The Apollo 11 splashdown occurred on July 24, 1969 at 16:50:35 UTC (12:50pm EDT)
There were two landings during the Apollo 11 mission. The first, on the lunar surface, took place on July 20, 1969. Upon the mission's return to Earth, the crew landed again, this time in the Pacific Ocean, on July 24, 1969.
20:17 GMT
The aim of Apollo 11 was to land man on the moon for the first time , and to bring him back safely to earth.
All of the Apollo spacecraft landed in the ocean, which is where they were designed to land. 3/26/10--The USSR landed their spacecraft on dry land because they had endless expanses of dry land to use. NASA chose the ocean because it was considered a safer landing surface and even if they missed the target by hundreds of miles, the thing still landed in water. The Apollo capsules were designed to float for a period of time and had some floatation aids onboard which could be deployed, as well as a liferaft. When recovering the astronauts, Navy Seals would attach a floatation collar to the capsule, then extract the astronauts. The floatation collar kept the capsule afloat long enough to be recovered aboard the ship. Since Apollo 13 never landed on the moon, the astronauts were not quarantined aboard the Iwo Jima and were free to wander around.
Splashdown of Apollo 11 occured on July 24, 1969 at 16:50:35 UTC.
Yes. Yes, it is. It borders the Pacific Ocean.
It is in the Central Time zone. It is nowhere near the Pacific Ocean!
There were two landings during the Apollo 11 mission. The first, on the lunar surface, took place on July 20, 1969. Upon the mission's return to Earth, the crew landed again, this time in the Pacific Ocean, on July 24, 1969.
Most likely the Pacific Ocean, though it might be the Arctic Ocean if you are close to the north pole at the time.
the pacific
whenever whenever
time traveling
20:17 GMT
The aim of Apollo 11 was to land man on the moon for the first time , and to bring him back safely to earth.
the name given to pacific ocean by balboa is the prizzano the answer in top is wrong its south you can figure the rest pleaseBalboa named it Mar del Sur (South Sea). Magellan renamed it Pacific Ocean.
All of the Apollo spacecraft landed in the ocean, which is where they were designed to land. 3/26/10--The USSR landed their spacecraft on dry land because they had endless expanses of dry land to use. NASA chose the ocean because it was considered a safer landing surface and even if they missed the target by hundreds of miles, the thing still landed in water. The Apollo capsules were designed to float for a period of time and had some floatation aids onboard which could be deployed, as well as a liferaft. When recovering the astronauts, Navy Seals would attach a floatation collar to the capsule, then extract the astronauts. The floatation collar kept the capsule afloat long enough to be recovered aboard the ship. Since Apollo 13 never landed on the moon, the astronauts were not quarantined aboard the Iwo Jima and were free to wander around.
To reach the Pacific Ocean from the Atlantic Ocean and vice versa, saves a bunch of time, resources, human fatigue etc.