A discussion came up elsewhere about the Apollo 10 practice landing; what would have happened if for some reason they were forced to actually land on the surface; could they rendezvous with the CSM again?
The good news is, you're the first humans in all of history to land on another celestial body!
The bad news is ...
LM of Apollo 10 made engine burn to lower their orbit but they were still in stable orbit. Should they have had problems they had time to solve them because they weren't in danger of crashing into anything. If their problem had been unsolvable the CSM would have been able to rescue the astronauts from the LM.
Just for me to confirm my understanding - so they were in a reasonably stable orbit (roughly circular?), attached to the CSM. Then they fire up the engine to make their orbit elliptical (or more elliptical), with the low point being much much closer to the surface. So for Apollo 10, I guess they just do nothing, riding down and then back up again, perhaps enjoying the view if they're not too busy. But in an actual landing scenario, they wait until they're at the low point of the orbit, then fire up the engines again to put themselves down on the surface.
So the main failure scenario for Apollo 10 would then be, something goes wrong with the engine, and they're unable to return to the orbit of the CSM, in which case the CSM would have to match their orbit to pick them up.
Is that at least approximately correct?