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Apollo 13
The Apollo 13 logo featured three flying horses, and the motto Ex luna, scientia (out of the moon, science), and the name of the mission in Roman numerals
In order to accomplish a safe return to Earth, a significant course correction to place the spacecraft on a free return trajectory was required. This was performed by firing the lunar module's descent engine. The engine was fired again after passage around the Moon in order to accelerate the spacecraft's return to Earth. (As a result of following the free return trajectory, the altitude of Apollo 13 over the lunar far side was approximately 100 km greater than the corresponding orbital altitude on the remaining Apollo lunar missions. Though this difference is swamped by the variation in distance between Earth and the Moon owing to the eccentricity of the Moon's orbit about Earth, this fact has sometimes generated sentiment favouring the award of the world altitude record to the Apollo 13 crew). Reentry in Earth's atmosphere required the unusual step of undocking and jettisoning the lunar module, which had been retained for the flight back to Earth, in addition to the separation of the damaged service module. The crew returned unharmed to Earth. Jim Lovell's book about the mission, Lost Moon, was later turned into a successful movie, Apollo 13, starring Tom Hanks. Mission notes:
Actual quote: "Houston, we've had a problem" [1], first uttered by Swigert to ground, then repeated by Lovell. The command module is currently displayed at the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center, Hutchinson, Kansas. It was formerly at the Musee de l'Air, Paris. The lunar module burned up in Earth's atmosphere 17 April, 1970.
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