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After the Apollo 11 mission, officials from the Soviet Union said landing humans on the Moon was dangerous and unnecessary. At the time the Soviet Union was attempting to retrieve lunar samples robotically. The Soviets publicly denied there was a race to the Moon, and indicated they were not making an attempt. [234]
This is a PDF version of Apollo 11 photo map.gif. It is more detailed than the GIF file and it can be zoomed. It is more detailed than the GIF file and it can be zoomed. Date
NASA's Apollo Lunar Surface Journal (ALSJ) [1] records the details of each mission's period on the lunar surface as a timeline of the activities undertaken, the dialogue between the crew and Mission Control, and the relevant documentary records. Each photograph taken on the mission is catalogued there and each photographic sequence is also ...
11 August 1969: Source: USGS, modified by Apollo Lunar Surface Journal, A11photomap (the 196k redraft) Author: Original by R. M. Batson and K. B. Larsen from the USGS redrafted and recolored by Thomas Schwagmeier: Other versions: Original GIF version PDF version French version
Launch of AS-506 space vehicle on July 16, 1969, at pad 39A for mission Apollo 11 to land the first men on the Moon. The Apollo program was a United States human spaceflight program carried out from 1961 to 1972 by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), which landed the first astronauts on the Moon. [1]
Apollo 11: Apollo 11: 16 July 1969: Saturn V: NASA: Orbiter: Success Lunar Module Eagle: Lander/Launch Vehicle: Success First crewed landing on the Moon. The Lunar Module Eagle landed at 20:17 UTC on 20 July 1969. 73: Zond 7 (7K-L1 No.11L) Zond 7: 7 August 1969: Proton-K/D: Lavochkin: Flyby: Success Technology demonstration for planned crewed ...
Lunar Orbiter 5 image from 1967, cropped to show the vicinity of the landing site of Apollo 11, used in mission planning. The image is centered precisely on a small crater called West crater (190 m in diameter), and the lunar module Eagle touched down about 550 m west of West Crater.
Little West is a small crater (30-meter diameter) in Mare Tranquillitatis on the Moon, east of the Apollo 11 landing site known as Tranquility Base.. The Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed the Lunar Module (LM) Eagle approximately 60 meters west of Little West Crater on July 20, 1969.