The Apollo capsules could go almost 40,000 km/h
300000 Km/s
it took 7 days
The capsule on the tip of the rocket detaches when it leaves the atmosphere of earth, lands on the moon, then the capsule blasts off the moon and lands in the ocean in a "splashdown".
19 000 mph to the moon, not sure how it slowed down though. Not sure how it managed that speed to get back.
the shuttle does not go to the moon.
A return capsule is a vehicle in which to travel on the return trip from somewhere. For example the first astronauts that walked on the moon used the descent vehicle "Eagle" to land on the Moon and get back to the "Return Capsule" (the Command/Service Module) which took them back to Earth.
300000 Km/s
it took 7 days
That will greatly depend on how you fast you travel.
The capsule on the tip of the rocket detaches when it leaves the atmosphere of earth, lands on the moon, then the capsule blasts off the moon and lands in the ocean in a "splashdown".
19 000 mph to the moon, not sure how it slowed down though. Not sure how it managed that speed to get back.
That depends on how fast you are going. Basic math here. If you are on the moon, and you travel in a straight line at 100 mph, you will have traveled a mile after 1/100 of an hour, or 36 seconds. Remember, this applies to wherever you are, not just the moon.
I belive you are talking about how much does the ocean get impacted by the gravity of the moon. Depending on the distance of the moon from earth so thats why you get tide in and tide out.
the shuttle does not go to the moon.
No. Man did travel and land on the moon.
Quite a while as long as they stay in the capsule.
It can travel through the moon's crust, yes - it is solid. But it cannot travel through the air on the moon, of course, because there Is no air on the moon!