Apollo Program
NASA
Of course! That's why NASA puts it in the suits and that is why a lot of dead astronauts return to earth.
Astronauts in their spacecraft (such as the Space Shuttle) are lifted into space by huge rockets which accelerate the craft to "escape velocity" (about 25,000 mph). This puts the craft into orbit around the Earth, its forward velocity balancing the continuous pull of gravity. When they are ready to return to Earth, they use rockets to slow down, and gravity pulls them back out of orbit. When astronauts travelled to the Moon, another smaller rocket pushed the Apollo spacecraft out of orbit, and carried it to the gravitational field of the Moon. Another rocket firing pushed the craft back to Earth. Unmanned space probes have travelled to even farther distances from Earth, including the outer planets Uranus and Neptune. Most of the travel is coasting, because there is practically no matter in space to slow a spacecraft down.
when the moon puts in front of the sun when the moon puts in front of the sun
when the moon puts in front of the sun when the moon puts in front of the sun
There were 6 Apollo missions which successfully landed astronauts on the moon. Between July 1969 and December 1972. See related link. Apollo 13 (April 1970) had a malfunction and was unable to land on the moon. See related link.
Ther is no set date for a a return to the moon yet, but NASA is now working on a new space program called "Constelation", which will work on establishing and maintaining a permanet moon base.They need to build a whole new set of space vehicles for this project, since the Space Shuttles are not capable of landing on the moon.Another answer:The original plan was another manned moon mission by 2020, but recent (September 2009) news articles puts that severely in doubt.See the two Related Links shown below (one titled "Nasa's manned Moon mission too expensive" and the other titled "Mars and Moon Are Out of NASA's Reach for Now, Review Panel Says").
Astronauts in their spacecraft (such as the Space Shuttle) are lifted into space by huge rockets which accelerate the craft to "escape velocity" (about 25,000 mph). This puts the craft into orbit around the Earth, its forward velocity balancing the continuous pull of gravity. When they are ready to return to Earth, they use rockets to slow down, and gravity pulls them back out of orbit.
its the key with the moon on it
The NASA is an example
Learnership program