Difference between revisions of "Apollo"

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The '''Apollo''' project was the U. S. project to land a man on the moon.  Apollo is also the collective name of the spacecraft, comprising the Apollo  [[Lunar Module]] (LM, or LEM), the Apollo [[Command Module]] (CM), and the [[Service Module]] (SM).  The Apollo spacecraft were launched with the [[Saturn-1b]] booster (for missions to Earth orbit) and with the [[Saturn-V]] booster (for missions to orbit or land on the moon).
 
The '''Apollo''' project was the U. S. project to land a man on the moon.  Apollo is also the collective name of the spacecraft, comprising the Apollo  [[Lunar Module]] (LM, or LEM), the Apollo [[Command Module]] (CM), and the [[Service Module]] (SM).  The Apollo spacecraft were launched with the [[Saturn-1b]] booster (for missions to Earth orbit) and with the [[Saturn-V]] booster (for missions to orbit or land on the moon).
  
The Apollo project comprised 14 launches, plus an additional three launches of Apollo spacecraft in the Skylab project:
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The Apollo project comprised 14 launches, plus an additional three launches of Apollo spacecraft in the [[Skylab]] project:
 
*[[Apollo-1]], a mission to test the Command Module in Earth orbit, had a fire in the spacecraft on the launch pad, resulting in the deaths of three astronauts.  It did not launch.
 
*[[Apollo-1]], a mission to test the Command Module in Earth orbit, had a fire in the spacecraft on the launch pad, resulting in the deaths of three astronauts.  It did not launch.
 
* The numbers Apollo 2 and 3 were not used.  The spacecraft which would have flown these missions were used as test items in the redesign of the Apollo spacecraft following the Apollo-1 fire.   
 
* The numbers Apollo 2 and 3 were not used.  The spacecraft which would have flown these missions were used as test items in the redesign of the Apollo spacecraft following the Apollo-1 fire.   

Revision as of 10:07, 28 January 2007

The Apollo project was the U. S. project to land a man on the moon. Apollo is also the collective name of the spacecraft, comprising the Apollo Lunar Module (LM, or LEM), the Apollo Command Module (CM), and the Service Module (SM). The Apollo spacecraft were launched with the Saturn-1b booster (for missions to Earth orbit) and with the Saturn-V booster (for missions to orbit or land on the moon).

The Apollo project comprised 14 launches, plus an additional three launches of Apollo spacecraft in the Skylab project:

  • Apollo-1, a mission to test the Command Module in Earth orbit, had a fire in the spacecraft on the launch pad, resulting in the deaths of three astronauts. It did not launch.
  • The numbers Apollo 2 and 3 were not used. The spacecraft which would have flown these missions were used as test items in the redesign of the Apollo spacecraft following the Apollo-1 fire.
  • Apollo-4 was the first flight of the Saturn V.
  • Apollo-5 was the first flight of the Apollo Lunar Module.
  • Apollo-6 was the final unmanned test launch of the Saturn V.
  • Apollo-7 was the first launch of the Apollo spacecraft, testing the Command and Service Module spacecraft in Earth orbit.
  • The Apollo 8 mission was the first mission in which humans orbited the moon, and the test launch of the Saturn-V booster with the full-up, manned Apollo capsule.
  • Apollo-9 tested the Lunar Module spacecraft in Earth orbit.
  • The Apollo-10 mission tested the Lunar Module (as well as the Command and Service Modules) in orbit around the moon without landing:
  • Six Apollo missions successfully landed humans on the moon, Apollo-11, Apollo-12, Apollo-14, Apollo-15, Apollo-16, and Apollo-17.
  • The Apollo-13 mission failed to land, but succeeded in returning the astronauts safely after a fly-by of the moon.
  • Finally, the Apollo spacecraft was used in three missions to the Skylab space station in Earth orbit and the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP)

The Apollo missions are to date the main source of lunar samples.

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