Brooker2023a

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Brooker2023a
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Brooker2023a
Author(s) Phillip Brooker, Wes Sharrock
Title Bricolage in Astronautics: Talk-in-Interaction in the Construction of Apollo 13's DIY CO2 Scrubber
Editor(s) Michael Lynch, Oskar Lindwall
Tag(s) EMCA, Astronautics
Publisher Routledge
Year 2023
Language English
City London
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 225–241
URL Link
DOI 10.4324/9781003279235-16
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Instructed and Instructive Actions: The Situated Production, Reproduction, and Subversion of Social Order
Chapter

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Abstract

The Apollo 13 mission, and its attendant perils, is perhaps the most famous example of ingenuity and problem solving in the history of NASA's mission control. One peril dealt with during that mission was the rapidly increasing volume of CO2 filling the astronauts’ lunar module (LEM). To support the astronauts, mission control rapidly designed an alternative means of affixing the lithium hydroxide canisters (which absorb CO2 from the ship's atmosphere). Instructions then had to be read up from the ground by the Capsule Communicator (CapCom) for building this bricolage system, using only talk in the absence of other communication formats. This chapter analyses transcripts covering this moment of improvised instructed action, far outside of NASA's typically tightly scripted procedural methods, to elicit an understanding of just how descriptions can be made to work under extreme circumstances and pointing toward the potential for ethnomethodological analysis to generate valuable insight for space agencies on the work of doing astronautics.

Notes