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Revision as of 16:51, 28 December 2009

Explorers on the Moon
(On a marché sur la Lune)
File:Tintin cover - Explorers on the Moon.jpg
Cover of the English edition
Date1954
SeriesThe Adventures of Tintin (Les aventures de Tintin)
PublisherCasterman
Creative team
WritersHergé
ArtistsHergé
Original publication
Published inTintin
Date of publication29 October 1952 – 29 December 1953
LanguageFrench
ISBN2-203-00116-X
Translation
PublisherMethuen
Date1 September 1959
ISBN0-416-92560-X
TranslatorLeslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner
Chronology
Preceded byDestination Moon, (1953)
Followed byThe Calculus Affair, (1956)

Explorers on the Moon, published in 1954, is the seventeenth of The Adventures of Tintin, a series of classic comic-strip albums, written and illustrated by Belgian writer and illustrator Hergé, featuring young reporter Tintin as a hero. Its original French title is On a marché sur la Lune ("We walked on the Moon"). It is the second of a two-part adventure begun in Destination Moon.

Plot

The story continues from Destination Moon. Professor Calculus is taking Tintin, Tintin's dog Snowy, Captain Haddock and Calculus' assistant Frank Wolff to the Moon in his rocket. However, the detectives Thomson and Thompson come up from the hold, having mistaken the time of the launch (1:34 a.m. on Tuesday, 3 June 1952). Calculus is concerned at the effect this will have on their air supplies; Haddock is furious, and lambasts the detectives for being too imbecilic to understand the difference between 1:34 a.m. and 1:34 p.m.

The journey to the Moon is not uneventful — Haddock has smuggled some whisky aboard in hollowed-out books, becomes drunk, and engages in an unscheduled spacewalk that results in him briefly becoming a satellite of the asteroid Adonis. Tintin also dons a space suit to fetch him, and, in a very rare display of temper, lashes out at the Captain, declaring that the latter's recklessness has "nearly cost us our lives." When the rocket engine must temporarily be shut down in order to execute the turnaround maneuver that will enable it to land on the moon right side up, the momentary lack of artificial gravity also poses problems for Haddock, who has neglected to put on his magnetic-soled boots in time.

Additionally, Thomson and Thompson suffer a relapse of the condition caused by their ingestion of the energy-multiplying substance Formula Fourteen (see Land of Black Gold). As a result, they sprout thick hair that grows at lightning speed and frequently changes color. The Captain, having no other immediate duty, volunteers to cut their hair, but can scarcely keep up with it, and begins to suffer blisters from the scissors. He remarks sarcastically that in the future, when people ask him what he did on the rocket, he will reply, "Me? I was the hairdresser!" Gradually, however, the detectives' condition abates, and their appearances begin to return to normal.

The spacecraft lands safely in the Hipparchus Crater, and by agreement among the crew, Tintin is the first to set foot on the Moon — the first human to do so. Everyone then gets a chance to walk about; even the Captain enjoys it, but upon seeing the Earth, expresses fear about whether they will survive to see it again.

The crew soon starts unpacking the scientific payload — telescopes, cameras, and a battery-powered tank — finishing the work at 23:45 Earth time on 3 June. Calculus decides to reduce the total stay on the lunar surface from fourteen Earth days to six in order to conserve oxygen. Three days later, the Captain, Wolff and Tintin take the battery-powered tank to explore some stalactite caves in the direction of the Ptolemaeus Crater; Snowy slips on an ice sheet, damaging his two-way radio and there is a minor drama in rescuing him, but they return to the rocket safely.

Tintin decides to rest up and have lunch with Wolff while the Captain, Calculus, Thomson and Thompson immediately go out in the tank again on a 48-hour trip to explore the lunar caves in detail, as Calculus suspects they might find uranium or radium deposits there.

A sudden turn of events occurs when the spy plot broached in Destination Moon is revealed. A secret agent from a foreign power, the brutish Colonel Jorgen, whom Tintin had previously encountered and bested in King Ottokar's Sceptre, has been hiding in the rocket since it was launched eight days previously (having been smuggled aboard along with technical equipment).

When Tintin goes below to fetch some supplies for lunch, Jorgen knocks him out and binds him, then tries to seize control of the rocket, which he plans to fly back to his own country, leaving the others marooned on the Moon. Outside, from the moon tank, the Captain, Calculus, Thomson and Thompson watch, horrified, as the rocket blasts off, shuts down, and, for one horrible moment, appears to be on the verge of collapsing before coming to rest right-side up. Tintin has freed himself (Jorgen did not have experience in binding a person correctly) and succeeded in foiling the plot, but in order to do so has been forced to sabotage the rocket to prevent Jorgen's attempted liftoff. Tintin holds Wolff and Jorgen at gunpoint while the Captain ties them up in the correct manner. Wolff reveals to the stunned group his history of gambling debts, which Jorgen's employers have used to blackmail him into aiding them involuntarily. After the group interrogates Jorgen and Wolff, Tintin eventually locks them in the hold, against protests by the Captain that they won't have enough oxygen to last the journey home, unless they abandon them on the Moon. Calculus determines that the crew needs at least four days to repair the damaged rocket, while the remaining oxygen supply will last at most four days.

Due to the strain on the oxygen supplies, the crew decides to abandon some of the equipment, rather than disassembling it and packing it up, and to cut short the lunar stay. The repair work is completed slightly ahead of schedule after three days, and the rocket cleared for lift-off 4:52 p.m. Earth time, as the sun sets over the Hipparchus Crater. Even so, shortly before lift-off, the Captain becomes the first among them to experience a bout of dizziness due to build-up of carbon dioxide. The lift-off is successful, but the rocket is off course, and by the time the crew awake from the liftoff-induced blackout and correct it, they have lost additional time and consumed yet more oxygen.

Halfway back to Earth, Jorgen escapes after overpowering the detectives, who had gotten the idea into their heads that handcuffs would be more secure than the Captain's knots. When Wolff sees that Jorgen intends to shoot Tintin and the others, he tries to dissuade him; the gun goes off accidentally, and Jorgen is killed instantly. The crew have no choice but to consign the body to space. However, even without Jorgen, now there isn't enough oxygen to make it home. Overcome with guilt, Wolff opens the airlock and lets himself out into space to save the others' lives whilst they are sleeping, leaving a moving farewell note.

The rest of the group continues towards Earth as their oxygen runs low. Everyone falls unconscious. Tintin faints but mission control sounds a piercing signal by radio, which awakens him, allowing him to set the rocket up to land. After the ship lands, firemen break the door open, finding everyone unconscious. On the tarmac, everyone is revived, except for the Captain. A doctor is giving a prostrate Haddock oxygen, but fears that his heart is worn out because "It seems he was a great whisky drinker." Suddenly roused by the sound of the word "whisky", Captain Haddock wakes up with a start.

Everyone rejoices and a ground crew member returns with a bottle of whisky. Calculus, usually a strict teetotaller, joins Haddock in a drink in order to toast their journey. He even adds "we will return" to the moon. Calculus was quite likely referring to mankind in general, but Haddock takes that statement literally and furiously declares that he will never be seen inside a rocket again. He then promptly walks away, only to trip and a fall over a stretcher in the midst of declaring that "Man's proper place ... is on dear old Earth!"

Scientific accuracy/inaccuracy

Destination Moon and Explorers on the Moon were written well over a decade before the 1969 Apollo 11 Moon landing and several years before manned space flight. Hergé was keen to ensure that the books were scientifically accurate, based on ideas about space flight then available.

Rocket

The rockets bear a striking physical resemblance to V-2 rockets, the only rockets to have struck popular imagination by the early 1950s. The similarity even goes as far as including the checkerboard pattern on the hull, which the V-2 designers used to measure the roll rate of a rocket during test flights.[1]

No separate lunar lander is shown: The whole ship turns about on its axis, lands tail-down, and returns intact. This is in stark contrast to the real-life Saturn V moon rockets, which, like virtually all modern rockets, were disposable, multistage rockets, and as such would separate into progressively smaller segments during ascent in order to save weight. The approach taken by Tintin's rocket is what NASA called a "direct ascent". Such a mission profile was studied, and discarded by NASA engineers. In Tintin's case, it is made possible by the rocket's extremely efficient propulsion which, more than half a century later, remains much more capable than any real-life rocket propulsion system.

Rocket engine

Hergé's rocket has two propulsion systems — a conventional liquid-fueled chemical rocket engine for launching (and also for deceleration upon landing), and an engine for the spacebound part (>800 km altitude) of the journey, described as being nuclear-powered. The depicted rationale for this solution is to avoid contaminating takeoff and landing sites with radioactive exhaust products. Today, nuclear power is not widespread in space propulsion because of another safety risk, namely that of the reactor core or other radioactive materials falling back to Earth upon accidental or programmed destruction of the spacecraft. Hergé's rocket most closely resembles a nuclear thermal rocket, such as the design tested in the United States NERVA project. One of the reasons for the cancellation of the NERVA project was the risk of radioactive particles being released in the rocket exhaust, so Hergé's chemical/nuclear combination makes sense.

Currently, nuclear power is only being used for space probe propulsion. These, however, are nuclear electric rockets (nuclear-powered ion drives), which do not generate enough thrust to lift a heavy spacecraft off a planet. They give the probe a very small acceleration over a very long period of time, ideal for long-distance travel by an unmanned craft. This is, however, a completely different system to the one proposed by Hergé.

The book shows gravity being generated through the constant acceleration of the moon rocket. This is impossible with the chemical rockets in use today, which can only maintain their thrust for a few minutes before running out of fuel, but it could conceivably be achieved using high-powered nuclear pulse propulsion.

Space travel

When the rocket is turned around halfway through the journey (to decelerate), the crew experiences weightlessness for a short time, and the effects of this weightlessness are correctly portrayed, including floating liquid held into a spherical shape by surface tension.

There is a glaring flaw in the configuration of the rocket's acceleration couches, in which the explorers lie face-down. In reality, all launches have passengers lie on their backs, and the only worse position for a human being to endure acceleration than face-down would be heads-down. Hergé took the cue from the diagram of the Wernher von Braun moonship, without realizing that the crew members who need to monitor the controls are prone, but everybody else in their acceleration stations are properly on their backs.[2] The liftoff acceleration also seems to be significantly higher than that of existing real-life manned spacecraft: the crew passes out due to the tremendous G forces.

The reader is given the impression that the journey to and from the moon is undertaken in just a few hours, whereas the Apollo moon journey took about 3 days to reach the moon from Earth. However, if the rocket accelerated constantly at one gravity for the first half of the trip and decelerated at the same rate for the second half, as the author implies, the flight from Earth to the Moon could have taken as little as three and a half hours.

Lunar exploration

The spacesuits are rigid and have fishbowl-like helmets made of glass-like "multiplex," with bulky integrated backpacks that permit radio communications with the ship and other astronauts. The main differences from the suits worn by the Apollo astronauts are that they are apparently rigid, rather than soft, are orange rather than white, and the helmets lack sun-shielding visors.

Hergé accurately represented the methods of movement on the Moon: Due to the reduced gravity, Tintin and friends hop in huge jumps.[3]

In order to explore the surface of the Moon away from their landing site, Tintin and his crew bring a rover vehicle. This is similar to the last three Apollo missions, which also brought along a Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV). However, whereas the Apollo vehicle was extremely light, open, and seated two, Tintin's rover is actually more akin to a tank, is pressurized, which means the occupants can remove their spacesuits once inside, and seats four.

Tintin admits to have had no training in driving such a vehicle, a rather odd neglect, and it is only when they first try it out on the moon that they decide that crash helmets should be worn while travelling in it.

Water

In one section of the story, Tintin and Snowy accidentally discover frozen water beneath the surface of the moon. When the moon landings were completed, many experts felt the moon itself was bone dry, so this would have been an inaccuracy. In 2009, however, evidence has shown a strong probability that water ice does exist in certain lunar regions.

Astronomy

Notable failings in Hergé's story include the representation of the Earth as seen from space (there are no clouds), and the lunar landscape, which is represented as craggy, unlike the smooth, undulating hills of reality.[4]

The asteroid Adonis is a real object, but despite being classed as a near-Earth asteroid, it never comes between the Earth and the Moon. However, its exact orbit was not known in the early 1950s.

Hergé was delighted to have predicted the lunar mission fairly accurately, given the limited knowledge at the time, and later he produced a cartoon of Tintin greeting Neil Armstrong on the Moon[5].

Merchandise

File:Eexplorersreal.jpg
The View-Master discs

Various merchandise has been released about this book. In the United States, a pop-up-version was made. A View-Master set was also released. The Moon rocket has been used on various merchandise.

References