NASA is not sure exactly where on the moon the Eagle crash site is. It is believed to have crashed on the far side of the moon, so it is not visible from the Earth.
Three from the Apollo missions and two from the Soviet Unions Moon Walker program, so five total.
No, Apollo 5 was an unmanned mission and was designed to test the lunar module in Earth orbit. The mission took place in January 1968, and the spacecraft reentered Earth's atmosphere and burned up during reentry.
Ah, that's a wonderful question. The Apollo 11 lunar module has completed its mission and is no longer in orbit around the moon. Imagine all the beauty it saw during its time up there, inspiring others to dream big and explore the wonders of the universe. Keep looking up! Enough facts already!
The lunar rover was never returned to Earth...it still sits on the Moon today and probably will for many years to come.
No they were not changed they were part of the Space suit, those boots were still there.
NASA is not sure exactly where on the moon the Eagle crash site is. It is believed to have crashed on the far side of the moon, so it is not visible from the Earth.
I don't know whether you'd call them 'cars', or whether you'd call this 'in space', but the lunar rovers used on the surface of the moon during the last few Apollo missions in the early 1970s are still there on the lunar surface.
Three from the Apollo missions and two from the Soviet Unions Moon Walker program, so five total.
Apollo 10 holds the record for the highest speed attained by a manned vehicle (39, 897 kph). Apollo 10 was the first mission broadcast in colour from space. The lunar module for Apollo 10 is still in space (orbiting the sun) - all the others crashed into the moon or burnt up in the Earth's atmosphere.
No, Apollo 5 was an unmanned mission and was designed to test the lunar module in Earth orbit. The mission took place in January 1968, and the spacecraft reentered Earth's atmosphere and burned up during reentry.
Ah, that's a wonderful question. The Apollo 11 lunar module has completed its mission and is no longer in orbit around the moon. Imagine all the beauty it saw during its time up there, inspiring others to dream big and explore the wonders of the universe. Keep looking up! Enough facts already!
The lunar rover was never returned to Earth...it still sits on the Moon today and probably will for many years to come.
The Apollo 11 lunar module ascent stage crashed on the moon, sometime before November 1969. It's location ion the moon s unknown.
No, the Apollo Program was cancelled after the final moon landing (Apollo 17) in December 1972.
Three. Rover Apollo 15 was left on the lunar surface at Hadley-Apennine (26.10 N, 3.65 E). Rover Apollo 16 was left on the lunar surface at Descartes (8.99 S, 15.51 E) and Rover Apollo 17 was left on the lunar surface at Taurus-Littrow (20.16 N, 30.76 E) They will stand intact for thousands of years.
There are five lunar rovers still on the moon: the two unmanned Lunakhod rovers sent to the moon in 1970 and 1973, and the three manned Apollo lunar rovers sent during the last three missions of the American Apollo program (15, 16, and 17) during 1971 and 1972.Q: Why couldn't the astronauts park their spaceship on the moon?A: Because it was full.