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Apollo project

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Apollo project

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A photograph of the Suez Canal taken by astronauts aboard the Apollo 7 spacecraft, showing the canal stretching from the Gulf of Suez (the dark area at the bottom of the picture) to the Mediterranean. The broad expanse to the right of the canal is the Sinai Desert, and to the left is Egypt.
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An Apollo 12 astronaut walking on the Moon in November 1969. The Apollo project sent 17 spacecraft to the Moon between 1969 and 1972. Six of these missions involved landing astronauts on the Moon and featured space walks during which they collected rocks and soil, took photographs, and set up scientific equipment.
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US astronauts landed on the Moon in July and November 1969. They collected samples of Moon rock for analysis and set up experiments to send data back to Earth. During moon walks the astronauts wore protective suits incorporating an oxygen supply, and weighted boots to compensate for the low gravity on the Moon.
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The Apollo project crest; a bald eagle, the symbol of the USA. The lunar module used for the Moon landing in July 1969 was called Eagle.
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Apollo project astronauts being picked up following splashdown of the command module. On return to Earth the spacecraft re-entered the atmosphere and part of the command module parachuted down into the sea, where the astronauts were picked up by a waiting ship.
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A US astronaut on one of the Apollo missions to the Moon, with the lunar landing module (centre) and the ‘lunar rover’ (right). The landing module was flown down to the lunar surface from the command module which remained in orbit around the Moon. The ‘lunar rover’, a battery powered car, was used for transport during the last three moon landings.
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The Apollo 11 command and service module, about to fly US astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins to the Moon, is moved from its work stand and mated with the Saturn launch vehicle adaptor.
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The Earth photographed by the crew of Apollo 17 on their way to the Moon. It was the first Apollo lunar trajectory that allowed photography of the south pole. Much of Africa and the Mediterranean are cloud-free, whereas large swathes of cloud dominate the southern Atlantic and Indian oceans.
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A full Moon photographed from the Apollo 11 spacecraft as it made the three-day, 386,000-km/240,000-mi journey back to Earth. This photograph was taken about 18,520 km/10,000 mi from the Moon.
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In a life raft following splashdown, Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin wear biological isolation garments put on within their spacecraft. They are undergoing disinfection by US Navy personnel.
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The crew of Apollo 8 at the Kennedy Space Center simulator. From left to right are: James Lovell, William Anders, and Frank Borman.
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Lift-off of the Saturn V rocket carrying US astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins aboard the Apollo 11 on their way to the Moon, on 16 July 1969.

US space project to land a person on the Moon, achieved on 20 July 1969, when Neil Armstrong was the first to set foot there. He was accompanied on the Moon's surface by Buzz Aldrin; Michael Collins remained in the orbiting command module.

The programme was announced in 1961 by US president John F Kennedy. The world's most powerful rocket, Saturn V (see Saturn rocket), was built to launch the Apollo spacecraft, which carried three astronauts. When the spacecraft was in orbit around the Moon, two astronauts would descend to the surface in the lunar module to take samples of rock and soil and set up experiments that would send data back to Earth. After four preparatory flights, Apollo 11 made the first lunar landing. Five more crewed landings followed, the last in 1972. The total cost of the programme was over US$24 billion.

The Apollo-Saturn rocket complex stood 111 m/364 ft tall. Saturn's first stage separated and second stage fired at 72 km/45 mi; the third stage ignited at 177 km/110 mi for extra power to put Apollo into Earth orbit at 28,000 kph/17,400 mph, and later fired to send Apollo towards the Moon.

Apollo 1

During a preliminary check on the ground the three crew were killed by a fire on 27 January 1967. After this, NASA conducted five uncrewed test flights.

Apollo 7

The first successful Apollo mission to carry a crew, Apollo 7 was a test flight sent into orbit around the Earth on 11 October 1968.

Apollo 8

Launched on 21 December 1968, this was the first mission to take a crew around the Moon.

Apollo 9

Launched on 3 March 1969, this mission tested the lunar module in orbit around the Earth.

Apollo 10

Launched on 18 May 1969, this mission successfully tested the lunar module 14.5 km/9 mi above the surface of the Moon.

Apollo 11

After a launch on 16 July 1969, Armstrong and Aldrin landed the lunar module (named Eagle) in an area called the Sea of Tranquillity on the Moon's surface on 20 July 1969. Armstrong had to land manually because the automatic navigation system was heading for a field of boulders. On landing, Armstrong announced, ‘Tranquillity base here. The Eagle has landed.’ The module remained on the Moon for 22 hours, during which time the astronauts collected rocks, set up experiments, and mounted a US flag. Apart from a slight wobble when rejoining the command module, the return flight went without a hitch. After splashdown, the astronauts were quarantined as a precaution against unknown illnesses from the Moon.

Apollo 12

Launched on 14 November 1969, this mission achieved another successful Moon landing, in spite of twice being struck by lightning during launch.

Apollo 13

Intended to be the third Moon landing, Apollo 13 was launched on 11 April 1970 with the crew of John Swigert, Fred Haise, and James Lovell. On the third day of the mission Swigert reported to Houston, ‘We've had a problem here.’ An electrical fault had caused an explosion in one of the oxygen tanks in the service module, cutting off supplies of power and oxygen to the command module. The planned landing was abandoned and the rocket was sent round the Moon before heading back to Earth. The crew used the lunar module Aquarius as a ‘lifeboat’, though they had to endure near-freezing temperatures to save power, making sleep almost impossible. Attempting re-entry in the crippled ship almost led to disaster but the crew splashed down safely on 17 April.

Apollo 14

Launched on 31 January 1971, this mission reached the Moon on 5 February and returned to Earth on 8 February with samples of lunar rock.

Apollo 15

Launched on 26 July 1971, this mission used the first surface vehicle on the Moon, the lunar roving vehicle.

Apollo 16

Launched on 16 April 1972, this mission gathered lunar soil and rock during 71 hours 2 minutes on the Moon.

Apollo 17

Launched on 7 December 1972, this was the last of the Apollo Moon landings. Detailed geological studies were carried out during a record 74 hours on the Moon, and large amounts of rock and soil were brought back.



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Named after JFK's Apollo Project, which put a man on the moon in less than a decade, "an Apollo project for energy freedom must be big, bold, and fast," the group's website declares.
The Apollo Project was the product of the imagination of President Kennedy and his close advisors.
As a science student Marymount College, Tecla Mickoseff thought her studies would lead to a career m outer space; one summer, she worked as a student intern on the Apollo project.
 
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