Aquarius
The Apollo 13 Command Module was 'Odyssey' . Aquarius was the Lunar lander.
The name of the LEM (Lunar excursion model) was Aquarius (:
The LEM on Apollo 13 was named 'Aquarius'. This did not land on the moon as planned, but enabled the astronauts to survive, and was used as a 'lifeboat'.
The command module was named "Odyssey", and the Lunar Module "Aquarius."
The two main parts of the Apollo 13 spacecraft were the Command Module (nicknamed "Odyssey") and the Lunar Module (nicknamed "Aquarius"). The Command Module was used for reentry into Earth's atmosphere, while the Lunar Module was used as a lifeboat after an oxygen tank explosion damaged the Command Module.
The Apollo 13 Command Module was 'Odyssey' . Aquarius was the Lunar lander.
The name of the LEM (Lunar excursion model) was Aquarius (:
The LEM on Apollo 13 was named 'Aquarius'. This did not land on the moon as planned, but enabled the astronauts to survive, and was used as a 'lifeboat'.
The command module for Apollo 13 was called Aquarius. The lunar module was called Aquarius.
The command module was named "Odyssey", and the Lunar Module "Aquarius."
The two main parts of the Apollo 13 spacecraft were the Command Module (nicknamed "Odyssey") and the Lunar Module (nicknamed "Aquarius"). The Command Module was used for reentry into Earth's atmosphere, while the Lunar Module was used as a lifeboat after an oxygen tank explosion damaged the Command Module.
The lunar module pilot on Apollo 13 was Astronaut Fred Haise, Jr. Apollo 13 lifted off on April 11, 1970 and returned on April 17, 1970. The crew spent time in the lunar module due to the oxygen vent not working.
lunar module
Apollo 13 was the spacecraft that had an oxygen tank explosion, not the lunar module that landed on the moon. The lunar module that landed on the moon during the Apollo 11 mission was called the Eagle, piloted by astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin.
Apollo 13 got back to Earth by using the Lunar Module as a lifeboat after an oxygen tank explosion in the Service Module. The crew used the Lunar Module's descent engine to adjust their return trajectory, allowing them to slingshot around the moon and back towards Earth for a successful re-entry.
It must be Aquarius.
James Lovell (commander), Fred Haise (lunar module pilot) & Jack Swiekart (command module pilot)