Friday, May 16, 2025

RIP Ed Smylie

Ed Smylie (1929-2025) was just one engineer among the hundreds whose genius made the Apollo missions possible. He got his 15 minutes of fame when an oxygen explosion crippled the Command Module of Apollo XIII, forcing the whole crew to move to the Lunar Module. As the engineer in charge of the life support systems, Smylie immediately realized that the CO2 scrubbers in the LM would not be able to handle the load of three men, so he assembled a team to rig up a solution. The episode is wonderfully depicted in Ron Howard's film, and it is to Smylie that someone says, "You, sir, are a steely-eyed missile man." But as Nixon said when he singled out Smylie in giving the Medal of Freedom to the whole Apollo XIII team, "They are men whose names simply represent the whole team."

I love what the Apollo team did, what America did, possibly the biggest ever cooperative human endeavor that was not a war. It was incredible, amazing; using technology 50 years behind the most basic smartphone, humans walked on another world. The wonder of it still wows me and fills me with hope. And with a rage bordering on despair with the people who deny that it happened, who deny that we, humans, just clever apes cursed with violence, built spaceships and sailed to the moon, the people whose minds are too small to encompass the wonder of what we have done and still can do if we put aside our doubts and out differences and dream together about what the future might be.

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