In 1966 the author, newly graduated from college, went to work for the MIT laboratory where the Apollo guidance system was designed. His assignment was to program the complex lunar landing phase in the Lunar Module's onbo...

Buy Now From Amazon

In 1966 the author, newly graduated from college, went to work for the MIT laboratory where the Apollo guidance system was designed. His assignment was to program the complex lunar landing phase in the Lunar Module's onboard computer. As Apollo 11 approaches, the author flies lunar landings in simulators and meets the astronauts who will fly the LM for real. He explains the computer alarms that almost prevented Neil Armstrong from landing and describes a narrow escape from another dangerous problem. On Apollo 14 he devises a workaround when a faulty pushbutton threatens Alan Shepard's mission, earning a NASA award, a story in Rolling Stone, and a few lines in the history books.  This memoir is a new kind of book about Apollo. It tells a story never told before by an insider the development of the onboard software for the Apollo spacecraft. It makes a vertical connection between technical details and historic events, but by broadening the story using his own experiences as he grows into adulthood in the 1960s the author draws a parallel between that era of successful space exploration, and the exploration, inner and outer, that was taking place in the culture.



Similar Products

Landing Eagle: Inside the Cockpit During the First Moon LandingThe Apollo Guidance Computer: Architecture and Operation (Springer Praxis Books)Digital Apollo: Human and Machine in Spaceflight (The MIT Press)How Apollo Flew to the Moon (Springer Praxis Books)Journey to the Moon (Library of Flight)The Astronaut Maker: How One Mysterious Engineer Ran Human Spaceflight for a GenerationPicturing Apollo 11: Rare Views and Undiscovered Moments