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LUNAR EXPLORATION BEGINS
Preparations for the Next Mission
Scientists had been reasonably well satisfied with the way the Apollo 11
samples were processed, although there was considerable waste motion and
some confusion attributable to inexperience in the first real exercise
of the lunar receiving laboratory. The most serious complaint concerned
the long delay in releasing samples to principal investigators. However,
many deficiencies in equipment and procedures had shown up during the
first mission that required correction before Apollo 12, scheduled for
mid-November. So, while completing their tasks following Apollo 11,
scientists in the Lunar Receiving Laboratory were also preparing to
incorporate necessary changes.
In early September the Lunar Sample Analysis Planning Team forwarded to
Anthony J. Calio, MSC's new Director of Science and Applications, a fist
of recommended changes concerning matters such as weighing of samples,
procedures for transferring samples during quarantine, and photography.
They also suggested improving the display of information on sample
history, status, and location, since it had proved difficult during
Apollo 11 to keep everyone informed of where the individual samples were
and what had been done to them.64
Also in need of improvement was the vacuum system into which the
returned sample containers were first admitted to the laboratory.
Problems had been foreseen in handling the samples under high vacuum,
and indeed problems had developed during simulations and during the
first mission. [see Chapter 9] Members
of the analysis planning team now felt it was mandatory to open the
lunar sample container in an atmosphere of dry nitrogen rather than in
vacuum. If two containers were returned, one could be opened in the
vacuum system; but rather than conduct the preliminary examination
there, the contents should immediately be canned and stored under vacuum
for the few investigators who required vacuum-preserved specimens. The
vacuum facility posed too many problems, such as rupture of the gloves
and contamination by organic materials from the vacuum pumps, to allow
continuation of its use for all the lunar samples.65
Others who had been involved in handling the Apollo 11 samples offered
suggestions for reducing the number of people in the laboratory,
separating the functions of the preliminary examination team and the
analysis planning team, and eliminating the preparation of two samples
for quarantine testing. All these changes would speed up the release of
samples to outside investigators.66
A meeting in late September settled many of these questions, deciding
that a single "biopool" sample would be prepared for the
biological tests rather than the two that had been used on Apollo 11 and
that the two sample return containers would be processed simultaneously:
one in the vacuum system in the physical chemistry laboratory and the
other under sterile nitrogen in the biological preparation laboratory.
Among other procedural changes adopted at this meeting was a provision
that the analysis planning team would begin work only after the
preliminary examination team had completed its tasks.67
The Interagency Committee on Back Contamination continued to press for
the installation of a bacterial filter on the command module postlanding
ventilation system. MSC was unyielding although engineers continued to
evaluate solutions to the problem.68
Agreement was reached to discontinue using the biological isolation
garments, provided no crew member was ill on return. Recovery teams
would provide clean flight suits and respiratory masks for the
astronauts to put on before they left the command module.69
For the crews, August, September, and October were packed with
simulations, briefings, and field trips. In mid-August they got their
first briefing on the Surveyor at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. A month
later they spent a day with the geologists in the lunar receiving
laboratory, examining the Apollo 11 rocks and discussing plans for
collecting samples.70
Geologists had high hopes for the Apollo 12 crew. They had been the
first to go through a revised geology training program that stressed
basic principles of site exploration rather than minutiae such as
identification of rocks. By the time they were ready for launch, Pete
Conrad and Alan Bean and their backups had well over 200 hours of field
work under their belts. Their last field trip, to the volcanic fields of
Hawaii, was extremely satisfying to their training officers. They
handled every problem put to them, their descriptions and photographs
were excellent, and their sampling of the terrain was first-rate.
Everyone looked forward to superior results from the first real lunar
scientific expedition.71
At Kennedy Space Center, preparations for the launch of Apollo 12 went
smoothly. The first complete lunar surface experiments package arrived
at KSC in late March. Spacecraft and Saturn V were mated on July 1, and
the vehicle was moved to launch complex 39A on September 8. A week
before launch the recovery quarantine equipment and mobile quarantine
facility were ready for shipment to the recovery ship, U.S.S.
Hornet. From then on, the only hitch in launch preparations
occurred two days before launch, when discovery of faulty insulation on
a liquid hydrogen tank in the service module required exchanging the
tank for one on the Apollo 13 spacecraft. As launch day dawned, the only
portent of possible delay was a cold front approaching the Cape from the
north.72
64. James R. Arnold to A. J. Calio,
"Apollo 12 Recommendations," Sept. 5, 1969; Arnold to Calio,
"Display of Sample Information in the LRL," Sept. 6, 1969.
65. Paul W. Gast to Calio, "Dry N2
Facility as a primary ALSRC Receiving and Handling System," Sept.
8, 1969; LSAPT to W. N. Hess, "Minutes of LSAPT dated March 13,
1969," Mar. 21, 1969; Gast to LRL Management and Mission Review
Board, no subject, Aug. 8, 1969.
66. E. C. T. Chao and R. L. Smith to
Hess, "Recommendations and Suggestions for Preliminary Examination
of Apollo 12 Returned Lunar Samples," Sept. 8, 1969.
67. R. S. Johnston to P. R. Bell and W.
W. Kemmerer, Jr., "Apollo 12 Sterile Nitrogen Processing,"
Sept. 22, 1969.
68. Johnston to NASA Hqs., attn.: Maj.
Gen. J. W. Humphreys, "Apollo 12 Back Contamination Program
Plan," Oct. 7, 1969; Johnston to Mgr., Command and Service Modules,
Apollo Spacecraft Program, "Requirement for Installation of a
Postlanding Vent Valve Back Contamination Filter on CM's 108 and
Subsequent," Sept. 18, 1969.
69. Johnston to the record, "Apollo
12 Back Contamination Program," Sept. 17, 1969.
70. Apollo 12 Crew Training Summaries,
Aug. 15, Sept. 15, Nov. 14, 1969, folder in box 081-14, JSC History
Office.
71. Harrison H. Schmitt interview, May
30, 1984.
72. Manned Space Flight Weekly Reports,
Apr. 1, July 1, Sept. 15, Nov. 10, 1969; Charles D. Benson and William
Barnaby Faherty,
Moonport: A History of Apollo Launch Facilities and
Operations, NASA SP- 4204 (Washington, 1978), pp. 480-81.
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