The Apollo spacecraft traveled at a maximum speed of 24,000 mph. To overcome the Earth's gravitational pull, one must travel at or above its escape velocity which is 24,000 mph.
When Apollo 13 was reentering Earth is was traveling at a speed of 36,210.6 feet per second. When the spacecraft came around from the far side of the moon it was traveling at 860.5 feet per second.
1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 fast
When building the Apollo spacecraft, there were numerous limits to avoid. Firstly, the weight of the spacecraft had to be within a certain limit. If the equipment or spacecraft were too heavy, the Saturn V could not propel the spacecraft fast enough to reach the moon.
24990
10000 km an hour
When Apollo 13 was reentering Earth is was traveling at a speed of 36,210.6 feet per second. When the spacecraft came around from the far side of the moon it was traveling at 860.5 feet per second.
1000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 fast
When building the Apollo spacecraft, there were numerous limits to avoid. Firstly, the weight of the spacecraft had to be within a certain limit. If the equipment or spacecraft were too heavy, the Saturn V could not propel the spacecraft fast enough to reach the moon.
24990
10000 km an hour
The Apollo 11 spacecraft traveled at an average speed of about 24,500 miles per hour (39,350 kilometers per hour) during its journey to the moon. This journey took approximately three days to complete.
From what I have read it was going 50,000 mph.
They travelled at 27,875 kilometers a hour.
it took 7 days
The same reason why all spacecrafts have parachutes: During reentry into the Earth's atmosphere, the spacecraft goes extremely fast. And if there are people in the spacecraft and no parachute, they would slam into the water at that speed and it would be like hitting concrete. So without a parachute, everyone on the spacecraft would be killed.
The speed of an Apollo spacecraft is hard to answer because there are many answers available. The best question would ask something like "What was the maximum speed?", or "what was the average speed during the translunar or transearth phase?" The problem is that the speed of spacecraft was constantly changing. In order to break out of Earth orbit and reach the moon, an object must travel approximately 24,000 miles per hour. The Apollo spacecraft did just that. However, they didn't maintain that speed. Once they were out of orbit, they simply coasted the entire distance to the moon. Breaking out of Earth orbit does not mean breaking free from Earth's gravity though. The Earth was constantly pulling on the spacecraft, slowing it down. Eventually, the spacecraft got close enough to the moon that that moon's gravity had a stronger effect than the Earth's gravity, pulling the Apollo module forward, causing the module to speed up. With that in mind, we can provide the speed of Apollo 8 at various events: At translunar injection, Apollo 8 was traveling at 35, 505.41 ft/sec, or 24,208 mph. When the spacecraft entered the moon's sphere of influence (when the action of the moon's gravity became stronger than the action of the Earth's gravity on the spacecraft), it had slowed down to 3,261 ft/sec, or 2,223 mph. When the spacecraft reentered the Earth's atmosphere after returning from the moon, it was traveling at 36,221 ft/sec, or 24,696 mph.
The Apollo capsules could go almost 40,000 km/h