1. They used the EVA cue card to form an arch over the canister, to prevent the bag they were going to put the canister into from sucking down on the screens and blocking the flow.
2. They used a piece of cut-up towel to plug the bypass hole in the canister so air would be forced to flow through the screens.
3. They placed the canister inside one of the LCG bags and taped everything securely in place.
4. They then cut a hole in the LCG bag and slipped a red EVA suit hose into the hole and underneath the arch they built with the EVA cue card, then taped everything in place.
5. They connected the suit hose to the SUIT LOOP in the LM and turned it on, sucking the air out LM, through the canister, and back out.
In the complete mission transcript (see link below WARNING: 21mb PDF file) the procedure is read up to the crew starting on page 418.
No, they were not - the first moon landing left Cape Canaveral in Florida on 16th July, 1969 with the crew of Apollo 11 landing on the moon four days later. Between July 1969 and December 1972 there were (in total) six manned moon landings made by Apollo 11, Apollo 12, Apollo 14, Apollo 15, Apollo 16 and finally Apollo 17. Apollo 13 was forced to return to Earth when an explosion in the rocket occurred when the crew were halfway to the moon but fortunately the crew survived and returned to Earth safely. There is even a movie about the Apollo 13 moon mission so that's evidence the moon landings were not faked.
The crew of Apollo 4 was made up of all Navy captains: Command Module Pilot Walter M. Schirra, Jr., Senior Pilot Donn F. Eisele, and Lunar Module Pilot R. Walter Cunningham. Apollo 4 was an unmanned mission that tested the Saturn V rocket and the spacecraft systems in Earth's orbit.
Well, honey, thankfully no one died on Apollo 13. Those astronauts had a rough time up there, but they made it back to Earth in one piece. So, no need to start planning any funerals for them!
AS-203 (informally called Apollo 2) was an unmanned mission on July 21, 1966 to test aspects of the Saturn V rocket. Officially, there is no Apollo 2. NASA administrators were not sure they wanted to continue with the Apollo name after the Apollo 1 tragedy. Before they made a decision there were two unmanned test flights, officially named AS-203 and AS-202
The Apollo 13 crew used the Lunar Module as a lifeboat after an oxygen tank exploded, damaging the Service Module. They made critical repairs and used the gravitational pull of the Moon to slingshot back towards Earth, re-entering the atmosphere and splashing down safely in the Pacific Ocean.
There are no maps made as a result of Apollo 13. The mission objectives of Apollo 13 were never completed, and the crew almost died.
No, they were not - the first moon landing left Cape Canaveral in Florida on 16th July, 1969 with the crew of Apollo 11 landing on the moon four days later. Between July 1969 and December 1972 there were (in total) six manned moon landings made by Apollo 11, Apollo 12, Apollo 14, Apollo 15, Apollo 16 and finally Apollo 17. Apollo 13 was forced to return to Earth when an explosion in the rocket occurred when the crew were halfway to the moon but fortunately the crew survived and returned to Earth safely. There is even a movie about the Apollo 13 moon mission so that's evidence the moon landings were not faked.
The crew of Apollo 4 was made up of all Navy captains: Command Module Pilot Walter M. Schirra, Jr., Senior Pilot Donn F. Eisele, and Lunar Module Pilot R. Walter Cunningham. Apollo 4 was an unmanned mission that tested the Saturn V rocket and the spacecraft systems in Earth's orbit.
No, all of the Apollo 11 crew made it to the moon and back to Earth safely.
Well, honey, thankfully no one died on Apollo 13. Those astronauts had a rough time up there, but they made it back to Earth in one piece. So, no need to start planning any funerals for them!
AS-203 (informally called Apollo 2) was an unmanned mission on July 21, 1966 to test aspects of the Saturn V rocket. Officially, there is no Apollo 2. NASA administrators were not sure they wanted to continue with the Apollo name after the Apollo 1 tragedy. Before they made a decision there were two unmanned test flights, officially named AS-203 and AS-202
The Apollo 13 crew used the Lunar Module as a lifeboat after an oxygen tank exploded, damaging the Service Module. They made critical repairs and used the gravitational pull of the Moon to slingshot back towards Earth, re-entering the atmosphere and splashing down safely in the Pacific Ocean.
Apollo 13 was a NASA mission in 1970 that experienced an oxygen tank explosion. The crew had to abort their plans to land on the moon and instead focus on safely returning to Earth. Through ingenuity and teamwork, the crew, along with NASA mission control, successfully made it back to Earth.
Thankfully, everyone made it back to Earth safely.
There is a three way tie: Jim Lovell, Gene Cernan, and John Young all made three flights on or around the moon. Lovell: Apollo 8, Apollo 13 Young: Apollo 10, Apollo 16 Cernan: Apollo 10, Apollo 17
Apollo 13 never landed on the moon because of a catastrophic malfunction. However, it made a successful landing back on Earth on April 17, 1970.
Jack Swigert was moved from the backup to the prime crew for the Apollo 13 mission because the original prime crew member, Ken Mattingly, was exposed to German measles and was deemed non-immune. Swigert's experience as a backup crew member and his ability to step in at short notice made him a suitable replacement for Mattingly.