Your best bet would be to contact a company that specializes in space memorabilia, such as http://www.novaspace.com/
Anyone could attend a shuttle launch in the old days but now you have to get a special pass to attend
28 days
There have been 19 Apollo missions (1A & 1 - 17). All bar one have either been successful or partially successful. The one mission that was a failure was Apollo 1 where the command module destroyed and three astronauts killed on 27 January 1967 by fire in the module during a test exercise. The most famous almost failure was Apollo 13 which is classed as a successful failure as no one died - problematic oscillations on start, unrelated explosion in service module during Earth-Moon transition caused mission to be aborted - crew took temporary refuge in lunar module and eventually returned to Earth with command module after single pass around Moon and made it through reentry. Outside of the imagination of the lunatic fringe, there was no Apollo 18 flight. Apollo 18 was cancelled by Nixon, as he wanted Apollo, which had been started by Kennedy, to generate no more successes that would be credited to the Democrats. He even went so far as to rename Cape Kennedy, "Cape Canaveral". The Apollo 18 capsule, which had already been built, was wasted on a publicity stunt called "Apollo-Soyuz", which was supposedly a test of an emergency linkage that would allow Russian and American spacecraft to rescue one another.
There have been 19 Apollo missions (1A & 1 - 17). All bar one have either been successful or partially successful. The one mission that was a failure was Apollo 1 where the command module destroyed and three astronauts killed on 27 January 1967 by fire in the module during a test exercise. The most famous almost failure was Apollo 13 which is classed as a successful failure as no one died - problematic oscillations on start, unrelated explosion in service module during Earth-Moon transition caused mission to be aborted - crew took temporary refuge in lunar module and eventually returned to Earth with command module after single pass around Moon and made it through reentry. Outside of the imagination of the lunatic fringe, there was no Apollo 18 flight. Apollo 18 was cancelled by Nixon, as he wanted Apollo, which had been started by Kennedy, to generate no more successes that would be credited to the Democrats. He even went so far as to rename Cape Kennedy, "Cape Canaveral". The Apollo 18 capsule, which had already been built, was wasted on a publicity stunt called "Apollo-Soyuz", which was supposedly a test of an emergency linkage that would allow Russian and American spacecraft to rescue one another.
All of the Apollo astronauts passed through the Van Allen belt in their spacecrafts on their way to the moon. Since the exposure was brief, all were within the limits regarded as safe (Apollo 14 experienced the highest levels). Longer exposure to the radiation would certainly cause harm.
600 million USD.
Anyone could attend a shuttle launch in the old days but now you have to get a special pass to attend
It would depend who the pass was issued to and if it is a MLB lifetime pass or a Pittsburg Pirates lifetime pass. Probably about $100
You cannot buy it with a pass from the Black Market, you buy cards and if your lucky you can get the Apollo's Lyre.
He won't last the season
The answer depends on the percentage required for a pass. This is not a fixed value.
In my opinion $100 to $200 depending on the pass.
£200
yes
they worth time-pass
It isn't very rare, so it isn't worth very much.
Not really. If there was an observer between the moon and Earth during this mission, if they were orientated properly, they could have seen the Apollo 11 CSM and LM pass in front of the sun, but no one was there to see this. The moon is in orbit around the Earth. The space craft simply went from low Earth orbit to a higher orbit that intersected the moon's orbit. At no time did they travel further than 260,000 miles. The sun is 93,000,000 from the Earth. There would be no reason for the Apollo 11 craft to "pass the sun" to get to the moon.