Splashdown occurred within one nautical mile of the recovery ship, the USS Iwo Jima. The astronauts were weak, dehydrated, and suffering from hypothermia and urinary infections. But they were alive. The Apollo 13 Review Board concluded that the explosion was caused by a combination of poor design, inadequate testing, and a series of minor errors that cascaded into a catastrophe. The Teflon-insulated wires in the oxygen tank, the use of an incorrect thermostat, and the decision to use 65-volt ground support equipment on a 28-volt system—all were human errors.
Then came the problem of navigation. Without the command module’s guidance computer, Lovell had to use the LM’s telescope to align the ship using the stars. But the explosion had left a debris field around the spacecraft, making star sightings impossible. The crew had to use the Sun’s terminator on Earth as a reference point. Lovell manually performed a burn that had never been simulated, using a wristwatch and a sextant. Apollo 13
Lovell would often say, “Apollo 13 wasn’t a failure. It was a triumph of the human spirit.” In the end, the mission did not land on the Moon. But it landed something far more profound in the collective memory: a reminder that in the cold, dark, infinite vacuum of space, the most powerful engine of all is the human mind, working together, duct-taping a square peg into a round hole to bring three men home. Splashdown occurred within one nautical mile of the