The Saturn V rocket was used to send humans to the moon during the Apollo missions. It was a large, multi-stage rocket developed by NASA in the 1960s specifically for the purpose of the Apollo program.
NASA retired the Saturn V rocket in 1973 after the Apollo program ended. The high cost of operating and maintaining the Saturn V, along with advances in rocket technology, led NASA to shift to newer and more efficient rocket systems for its missions. Today, NASA uses the Space Launch System (SLS) for its deep space exploration missions.
Usually in factories. In 5-10 years the robot population will increase. Department of Defense and NASA are also big on robotics
The travel time to Titan, Saturn's largest moon, depends on the spacecraft and its trajectory. For instance, NASA's Cassini spacecraft took about seven years to reach Titan after its launch in 1997. A more direct mission could potentially reduce this time to around 4-5 years, depending on the specific launch windows and technology used.
No. All Saturn S-Series cars for all years have a 4x100 lug pattern.
5 years
5 1/2 years old
5 to 6 years
It depends on the speed, the propulsion, and the orbit used. A conventional chemical rocket, with very limited fuel, could take several years. While there are no continuous thrust rockets yet available, if you could accelerate at 1 g, your travel time to Saturn would be about 2 weeks, depending on where the Earth and Saturn were in their orbits. Of course, if the question were "When will people get to Saturn", the answer is probably "In about 50 years". NASA does not currently have the ability to send people back to the Moon, and won't for another 10 years. After that, it will be a question of costs and priorities.
Yes, the Saturn V was used for all of the Apollo moon landings.
The Saturn 5 was used from Apollo 8 to Apollo 17, so there were ten Apollo missions with the Saturn .
It was the Saturn 5 rocket.