00:00On this day in space.
00:03On May 13, 1964, NASA launched the second abort test of the Apollo spacecraft.
00:09This uncrewed mission would demonstrate that the launch escape system could safely eject
00:12the Apollo command module in case of an emergency.
00:15For the first test, the command module ejected just above the launch pad 15 seconds after
00:19liftoff.
00:20But the second time, it stayed on top of the rocket for 44 seconds.
00:23It reached an altitude of almost 30,000 feet, which was six times higher than it went during
00:28the first test.
00:30By doing the test later in the flight, NASA was checking to see if the escape system worked
00:33well under high dynamic pressure.
00:36In other words, the rocket was under more mechanical stress because of the aerodynamics of its flight.
00:41It lifted off on a Little Joe II rocket from the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico,
00:45and the abort test went mostly according to plan.
00:48The command module did bump into the booster after they separated, and that damaged one
00:52of its parachutes.
00:53Thankfully, it had two more parachutes, but the landing was still pretty rough.
00:57And that's what happened on this day in space.
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