The Apollo 16 capsule is dusty all these decades after it carried three
astronauts to the moon. Cobwebs cling to the spacecraft. Business cards, a
pencil, money, a spoon and even a tube of lip balm litter the floor of the
giant case that protects the space antique in a museum.
The COVID-19 pandemic meant a break in the normal routine of cleaning the
ship’s display at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center, located near NASA’s
Marshall Space Flight Center. But workers are sprucing up the spacecraft for
the 50th anniversary of its April 1972 flight.
Delicately using microfiber towels, extension poles, brushes, dust-catching
wands and vacuums, a crew recently cleaned the 6.5-ton, nearly 11-foot-tall
capsule and wiped down its glass enclosure, located beneath a massive Saturn
V rocket suspended from the ceiling. They removed dozens of items that
people had stuck through cracks in the case.
Aside from overseeing the cleaning, consulting curator Ed Stewart taught
museum staff how to maintain the capsule, which is on loan from the
Smithsonian Institution and has been displayed in the “rocket city” of
Huntsville since the 1970s.
Brushing dust off the side of the capsule while dressed in protective
clothing, Stewart said the command module was in “pretty good shape”
considering its age and how long it had been since the last cleaning about
three years ago.
“I’m pleased to see that there’s not … heavy layers of dust. I’ve not seen a
lot of insect debris or anything like that, so I take that as a very
positive sign,” he said.
Richard Hoover, a retired NASA astrobiologist who serves as a docent at the
museum, remembered a time decades ago when visitors could touch the
spacecraft. Some even picked off pieces of the charred heat shield that
protected the ship from burning up while reentering Earth’s atmosphere, he
said.
“This is really quite a travesty because they don’t realize that this is a
tremendously important piece of space history,” he said.
Conservation procedures changed as preservationists realized that a ship
built to withstand the rigors of space travel didn’t hold up well under the
constant touch of tourists, Stewart said. That’s why the case surrounding
the capsule is sealed.
“Making it last for 1,000 years was not on the engineer’s list of
requirements for developing these to get the astronauts to the moon and back
safely,” he said.
Perched atop columns, the capsule — nicknamed “Casper” during the flight —
is tilted so visitors can look inside the open hatch and see controls and
the metal-framed seats where astronauts Ken Mattingly, John Young and
Charlie Duke rode to the moon and back.
Duke, who walked on the moon with Young while Mattingly piloted the capsule,
is expected to attend a celebration this spring marking the 50th anniversary
of the flight’s liftoff on April 16, 1972.
The capsule was cleaned and any potentially hazardous materials were removed
after the flight, but reminders of its trip to the moon remain inside.
Leaning through the hatch to check for dust, Stewart pointed to a few dark
spots over his head.
“That’s the crew’s fingerprints and handprints on there,” he said.
Workers plan to further seal the capsule’s case so visitors won’t be able to
deposit anything inside, but they were careful not to do too much to Apollo
16 itself. While it would be easy enough to scrub down the spaceship with
elbow grease, doing so would destroy the patina that links it to history,
Stewart said.
“You don’t want to lose any of that, because that is all part of the saga of
the mission. If you clean it, it’s gone. It’s that extra texture of history
that just sort of is lost to the ether if you make a mistake,” he said.