RMHFF77X–ERC Technician Test Device Developed for Apollo Missions 2002-000215
RMPCAW38–Apollo 12 launch November 14, 1969
RM2DGNRWX–Alkaline fuel battery. Three of these elements were used to power the command module for the Apollo missions. Combining hydrogen and oxygen provides power and water to the spacecraft. Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC). Houston. State of Texas. United States.
RMT81NTK–Apollo 14 Moon Rock
RMCNX1BP–Apollo mission control room at NASA's Johnson Space Center.
RM2FNYB4H–astronautics, missions, USA, Apollo 13, booster rocket Saturn V, Cape Kennedy, 1960s, ADDITIONAL-RIGHTS-CLEARANCE-INFO-NOT-AVAILABLE
RM2K7XH1K–Astronaut Edwin E. 'Buzz' Aldrin, prime crew pilot of the Gemini XII spaceflight, undergoes evaluation procedures with the Astronaut Maneuvering Unit in the 30-foot altitude chamber at McDonnell Aircraft. The Astronaut Maneuvering Unit subsequently was deleted from the mission so Aldrin could demonstrate basic spacewalk capabilities required for Apollo missions.
RM2EATE7H–Soviet Space Race exploration propaganda poster 1970’s - 'In the Name of Peace and Progress For the Glory of Our Motherland! '- depicting Lunokhod / Moonwalker rover on the moon with antenna sending a signal to a red star on earth as satellite communication against dark space background, a yellow hammer and sickle symbol on the side of the red vehicle. During the Cold War era Space Race (1955-1975), the Soviet Union designed a series of Lunokhod lunar rovers to land on the moon for exploration & research to support their manned Moon Race missions after NASA's successful Apollo missions
RM2K5E3P8–Apollo 17 moon landing. A lunar panorama at geology Station 4, Shorty Crater, The Moon, was photographed as Geologist-Astronaut Harrison Schmitt explored the surface using the Lunar Roving Vehicle developed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. This was the area where Schmitt discovered unusual orange soil. As Apollo 17 was the last of the Apollo missions, Schmitt became the twelfth person to set foot on the moon. A unique optimised NASA image (with added black vertical space above original square image; crosshair removal): Credit: NASA
RM2GGBNM3–Beef and vegetables space food, Mercury Friendship 7 mission, 1962. This space food package contains pureed beef with vegetables and was issued to astronaut John Glenn for consumption during his Friendship 7 flight in February 1962. Spacefood for the Mercury missions was placed in tube form to enable the astronaut to squeeze it directly into his mouth. In the later Gemini and Apollo missions, food was dehydrated requiring rehydration with hot water and could be eaten directly from the plastic storage bag. Transferred to the national Air and Space Museum from NASA in 1967.
RMKREC2N–ERC Technician Test Device Developed for Apollo Missions - GPN-2002-000215
RMPGTCAM–Jill Gallone, head of media and advertising at Hansons Auctioneers in Derbyshire, holds the Apollo 15 Flight Plan. A space exploration collection is set to go to auction which includes items from the Apollo space missions.
RM2HWET6A–Frances 'Poppy' Northcutt, mathematician aged 25 who works at the Mission Control Centre in Houston, Texas, pictured in London (returning to USA to prepare for Apollo 13 mission in six weeks (11/04)), Tuesday 24th February 1970. Poppy Northcutt, is an integral part of the engineering team on the Apollo missions. She attended the University of Texas where she studied mathematics. In three-and-a-half years, Northcutt graduated. Shortly afterward, she went to work for an aerospace contractor, TRW Systems, who collaborated with NASA on the Apollo Program. TRW designed and built the descent engin
RM2A89M60–Astronaut's badges, marking Apollo Missions at the National Space Centre, Leicester, Leicestershire, UK
RM2BF2HF7–Rescue Net Apollo 8. All of the Apollo missions ended with splashdown in the ocean and recovery by specially trained teams from the U.S. Navy.
RMMGYX33–Space Centre Houston - visitors looking at the Apollo Lunar Landing Module at the Johnson Space Centre, Houston, Texas USA
RF2KDYRMK–Surface of the Moon
RMRA13AY–Apollo 11 stainless steel plaque attached to the Apollo Lunar Modules that landed on the moon. Designed by Jack Kinzler, NASA the text reads: “Here Men From The Planet Earth First Set Foot Upon The Moon, July, 1969, AD. We Came In Peace For All Mankind' followed by the engraved signatures of bears the signatures of Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, Buzz Aldrin, and President Richard Nixon. The plaques of all the successful missions that landed remain on the moon.
RMW0M9B5–Former President Lyndon B. Johnson and then-current Vice President Spiro Agnew are among the spectators at the launch of Apollo 11, which lifted off from Pad 39A at Kennedy Space Center at 9:32 am EDT on July 16, 1969. The crew, the first of the Apollo missions to land on the moon, safely returned to Earth on 37 years ago this week on July 24, 1969. (UPI Photo/NASA)
RMGE4EXP–Launch- May 18, 1969 Landing- May 26, 1969 Astronauts- Thomas Stafford, Eugene Cernan and John Young Apollo 10 experienced a couple firsts in spaceflight. The first live color TV transmission to Earth began three hours after launch, as well as the first decent toward the moon. The Lunar Module (LM) detached from the Command and Service Module (CSM) and descended toward the moon for a lower orbit to check the LM landing radar for altitude functioning. www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo10.html#... ( http://www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo10.html#.VAigVhCa-So )
RFPABBCE–A replace of the Lunar Module from the Apollo Missions to the moon
RM2DENY51–Saturn V Rocket. Designed to drive astronauts to the moon on the Apollo missions of the 60s and 70s. Apollo Lunar Module (1968-1972). Scale 1/3. Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC). Houston. State of Texas. United States of America.
RMT81NTM–Apollo 14 Moon Rock
RMHCHMTR–Cleveland, OH - August 29, 2008 -- An all-star gathering of legendary American astronauts appeared in Cleveland, Ohio on August 29, 2008 to celebrate the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) 50th anniversary. John Glenn, the first American to orbit Earth, Neil Armstrong, the first person to walk on the moon, Jim Lovell, veteran of two Apollo missions, and Kathryn Sullivan, the first woman to walk in space joined 15 other astronauts from Ohio.From left to right in the front row are Kenneth Cameron, Robert Springer, Neil Armstrong, John Glenn, James Lovell and Kathryn Sullivan
RMBJWB0H–astronautics, missions, USA, Apollo 13, landing map, April 1970, 1970s, 70s, 20th century, historic, historical, outline map, outline maps, map, maps, landing area, space travel, space flight,
RMC1M8HY–Apollo 10 crew, Thomas P. Stafford pats the nose of Snoopy, the mission's mascot, held by Jamye Flowers
RMHCHT1T–Cleveland, OH - August 29, 2008 -- An all-star gathering of legendary American astronauts appeared in Cleveland, Ohio on August 29, 2008 to celebrate the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) 50th anniversary. John Glenn, the first American to orbit Earth, Neil Armstrong, the first person to walk on the moon, Jim Lovell, veteran of two Apollo missions, and Kathryn Sullivan, the first woman to walk in space joined 15 other astronauts from Ohio.From left to right in the front row are Kenneth Cameron, Robert Springer, Neil Armstrong, John Glenn, James Lovell and Kathryn Sullivan
RM2WY1B71–Lunar Roving Vehicle. Mobility City Technology Museum in Zaha Hadid’s Bridge (Bridge Pavilion), Zaragoza, Spain
RM2GMWCGT–The Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) was designed to transport astronauts and materials on the Moon. It was a collapsible open-space vehicle about 10 feet long with large mesh wheels, anterna, appendages, tool caddies, and cameras. Powered by two 36-volt batteries, it has four 1/4-hp drive motors, one for each wheel. The vehicle was designed to travel in forward or reverse, negotiate obstacles about 1 foot high, cross crevasses about 2 feet wide, and climb or descend moderate slopes. Its speed limit was about 9 miles (14 kilometers) per hour. An LRV was used on each of the last three Apollo missions
RMF4T551–The shadow of the lunar module of Apollo 11, Moon
RMPGTCB2–Jill Gallone, head of media and advertising at Hansons Auctioneers in Derbyshire, holds the Apollo 15 Flight Plan. A space exploration collection is set to go to auction which includes items from the Apollo space missions.
RM2HWD8J5–Frances 'Poppy' Northcutt, mathematician aged 25 who works at the Mission Control Centre in Houston, Texas, pictured in London (returning to USA to prepare for Apollo 13 mission in six weeks (11/04)), Tuesday 24th February 1970. Poppy Northcutt, is an integral part of the engineering team on the Apollo missions. She attended the University of Texas where she studied mathematics. In three-and-a-half years, Northcutt graduated. Shortly afterward, she went to work for an aerospace contractor, TRW Systems, who collaborated with NASA on the Apollo Program. TRW designed and built the descent engin
RMPG930H–Vice President Mike Pence, center, views Sample 15014, which was collected during Apollo 15 with NASA's Apollo Sample Curator Ryan Zeigler, left, and Apollo 17 astronaut and geologist Dr. Harrison Schmitt, right, in Lunar Curation Laboratory at NASA's Johnson Space Center, Thursday, Aug. 23, 2018 in Houston, Texas. Sample 15014 is one of nine samples out of the 2,196 collected during the Apollo missions that was sealed inside its container on the Moon and still containes gasses from the Moon.
RF2J6K2TX–Historical Space Suits used throughout the Apollo Missions
RMCW6G17–Prayer for the safe return of Apollo 13 mission's astronauts (April 17, 1970)
RM2HH906E–Far Side of the Moon at Apolune 1967 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) This photograph was made as part of the Lunar Orbiter program, a series of five unmanned spacecraft launched into orbit around the Moon in 1966 and 1967. Each spacecraft was equipped with a sophisticated imaging system provided by Eastman Kodak, which consisted of a dual-lens camera, film processing and handling units, and a readout scanner for transmitting the images back to Earth. The main purpose of the program was to select lunar landing sites for NASA’s manned Apollo Missions. Over the course of one
RMRA145B–An Apollo 11 stainless steel plaque as attached to the Apollo Lunar Modules that landed on the moon. Designed by Jack Kinzler, NASA the text reads: “Here Men From The Planet Earth First Set Foot Upon The Moon, July, 1969, AD. We Came In Peace For All Mankind' followed by the engraved signatures of bears the signatures of Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, Buzz Aldrin, and President Richard Nixon. The plaques of all the successful missions that landed remain on the moon.
RMW0F4DP–Tourists look at the giant aft burners of the Saturn V rocket at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum's 'Apollo to the Moon' exhibit on July 20, 2009 in Washington, DC. Five giant first-stage engines propelled the Saturn V and Apollo missions into space. Today is the 40th anniversary of astronaut Neil Armstrong's first walk on the moon via Apollo 11, on July 20, 1969. The Apollo 11 crew was Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. (UPI Photo/Pat Benic)
RMGE4F3M–Launch- March 3, 1969 Landing- March 13, 1969 Astronauts- James A. McDivitt, Russell L. Schweickart and David R. Scott Apollo 9 preformed the first two successful rendezvous and docking with the Command and Service Module (CSM) and Lunar Module (LM). Overall the mission was a success with all the prime mission objectives being met. www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo9.html#.... ( http://www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo9.html#.VAidLRCa-So )
RMCRW3TK–Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on Merritt Island Florida the massive F-1 rocket engine for the Saturn V Apollo missions.
RM2DF564X–Lunar rock (Breccia Moon Rock). Obtained by the Apollo 16 (1972, 16 to 27 April). Zone of origin in the Moon: Descartes Highlands. Houston. State of Texas. United States. Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC). Houston. State of Texas. United States.
RMT81NTH–Apollo 14 Moon Rock
RM2GGBNH0–This is the flight backup for the mapping cameras used on the last three Apollo missions. Mapping the lunar surface was a high priority during Apollo 15, 16, and 17. Mounted in the service module, the mapping camera captured high-resolution images of the Moon as the spacecraft orbited. While returning to Earth, command module pilots performed spacewalks to retrieve the film canisters, mounted on the right side of the camera. This flight backup, available for those missions if the installed cameras were damaged or malfunctioned before launch, is the best surviving example of the Fairchild-built
RMCPH2WN–astronautics, missions, Apollo 11, launch, people watching the launch on a TV in a display window, Hamburg, 16.7.1969, 'Mit Apollo zum Mond' (With Apollo to the Moon), Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RM2H99J5F–Rear Admiral Donald C. Davis, Commanding Officer of Task Force 130, the Pacific Recovery Forces for the Manned Spacecraft Missions, welcomes the Apollo 13 crewmembers aboard the USS Iwo Jima, prime recovery ship for the Apollo 13 mission. The crewmembers (from the left) astronauts Fred W. Haise Jr. (waving), lunar module pilot; John L. Swigert Jr., command module pilot; and James A. Lovell Jr., commander; were transported by helicopter to the ship following a smooth splashdown only about four miles from the USS Iwo Jima. Splashdown occurred at 12:07:44 p.m. (CST),
RMB5GJ5Y–Bottom two sections of the massive Saturn V rocket used in the Apollo space missions to the moon
RM2WY1AEP–Lunar Roving Vehicle. Mobility City Technology Museum in Zaha Hadid’s Bridge (Bridge Pavilion), Zaragoza, Spain
RMD89PTC–APOLLO 7 PRIME CREW
RMF4T3DA–Precise lunar module of Apollo 11, USA
RMPGTCC4–An on board grapefruit and pineapple tube drink from an Apollo space craft on display at Hansons Auctioneers in Derbyshire. A space exploration collection is set to go to auction which includes items from the Apollo space missions.
RM2J3KHEK–On November 9, 1967, Apollo 4, the first test flight of the Apollo/Saturn V space vehicle, was launched from Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39. This was an unmanned test flight intended to prove that the complex Saturn V rocket could perform its requirements. All three stages separated successfully and their engines performed as planned. The third stage also restarted in orbit, which was a requirement for lunar missions. At the end of the flight, the unmanned Apollo spacecraft reentered and proved that it could survive the intense heat generated during a high-speed return from the moon.
RMCA3EMK–May 31, 2012 - Astronaut GENE CERNAN, who flew on both Gemini and Apollo missions and is the last man to have walked on the moon, is in Tucson, Ariz. at the Spacefest IV convention on the day the private Space-X space craft Dragon successfully splashed down marking a successful end to the first comm
RF2J6K2W1–Alternative and Contingency Plan Checklists used by astronauts during the Apollo Missions
RMCW6G0X–Apollo 1 mission's crew preparing orbital test flight carried out September 1966 crew die in tragic accident on January 27, 1967
RM2HGTPPK–Crater Kepler and Vicinity 1967 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) This photograph was made as part of the Lunar Orbiter program, a series of five unmanned spacecraft launched into orbit around the Moon in 1966 and 1967. Each spacecraft was equipped with a sophisticated imaging system provided by Eastman Kodak, which consisted of a dual-lens camera, film processing and handling units, and a readout scanner for transmitting the images back to Earth. The main purpose of the program was to select lunar landing sites for NASA’s manned Apollo Missions. Over the course of one year,
RF2WJ7E2P–Exhibit of Lunar Rover Trainer at houston space centre texas which was taken to the Moon’s surface (and left there) on the last three Apollo missions
RMW0F4DN–Tourists look at the giant aft burners of the Saturn V rocket at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum's 'Apollo to the Moon' exhibit on July 20, 2009 in Washington, DC. Five giant first-stage engines propelled the Saturn V and Apollo missions into space. Today is the 40th anniversary of astronaut Neil Armstrong's first walk on the moon via Apollo 11, on July 20, 1969. The Apollo 11 crew was Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. (UPI Photo/Pat Benic)
RMGE4F3G–Launch- December 21, 1968 Landing- December 27, 1968 Astronauts- Frank Borman, William A. Anders and James A. Lovell Jr. Apollo 8 was the first mission to orbit the moon, making Borman, Anders and Lovell the first humans to see the far side of the moon. They conducted lunar landing site tracking while in orbit for future missions to the moon. www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo8.html#.... ( http://www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo8.html#.VAibWxCa-So )
RMCRW3P4–Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on Merritt Island Florida the massive F-1 rocket engine for the Saturn V Apollo missions.
RM2DENY55–Lunar soil. Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC). Houston. State of Texas. United States of America.
RMT81NTG–Apollo 14 Moon Rock
RM2GGBMPD–The Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) was a battery powered "dune buggy" taken to the moon on Apollo missions 15, 16, and 17. The LRV was stowed on the descent stage of the Lunar Module and deployed upon arrival at the lunar surface. The LRV was operated with a spacecraft "stick," rather than a steering wheel, and could move forward and backwards. In addition to the flight vehicles, Boeing manufactured eight non-flight units for development and testing. One, the "Qualification Test Unit," was a very close replica of the units that flew. Using special test chambers, engin
RMCPH2W4–astronautics, missions, Apollo 11, launch, people watching the launch on a TV in a display window, Hamburg, 16.7.1969, 'Mit Apollo zum Mond' (With Apollo to the Moon), Additional-Rights-Clearences-Not Available
RF2ABJ42C–Teleclip - Apollo 11 Buzz Aldrin – shot by Neil Armstrong - photo taken directly from TV screen circa 1969/72
RFR6BNNR–Lunar Module and Lunar Rover of the Apollo missions at the Saturn V Hall at the Davidson Center, U.S. Rocket and Space Center in Huntsville, AL, USA
RM2WY1A67–Lunar Roving Vehicle. Mobility City Technology Museum in Zaha Hadid’s Bridge (Bridge Pavilion), Zaragoza, Spain
RMD89KHW–The NASA crew of Apollo 11
RMF4T3C1–And lunar module of Apollo 11 extravehicular activity, the Moon
RMGBNHGY–Doug Millard, senior space curator of the Science Museum in London, looks inside the Apollo 10 command module through the perspex cover which will be removed on Saturday May 23 so the public can see close inside for the first time.
RM2BE1BFM–Astronaut Alan L. Bean, lunar module pilot for the Apollo 12 lunar landing mission, works at the Modular Equipment Stowage Assembly (MESA) on the Apollo 12 Lunar Module (LM) during the mission's first extravehicular activity, (EVA) on Nov. 19, 1969.
RMCA3EMR–May 31, 2012 - Astronaut GENE CERNAN, who flew on both Gemini and Apollo missions and is the last man to have walked on the moon, is in Tucson, Ariz. at the Spacefest IV convention on the day the private Space-X space craft Dragon successfully splashed down marking a successful end to the first comm
RF2J6K2GP–The Launch Control Center for the Apollo Missions
RMCW6FXE–One of the Apollo 12 astronauts is photographied on Moon (November 19, 1969)
RM2HGTPTN–Crater Aristarchus, Schroter's Valley, and Vicinity 1967 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) This photograph was made as part of the Lunar Orbiter program, a series of five unmanned spacecraft launched into orbit around the Moon in 1966 and 1967. Each spacecraft was equipped with a sophisticated imaging system provided by Eastman Kodak, which consisted of a dual-lens camera, film processing and handling units, and a readout scanner for transmitting the images back to Earth. The main purpose of the program was to select lunar landing sites for NASA’s manned Apollo Missions. Ove
RM2K5E3K1–Apollo 16 lunar mission. This photograph, taken during the mission's second extravehicular activity, shows astronaut John W. Young retrieving tools from the Lunar Roving Vehicle's Hand Tool Carrier. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center designed, developed and managed the production of the lunar rover and the Saturn V rocket that took astronauts to the moon. April 20, 1972. A unique optimised NASA image (with added black vertical space above original square image): Credit: NASA An optimised NASA image: Credit: NASA
RMTXP0MD–Retired NASA Astronaut Walter Schirra attends the grand opening of 'Mission Space,' the EPCOT Center's newest attraction, on Oct 9, 2003 near Orlando, Florida. Schirra is the only astronaut to fly in Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions and is one of the Original Seven astronauts. (UPI MARINO / CANTRELL)
RMGE4F2W–Astronauts- Virgil “Gus” Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee On January 27, 1967 a fire swept through the cabin during a launch rehearsal killing astronauts Virgil “Gus” Girssom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. The name Apollo 1 was given to the mission in the spring of 1967 in memory of the astronauts who lost their lives. www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo1.html#.... ( http://www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo1.html#.VAiHchCa-So ) Date: January 27, 1967
RM2M74M8N–THE MOON, EARTH - October 1968 - NASA astronaut Walter Cunningham photographed during the Apollo 7 mission, on which he served in the lunar module pil
RMB5JCK4–Plaques commemorating all the space missions handled at the original NASA Mission Control Center at the Johnson Space Center
RMT81NTP–Apollo 14 Moon Rock
RM2GGBNAN–This cockpit instrument provided information on the pressure in the fuel and oxidizer tanks of one of the propulsion and attitude control systems of the Gemini spacecraft. Astronauts flew ten Gemini missions in 1965-66, paving the way for the Apollo missions to the Moon. The key objectives of Gemini were gathering experience with rendezvous and docking, long-duration spaceflight, and extravehicular activity. NASA transferred this instrument to the Smithsonian in 1972.
RM2FMX4C4–astronautics, Apollo 14, astronaut Edgar Mitchell on the moon, 1971, 1970s, 70s, 20th century, ADDITIONAL-RIGHTS-CLEARANCE-INFO-NOT-AVAILABLE
RF2ABJ43B–Teleclip - Apollo 11 Buzz Aldrin walking down ladder of Lunar Module – shot by Neil Armstrong - photo taken directly from TV screen circa 1969/72
RFR6BNM9–Lunar Module and Lunar Rover of the Apollo missions at the Saturn V Hall at the Davidson Center, U.S. Rocket and Space Center in Huntsville, AL, USA
RM2WY1A6C–Lunar Roving Vehicle. Mobility City Technology Museum in Zaha Hadid’s Bridge (Bridge Pavilion), Zaragoza, Spain
RM2GDB14G–Apollo 7 lifts off from Cape Canaveral on 11 October 1968. This was the first flight in the Apollo program
RMF4T55A–The launch of Apollo 11, Cape Kennedy, Fla., USA
RMGBNHH2–A staff member at the Science Museum in London, looks inside the Apollo 10 command module through the perspex cover which will be removed on Saturday May 23 so the public can see close inside for the first time.
RMPRACC9–Astronaut Alan L. Bean, lunar module pilot for the Apollo 12 lunar landing mission, works at the Modular Equipment Stowage Assembly (MESA) on the Apollo 12 Lunar Module (LM) during the mission's first extravehicular activity, (EVA) on Nov. 19, 1969.
RMCA3EMT–May 31, 2012 - Astronaut GENE CERNAN, who flew on both Gemini and Apollo missions and is the last man to have walked on the moon, is in Tucson, Ariz. at the Spacefest IV convention on the day the private Space-X space craft Dragon successfully splashed down marking a successful end to the first comm
RF2J6K2DC–The Launch Control Center for the Apollo Missions
RMCW6FXB–Apollo 16 view of Earth (April 16, 1972)
RM2HGTPTG–Close-Up of Crater Copernicus November 23, 1966 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) This photograph was made as part of the Lunar Orbiter program, a series of five unmanned spacecraft launched into orbit around the Moon in 1966 and 1967. Each spacecraft was equipped with a sophisticated imaging system provided by Eastman Kodak, which consisted of a dual-lens camera, film processing and handling units, and a readout scanner for transmitting the images back to Earth. The main purpose of the program was to select lunar landing sites for NASA’s manned Apollo Missions. Over the cou
RM2KYW0NM–The prime crew of Apollo 1, Virgil I (Gus) Grissom, Edward H. White, II, and Roger B. Chaffee, during training in Florida. On January 27, 1967, the crew was killed when a fire erupted in their capsule during testing. Apollo 1 was originally designated AS- 204 but following the fire, the astronauts’ widows requested that the mission be remembered as Apollo 1 and following missions would be numbered subsequent to the flight that never made it into space.
RMMGYX2E–NASA Space Centre Houston - visitors looking at the Apollo Lunar Landing Module at the Johnson Space Centre, Houston, Texas USA
RMGE4F29–Launch- April 16, 1972 Landing- April 27, 1972 Astronauts- John W. Young, Charles M. Duke Jr. and Thomas K. Mattingly II Apollo 16 had a couple display malfunctions as well as some telemetry problems that forced the mission to be shortened by one day. However the astronauts were able to collect 209 pounds of moon rocks and drove 16.6 miles in the rover. www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo16.html#... ( http://www.nasa.gov/mission pages/apollo/missions/apollo16.html#.VAi4EBCa-So )
RMR59Y5J–Apollo 11 mission patch and NASA badge.
RM2DJXKE6–Cleveland, OH - August 29, 2008 -- An all-star gathering of legendary American astronauts appeared in Cleveland, Ohio on August 29, 2008 to celebrate the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) 50th anniversary. John Glenn, the first American to orbit Earth, Neil Armstrong, the first person to walk on the moon, Jim Lovell, veteran of two Apollo missions, and Kathryn Sullivan, the first woman to walk in space joined 15 other astronauts from Ohio..From left to right in the front row are Kenneth Cameron, Robert Springer, Neil Armstrong, John Glenn, James Lovell and Kathryn Sullivan
RMT81NTN–Apollo 14 Moon Rock
RMHFTPWX–070606-N-5345W-041 SUITLAND, Md. (June 6, 2007) - Retired Senior Chief Aviation Machinist's Mate Scott Wood carefully restores a Saturn V F-1 rocket engine to its original condition at the National Air & Space Museum's Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration and Storage Facility. Five F-1 engines were used on the stage one portion of the Saturn V rocket to launch the project Apollo missions into space in the 1960s and 1970s. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kristopher Wilson (RELEASED) US Navy 070606-N-5345W-041 Retired Senior Chief Aviation Machinist's Mate Scott Wo
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