This article highlights that three approaches for the Apollo mission were considered and investigated early in the program: direct ascent, Earth orbit rendezvous, and lunar orbit rendezvous. Direct ascent would entail a direct shot from Earth to the moon, requiring an enormous rocket assembly, named the Nova rocket that required 15 first stage engines and would dwarf the Saturn V eventually selected as the launch vehicle. It also required a massive lunar landing vehicle to return the astronauts from the moon directly to Earth. At liftoff, the first stage burned 15 tons of fuel a second, requiring approximately 50,000 horsepower to power the fuel pumps to feed the engines. The Apollo 13 movie followed the actual flight with a fair degree of accuracy, recognizing that it had to compress four days of real-life tension into a two-hour motion picture. The film dramatized the explosion of the oxygen tank by showing the astronauts being thrown about in the cabin. In reality, the astronauts only heard a bang and then the warning alarm for low electrical bus voltage.
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October 2000
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That One Small Step
Apollo Aimed for the Moon on President Kennedy's Timetable, and Thousands of People Helped Get it there on Time.
Benedict J. Gaylo was a deputy director of the lunar module program for Grumman Aerospace Corp. He is currently retired in Cincinnati, and lectures on the Apollo program to civic groups.
Mechanical Engineering. Oct 2000, 122(10): 62-69 (8 pages)
Published Online: October 1, 2000
Citation
Gaylo, B. J. (October 1, 2000). "That One Small Step." ASME. Mechanical Engineering. October 2000; 122(10): 62–69. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2000-OCT-2
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