Press Release

Analytical Graphics, Inc. Rewrites History With New Apollo 13 `What If’ Scenario Analysis Results

By SpaceRef Editor
April 12, 2000
Filed under

Thirty years ago this week,
Apollo 13 ground and flight crews overcame substantial obstacles following an
on-board explosion to return three stranded astronauts safely back to Earth.
Today, Analytical Graphics, Inc. (AGI) has announced interesting results that
change what history books have written as the predicted outcome of this
adversity had NASA not been able to successfully rescue Apollo 13.

In most historical accounts of this event, records indicate that if
Apollo 13 was unable to perform any maneuvers following the explosion, the
crippled spacecraft would have never returned to Earth, missing it by over
40,000 miles and becoming a piece of eternal space debris.
AGI begs to
differ.

In preparation for the 30th Anniversary of this historic event, AGI and
business partner Space Exploration Engineering (SEE) recreated actual
Apollo 13 mission trajectories, including the maneuvers executed to return the
crew to Earth, using AGI’s Satellite Tool Kit® (STK) with
STK/Astrogator(TM).
The team also analyzed the “what if” scenario to
determine the mission’s outcome if the spacecraft’s orbit could not have been
altered following the explosion.
STK analysis revealed that the often-
published 40,000-mile figure is extremely inaccurate.
Results reveal that the
Apollo 13 spacecraft would have come within a mere 2,300 miles of the Earth
and swung back out into a new fatal orbit, only to re-enter the Earth’s
atmosphere on May 20, 1970 and burn up in a steep re-entry over the eastern
Atlantic Ocean.

Mission Commander Jim Lovell reportedly stated at the time he would have
rather burned up in the Earth’s atmosphere than become a permanent orbiting
monument to America’s space program.
As a result of AGI’s and SEE’s efforts,
analysis shows that had the crew not returned safely to our home planet,
Lovell would have had his final wish granted.
For more information on the
revolutionary STK analysis of the Apollo 13 mission, including orbital
diagrams and 3D animations of key mission sequences, please visit www.stk.com.

Space Exploration Engineering is an AGI Business Partner that offers
customers custom space systems solutions, specializing in interplanetary and
earth-orbiting mission analysis, spacecraft operations, spacecraft systems
engineering, and aerospace video services.
For more information on Space
Exploration Engineering, visit www.see.com.

Analytical Graphics, Inc. provides commercial off-the-shelf (COTS)
analysis and visualization software solutions to over 23,000 aerospace
industry professionals through its core product Satellite Tool Kit® (STK)
and a series of specialized STK add-on modules.
STK supports end-to-end
aerospace systems from mission planning through operations and is available
free of charge to all aerospace professionals.

Basic applications include calculating and visualizing a vehicle’s
position and attitude, determining acquisition times, and analyzing the
vehicle’s field of view.
The core functions of STK can be extended with a
wide range of add-on modules from AGI that address specialized analysis needs,
such as detailed communication link analysis, collision analysis, coverage
analysis, maneuver planning, orbit determination, and real-time visualization.

For additional information on Analytical Graphics, Inc., the STK software
suite, or how to obtain a free copy of STK on CD-ROM, call 800-220-4785 or
610-578-1000, visit www.stk.com, or e-mail info@stk.com.

SpaceRef staff editor.