over 24,000 miles per hour, on the final burn, which is 7 miles per second, which speed is needed to escape earths gravitational pull.
The booster was the Saturn V (five), the command module was Columbia, the lunar landing module was Eagle.
Yes, "Saturn V" and "Saturn 5" are referring to the same rocket. The correct designation is "Saturn V," with the "V" representing the Roman numeral for five.
The "Saturn V" rocket was named after the Roman god, Saturn, and the "V" represented the five powerful F-1 engines used in its first stage.
The Cold War and the Saturn-V booster did.
No part of the Saturn V rocket was reusable.
140,00o kilometers
The booster was the Saturn V (five), the command module was Columbia, the lunar landing module was Eagle.
Yes, "Saturn V" and "Saturn 5" are referring to the same rocket. The correct designation is "Saturn V," with the "V" representing the Roman numeral for five.
The "Saturn V" rocket was named after the Roman god, Saturn, and the "V" represented the five powerful F-1 engines used in its first stage.
The Cold War and the Saturn-V booster did.
No part of the Saturn V rocket was reusable.
Saturn spins faster then earth
The Saturn V rocket was 363 feet (111 meters) tall.
The Saturn V rocket was first launched on November 9, 1967.
5 Million Newtons was the pressure exerted by Saturn v rocket
The Saturn V rocket did not land on the moon itself, but it was the launch vehicle that carried the Apollo spacecraft to the moon. The Apollo spacecraft then separated from the Saturn V rocket and landed on the moon during the Apollo missions. The first successful manned moon landing was Apollo 11 in 1969.
The Saturn V rockets used by NASA during the Apollo missions stood at a height of 363 feet (111 meters).