, an oxygen tank in the Service Module ruptured, severely crippling the spacecraft.
The explosion forced the three-person crew—Commander Jim Lovell, Lunar Module Pilot Fred Haise, and Command Module Pilot Jack Swigert—to abort their lunar landing and use the Lunar Module (LM) as a lifeboat. The LM, designed to support two astronauts for two days, had to sustain three men for at least 90 hours during their perilous journey back to Earth.
Through ingenious improvisation and critical support from ground control, the crew successfully navigated their damaged spacecraft around the Moon and returned safely to Earth on April 17, 1970. Despite failing to achieve its primary objective of a lunar landing, Apollo 13 is widely regarded as a "successful failure" due to the remarkable survival of its crew against overwhelming odds.

Each signed & numbered by the artist. 
Size and framing options:

 

Size and Paper


Next Previous

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review Write a review

Related Items