Jim Lovell, Apollo 13 commander, has died

125 LorenDB 19 8/8/2025, 7:12:18 PM nasa.gov ↗

Comments (19)

FabHK · 22m ago
Trivia: Jim Lovell is the only person to fly to the moon twice without landing on it (scheduled "test flight" on Apollo 8, unscheduled emergency on Apollo 13).

12 people flew to the moon without landing on it, now only 1 is still alive (Fred Haise).

12 people walked on the moon, 4 are still alive (Buzz Aldrin, David Scott, Charles Duke, Harrison Schmitt).

(Conclusion: walking on the moon is healthy?)

hinkley · 3m ago
Long flights without getting up to stand are dangerous after all.
LorenDB · 12m ago
> (Conclusion: walking on the moon is healthy?)

NASA vetted the Apollo astronauts for those who did not have medical problems, so it would be more accurate to say they walked on the moon because they were healthy.

dyauspitr · 13m ago
Conclusion: the people selected to walk on the moon were fit and healthy
WJW · 3m ago
I don't doubt that the people selected to walk on the moon were indeed fit and healthy, but it seems like a stretch to think that the people who flew on the earlier Apollo missions were selected to less stringent criteria. The selection effect should be just as strong for the people who "merely" got to fly around the moon. So out of two sets of people selected for being healthy, one group seems to be much more alive than the other.

(Also yes obviously the sample size is too low to draw meaningful conclusions)

davidw · 1m ago
I know some of the space race stuff was driven by cold war politics, but I think it was still pretty cool. Big, difficult goals can be inspiring.
actinium226 · 58m ago
He came to speak at a small awards ceremony at my university. He came into the room and said "sorry, I know you were all expecting Tom Hanks!"

Really seemed like a great guy, shame to hear about his passing.

bunderbunder · 17m ago
He spoke at my school, too, and I got a chance to shake his hand. It was only a brief personal encounter, but I also came away with the impression that he must be one of the kindest people walking around on this rock.
sylens · 31m ago
For an astronaut, it has to be a triumph to die of old age or natural causes. Doubly so for the crew of Apollo 13.
lenerdenator · 24m ago
There should be a national day of mourning.

There won't be, but there should be.

rbanffy · 1h ago
Houston, I have a problem with my eyes.
mhh__ · 50m ago
"We" [0] need to get back up there before they're all gone.

[0] I say "We" but I'm not American...

bwb · 44m ago
Human works too, or earthling :)
ColinWright · 33m ago
I was lucky enough to have met and spent some time with Jim Lovell. An absolute gentleman, and it was a joy to have been in his company.

Ad Astra ...

richardwhiuk · 29m ago
Per aspera
Rooster61 · 1h ago
An utter shame that he never got a chance to actually touch down on the moon. IMO, he, and everyone involved with Apollo 13 after it left the ground, truly represent the peak of NASA personnel. Listening to the calm, cool manner in which Jim and everyone else conducted themselves with while their spacecraft was literally falling apart around them give me chills.

Godspeed sir

pjmorris · 12m ago
> IMO, he, and everyone involved with Apollo 13 after it left the ground, truly represent the peak of NASA personnel.

Agreed. One of the best books I've read on Apollo was 'Apollo: Race to the Moon', by Murray and Cox. It spends a lot of time on the engineering and management challenges behind what they accomplished then. One of the book's best chapters was on the enormous team(s) on the ground behind the troubleshooting and problem-solving for Apollo 13.

TMWNN · 25m ago
Lovell, as Pilot, flew with Frank Borman as Command Pilot on Gemini 7. They spent two very unpleasant weeks in space.[1]

Borman commanded Apollo 8, the first manned flight to the moon, again with Lovell. However, Lovell had by then commanded Gemini 12. So the odd situation resulted in which the person with more spaceflight experience was not commander.[2]

Lovell has another distinction besides the whole "survived almost certain death in space on Apollo 13" thing: He is the only one of the three Apollo 8 crewmen to have not become a Fortune 500 CEO. (Frank Borman ran Eastern Airlines, and Bill Anders ran General Dynamics.)

[1] TIL that NASA's Gemini 7 space mission lasted for 14 days. After rendezvousing with Gemini 6 on the 11th day, the two astronauts had nothing to do other than read books in the very cramped cockpit. Frank Borman, the commander, said that the last three days were "bad".<https://www.reddit.com/r/todayilearned/comments/1ccpszs/til_...>

[2] This has happened a few more times, including the current Crew-11 to ISS, in which a rookie is commander while the other three have all flown in space before

unethical_ban · 20m ago
Probably one of the more famous astronauts in pop culture given the movie Apollo 13. As someone who grew up near NASA that is one of my favorite films.

I recommend "A Man on the Moon" for anyone interested in that era.

Rest in Peace! Time to read up on him again.