Zero Phase: Apollo 13 on the Moon
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The first in a series of what-if stories from the golden age of space exploration, Zero Phase was written based on meticulous research, and with assistance from two Apollo astronauts: Dr. Edgar Mitchell, who visited the Fra Mauro Highlands—and Captain Jim Lovell, who was supposed to. Dramatic, detailed, and finely written, this novella is a must-read for space aficionados and literary enthusiasts alike.
The titles in the Altered Space series are wholly separate narratives, but all deal with the mysteries of space and time, progress and circularity. Each one is an ensō of words in which orbits of spacecraft, moons, planets, and people allow us fresh perspectives on the cycles of our own lives.
Gerald Brennan
Gerald Brennan earned a B.S. in European History from West Point and an M.S. in Journalism from Columbia University. He's the author of Resistance, which Kirkus called “an extremely impressive debut,” and four space books including Island of Clouds. ("Speculative sci-fi at its finest." - Neal Thompson, author of Light This Candle.) His writing has appeared in the Chicago Tribune and Newcity and was on the latter's 2019 Lit 50 list of notable literary Chicagoans; he's also the founder of Tortoise Books, a Chicago-based independent press that WGN Radio's Rick Kogan recently called “…one of the best, most provocative, and rewarding publishing houses in the entire country.”
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Titles in the series (5)
Zero Phase: Apollo 13 on the Moon Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Public Loneliness: Yuri Gagarin's Circumlunar Flight Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsIsland of Clouds: The Great 1972 Venus Flyby Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Infinite Blues: A Cold War Fever Dream Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAlone on the Moon: A Soviet Lunar Odyssey Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratings
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Zero Phase - Gerald Brennan
Other titles in the series:
Public Loneliness: Yuri Gagarin’s Circumlunar Flight
Island of Clouds: The Great 1972 Venus Flyby
Infinite Blues: A Cold War Fever Dream
Alone on the Moon: The Soviet Lunar Landing
ZERO PHASE
APOLLO 13 ON THE MOON
PART OF THE ALTERED SPACE SERIES
GERALD BRENNAN
TORTOISE BOOKS
CHICAGO, IL
THIRD EDITION, JUNE, 2021
Copyright © 2021 by Gerald D. Brennan III
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Convention
Published in the United States by Tortoise Books
www.tortoisebooks.com
ASIN: B08MBK38Z8
ISBN-10: 0-9986325-0-3
ISBN-13: 978-0-9986325-0-6
This book is a work of fiction. All characters, scenes and situations are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Front Cover: Image AS14-66-09272 (NASA/Lunar Planetary Institute)
Back Cover: Image AS14-66-09306 (NASA/Lunar Planetary Institute) Rotated 5⁰ right. Slight airbrushing to expand sun halo.
Helmet and cuff checklist photographs provided through arrangement with the Adler Planetarium. Photo editing for helmet photo by Nick Bianco Photography.
Tortoise Books Logo Copyright ©2012 by Tortoise Books. Original artwork by Rachele O’Hare.
PRO. Proceed.
We’ve been thinking about this for years and simulating it for months and now it’s real. 50,000 feet above the surface of the moon. Facing up, looking out the LM windows into blackness. Standing with tension cables clipped to our waists. Gloves and fishbowl helmets on. Flying.
And we’ve just had ullage and the propellant’s settled and the DSKY’s flashing 99. Asking us for confirmation. Powered Descent. Program 63. Braking Phase.
I press the button and call it out. PRO.
The button does not fire the engine. Four.
It just tells the computer it’s OK to go ahead. Three.
The DPS lights when the AGC wants it to. Two.
We just wait for it. One.
Freddo calls: Ignition.
It is not dramatic. Changing numbers on the DSKY and a very slight vibration from the DPS. Not as stressful as, say, a night carrier landing. Or a bad day in the simulator, even.
But it is dramatic. It is real at last. I echo: "Houston, Aquarius. We have auto ignition."
For the first 26 seconds, 10% thrust only. The engine needs to gimbal to make sure it’s aligned with Aquarius’s center of mass. Accelerometers measure vector components along the x, y, and z axes, then give feedback to the computer, which sends adjustments to the engine. Nulling out acceleration along the y and z axes and keeping the thrust vector along the x axis so we don’t tumble or spin. Like a toddler wobbling as he finds his balance. But fast. Precise. Automatic feedback loops. A system of systems. Doing it by hand would just foul it up.
Freddo: Stand by for 26.
OK, we have throttle up.
94% of rated power. 9,870 pounds of thrust. The whole ignition subroutine is called BURNBABY. This is what passes for humor among computer programmers.
"Houston, Aquarius. We are at full throttle." We feel the floor press gently against our feet.
A 2.6-second-delay. We’re far enough away that the speed of light makes a difference. And finally, the Capcom’s voice: "Aquarius, Houston. Roger that."
We’re riding the brakes. Orbital Mechanics 101. The descent engine’s thrusting in our direction of travel, slowing us down so we can fall out of orbit. The RCS thrusters fire to keep us in line. Inside our fishbowls we hear muffled sounds. Coolant fans, fuel pumps, hisses. Nothing abnormal.
Landing Radar, Enable.
Freddo again. Then: Jim, give me a two-minute mark.
I watch the DSKY count down the burn time. And…mark.
OK. H-dot is low. H is a touch high. Waiting on Noun 69.
Houston, do we have that?
The Capcom’s voice crackles: "…quarius, Houston. Guidance just sent it up. Minus One-Four-Zero-Zero."
Verb 21, Noun 69. I key in the command. Some programmer at MIT realized years ago that most of our computer commands would be simple sentences. Verb, noun. It was a temporary solution. Six years later, we’re flying it to the moon. That’s how it is in engineering. The temporary becomes permanent, if it works. Verb, noun. Display angles. Calculate orbit. Fire engine. Here we’re adjusting the landing point. A white lie. Kentucky windage. The target hasn’t moved. But it’s easier to tell the AGC the target’s moved than to tell it the spacecraft’s out of position.
I hit enter. Accept their adjustment.
Freddo watches the tapes. Compares instruments to printed checklists. At every stage there are indicators of what to do based on the displays, which our controllers are also monitoring in greater detail down in the MOCR. GO or NO GO. (Once we’re on the moon, though, it’s STAY or NO STAY. When the controllers were writing mission procedures, they realized that once we landed, GO could mean Go! Launch an abort! Get away from the moon!
or Go ahead and stay.
) Still, if you look close enough,