NASA engineer Ed Smylie, who led carbon dioxide fix on Apollo 13, dies at 95

Dmitry Kuznetsov
8 Min Read
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It was approximately one in the morning, four hours after an explosion crossed the Apollo 13 spacecraft on its way to the moon, when Ed Smylie realized that they had to do something about carbon dioxide. What happened next now is the history of the historical space, which implies how to place a square plug in a round hole.

Smylie, who was head of the NASA crew systems division at that time, died on April 21, 2025, at the age of 95. His death occurred almost 55 years after the day after he and his team discovered how to combine a space hose, a fox, a plastic bag, a duct tape to clean the air of astronauts Jim Lovell, it was learned and Jack Swigert Duration its emergency cards.

“I think those were our 15 minutes of fame,” Smylie said in a 1999 interview with a NASA historian. “If you read the book and look at the movie [“Apollo 13”]It seems that I did all that. I returned and looked at the list of people I identified were involved, and there were probable 60 people involved in one way or another. “

A bucket -shaped box with vents on one side is linked to a wall with a hose that runs from

Within the Apollo 13 lunar module, a view of the “mailbox”, a solution directed by the jury to scrub the carbon dioxide from the air, which astronauts build the lithium -shaped lithium -shaped command module Crew Crew Crew Crew Crew Crew Crew Creesta-Hally Crewwawawawawawawawawawawawa. Crew. and contractors. (Image credit: NASA)

The concern was that the carbon dioxide that astronauts be exhaled would reach concentrations high enough to be mortal if they were not cleaned from the air.

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