Life of an astronaut Jerry Carr

Transcriber: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

Normally astronaut training takes about one full year,

and it includes such subjects as

astronomy,

astrophysics,

flight physiology,

orbital trajectories,

or orbital management.

Another part of the astronaut basic training is survival training.

In the days of Gemini,

you never knew for sure where a spacecraft might land

if there was an emergency, deorbit.

So, we had to take desert training,

water training,

and jungle survival training.

So, we had to learn how to cook and eat snake

and all other, such other good things as that,

and how to make water in a desert.

After that year and a half of astronaut basic training,

our names were all put on a list

and that list was quite a bit longer at that time

then there were seats available.

And so, we were all given other duties

to keep us occupied

and to help continue our training.

Five of us were assigned to the lunar module,

and our job was to be with these lunar modules

as they were being built.

So, we spent a lot of time there.

I must admit that probably I had more time

sleeping on the floor of Lunar Module #6

than the crew who flew it on the moon.

Well, my next job was to be on the support crew of Apollo 8,

and Apollo 8 was the spacecraft that flew to the moon

and came back but did not land.

When they went behind the moon,

they were supposed to do a thrusting maneuver

to slow them down

so they would be captured into lunar orbit.

So we just had to sit and cool our heels

when they went behind the moon,

and we knew if they came out a little early on the other side,

that they had not burned enough,

not slowed down enough,

and were going to skip out into space,

they wouldn’t be captured in orbit.

If they came out a little bit late,

it meant they had over-done it,

and they weren’t going to be in orbit,

but were going to begin a spiral down to the lunar surface.

And, of course, without a lunar module,

that kind of ruins your whole day.

You can imagine how relieved we were

at the instant that they were supposed

to appear on the other side of the moon

that they appeared!

My next assignment was again a support crew assignment on Apollo 12,

and Apollo 12 was struck by lightning

on its way off the pad.

A nearby thunderstorm,

there was a lightning bolt that went over

and hit the very tip of the spacecraft.

The charge went down through the spacecraft,

through the booster,

down the exhaust gases,

and grounded out on the launching pad.

It killed the electrical power system

and the computers all died.

You can imagine what it must have been like

for them inside because suddenly the lights all went out

and then they came back on

when the batteries picked up the load.

And, every single warning light and caution light

in the spacecraft was on and flashing,

and all the necessary bells, whistles, and buzzards

and things that are in there,

all were going off at the same time.

The crew was totally confused

as to what was going on.

When we were settled in orbit,

we tested all the various systems

and everything looked good.

So, that, now I figured this is it,

and sure enough, I did get an assignment,

a flight assignment.

I was assigned to the back-up crew of Apollo 16,

which meant that I was to be on the param crew of Apollo 19.

And, several weeks into the training,

NASA made the surprise announcment

that they were going to cancel Apollos 18, 19, and 20.

We were in the middle of the Vietnam War,

the budget was in bad shape,

so you can imagine there were three

very, very sad hangdog guys moping around the office

because we lost our flight to the moon.

But, several weeks later, I got a call from Tom Stafford,

the Senior Astronaut at that time,

and he wanted me in his office,

and I went in,

and he told me that he was sorry

that I had missed my opportunity for the moon,

but he said, “I’ve got another assignment for you.”

He said, “I want you to be the commander

of the third and final Skylab mission.”

And, he said, “Do you think you could do the job?”

And I said, “Of course, yes!”

And, I’ll have to admit,

a certain lump in my chest and in my stomach,

because I was a rookie,

and they normally don’t assign a rookie to be a commander,

usually you have to have at least one flight under your belt,

but they assigned me to that,

which was really kind of a shock

because the last rookie commander was Neil Armstrong on Gemini 8.

抄写员:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

通常宇航员培训大约需要一整年

,包括

天文学、

天体物理学、

飞行生理学、

轨道轨迹

或轨道管理等科目。

宇航员基础训练的另一部分是生存训练。

在双子座时代,如果发生紧急情况,

你永远无法确定航天器会降落

在哪里,脱轨。

所以,我们不得不接受沙漠训练、

水上训练

和丛林生存训练。

所以,我们必须学习如何烹饪和吃蛇

之类的东西,诸如此类的好东西,

以及如何在沙漠中制造水。

在那一年半的宇航员基础训练之后,

我们的名字都被列在了一个名单上

,那个名单在那个时候要长一些,

然后才有空位。

因此,我们都被赋予了其他职责

,让我们保持忙碌

并帮助继续我们的训练。

我们五个人被分配到登月舱

,我们的工作是在建造这些登月舱时

与他们在一起。

所以,我们在那里度过了很多时间。

我必须承认,我在

6 号登月舱地板上睡觉的时间可能

比在月球上飞行的机组人员还要多。

嗯,我的下一份工作是在阿波罗 8 号的支持人员中工作,

而阿波罗 8 号是飞到月球

又回来但没有着陆的航天器。

当他们在月球后面时,

他们应该做一个推力机动

来减慢他们的速度,

这样他们就会被俘虏到月球轨道上。

所以我们只需要坐下来冷却我们的脚后跟,

当他们离开月球的时候

,我们知道他们是否早一点从另一边出来

,他们还没有燃烧到足够的

速度,没有足够的减速,

并且会跳出来 进入太空,

它们不会在轨道上被捕获。

如果他们出来晚了一点,

那就意味着他们做得过火了

,他们不会进入轨道,

而是会开始螺旋式下降到月球表面。

而且,当然,如果没有登月舱,

那会毁了你一整天。

你可以想象

当他们

应该出现在他们出现的月球的另一边的那一刻

,我们是多么的松了一口气!

我的下一个任务再次是阿波罗 12 号的支持人员任务

,阿波罗 12 号在离开停机坪的途中被闪电击中

附近

一阵雷雨,一道闪电掠过

,击中了飞船的最尖端。

电荷通过航天器,

通过助推器

,排出废气,

并在发射台上接地。

它杀死了电力系统

,计算机全部死机。

你可以想象

他们在里面会是什么样子,因为突然间所有的灯都熄灭了

,然后

当电池加载时它们又重新亮了起来。

而且,飞船上的每一个警告灯和警告灯都亮着

闪烁

,所有必要的铃铛、哨子、秃鹰

和里面的东西,

都同时熄灭了。

船员们完全不

知道发生了什么。

当我们在轨道上安顿下来时,

我们测试了所有不同的系统

,一切看起来都很好。

所以,那个,现在我想就是这样

,果然,我确实得到了一个任务,

一个飞行任务。

我被分配到阿波罗 16 号的后备船员,

这意味着我将成为阿波罗 19 号的辅助船员。

而且,在训练几周后,

美国宇航局出人意料地

宣布他们将取消阿波罗 18 号, 19 和 20。

我们正处于越南战争的中期

,预算状况不佳,

所以你可以想象有三个

非常非常悲伤的家伙在办公室里闷闷不乐,

因为我们失去了飞往月球的航班。

但是,几周后,我接到了当时高级宇航员汤姆斯塔福德的电话

,他想让我去他的办公室

,我进去了

,他告诉我,他很

抱歉我错过了参加太空任务的机会。 月亮,

但他说:“我还有一个任务要交给你。”

他说:“我希望你

成为第三个也是最后一个 Skylab 任务的指挥官。”

而且,他说,“你认为你能胜任这份工作吗?”

我说,“当然,是的!”

而且,我不得不承认,

我的胸口和胃里有一个肿块,

因为我是一个菜鸟,

而且他们通常不会指派菜鸟当指挥官,

通常你必须至少有一次飞行 你的腰带,

但他们把我分配给了那个,

这真的有点令人震惊,

因为最后一位新秀指挥官是双子座 8 上的尼尔·阿姆斯特朗。