- John Aaron
John W. Aaron is a former
NASA engineer, and was aflight controller during theApollo program . He is widely credited with saving theApollo 12 mission when it was struck by lightning shortly after liftoff and played an important role during theApollo 13 crisis.Early life
John Aaron was born in
Wellington, Texas and grew up in rural Western Oklahoma near Vinson in Booger Hollow, one of the youngest in a family of eight children. His mother was a minister, and his father was a cattle rancher. After spending a year attendingBethany Nazarene College , he transferred toSouthwestern Oklahoma State University , from which he graduated in 1964 with a BS degree in physics. Although he had intended to teach math and science after graduating from college, he applied for a job at NASA on the recommendation of a friend.NASA career
Gemini
When he arrived at NASA, Aaron was trained as an EECOM, a
flight controller with specific responsibility for the electrical, environmental and communications systems onboard the spacecraft. ByJanuary 19 ,1965 , when the unmannedGemini 2 was launched, he was already working inMission Control .Apollo 12
When
Apollo 12 launched onNovember 14 ,1969 , John Aaron was on shift. Thirty-six seconds after liftoff, the spacecraft was struck by lightning, causing a power surge. Instruments began to malfunction, communications dropped out, andtelemetry data became nonsensical. The flight director,Gerry Griffin , expected that he would have to abort the mission. However, Aaron realized that he had seen this odd pattern of telemetry before.A year before the flight, Aaron had been observing a test at
Kennedy Space Center when he had noticed some unusual telemetry readings. On his own initiative, he traced this anomaly back to the obscure "Signal Conditioning Equipment" (SCE) system, and became one of the fewflight controller s who was familiar with the system and its operations. In the case that first drew his attention to the system, normal readings could have been restored by putting the SCE on its auxiliary setting, which meant that it would run even under low-voltage conditions.Aaron surmised that this setting would also return the
Apollo 12 telemetry to normal. When he made the recommendation, "Flight, try SCE to 'Aux'", most of his mission control colleagues had no idea what he was talking about. Both the flight director and the CapCom asked him to repeat the recommendation.Pete Conrad 's response to the order was, "What the hell is that?" FortunatelyAlan Bean was familiar with the location of the SCE switch inside the capsule, and flipped it to auxiliary. Telemetry was immediately restored, allowing the mission to continue. This call earned Aaron the lasting respect of his colleagues, who declared that he was a "steely-eyed missile man".Apollo 13
Aaron was off duty when the Apollo 13 explosion occurred, but was quickly called to Mission Control to assist in the rescue and recovery effort. Flight Director
Gene Kranz put Aaron in charge of the Command Module's power supply. He was in charge of rationing the spacecraft's power during the return flight. He is also credited with developing the innovative power up sequence that allowed the Command Module to reenter safely while running on very limited battery power.Going against existing NASA procedures, he ordered the instrumentation system to be turned on last, just before reentry, rather than first. The call was a calculated risk. Without the instrumentation system, the crew and controllers would not know for certain if the cold startup had been successful until the last possible moment before reentry. However without this sequence change, the capsule would have exhausted its battery supply before splashdown. The procedure was a success, and the crew was recovered safely.
Later career
After the Apollo program ended, Aaron remained at NASA. He worked on the
Skylab program, and was involved in the development of theSpace Shuttle software. Starting in 1984, he worked on the abortiveSpace Station Freedom project; he became manager of Johnson Space Center's space station projects office in 1989. Four years later, however, he was forced to resign from the position after SenatorRobert Krueger blamed him for $500 million in overspending on the station project. [cite news
last = Leary
first = Warren E.
title = President is Expected to Request Full Financing for Space Station
work = New York Times
pages = 7
date = ]Aaron became a manager in
Johnson Space Center 's Engineering Directorate in 1993, and stayed in the directorate until he retired from NASA in 2000.In film
A character based on John Aaron was portrayed by actor
Loren Dean in the 1995 film "Apollo 13". Aaron was also played byJohn Travis in the 1998 mini-series "From the Earth to the Moon". He was interviewed in thePBS documentary "Apollo 13: To the Edge and Back", and in twoHistory Channel documentaries aboutMission Control , "Failure Is Not an Option " and "".Notes
References and external links
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* [http://www.dickgordon.com/ApolloXII-2.shtml Apollo 12 lightning strike]
* [http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/apr05/2697 Apollo 13, We Have a Solution] , Stephen Cass,IEEE Spectrum , April 2005, accessed 11 Feb 2006. (Now requires a login.)*
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