answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The spacecraft's electrical power came from storage batteries (also called fuel cells), carried onboard. They generated a maximum of about 2300 watts. The fuel to launch the spacecraft was liquid oxygen (with kerosene, and liquid hydrogen for the upper stages), with nitrogen tetroxide to steer, adjust and make course corrections.

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What powered the Apollo 11 spacecraft?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Is the Apollo 11 big or small compared to other spacecraft?

The Apollo 11 was a bigger spacecraft ,then mercury or Gemini spacecraft.


What happend to the Apollo 11 spacecraft?

Tye Apollo 11 spacecraft after landing back on earth in the Pacific ocean, is now in Washington.


After Apollo 11 what American spacecraft followed?

After Apollo 11 Apollo 12 and the rest followed till Apollo17.


What was the name of spacecraft that carried astronauts?

Apollo 11 was the spacecraft


How was Apollo 11 different from rockets?

The Apollo 11 was a liquid fueled gas for power, the Saturn 5 was a rocket, Apollo 11 was a spacecraft.


Which Apollo did Armstrong ride?

Neil Armstrong flew in the Apollo 11 spacecraft.


When did the astronauts enter Apollo 11?

The astronauts entered the Apollo spacecraft by a hatch.


What year did the Apollo 11 land?

The Apollo 11 spacecraft landed on the moon on 20/7/1969.


What spacecraft did niel Armstrong travel in?

the Apollo 11


What spacecraft did the first American fly in?

apollo 11


What was the name of Apollo 11's spacecraft?

Apollo 11 had two named spacecraft; the Lunar Module was called the Eagle, the Command and Service Module was called Columbia.


Was the Apollo 11 the first US spacecraft to reach the moon?

Yes. Apollo 11 was the first Apollo mission to successfully land on the moon, but it was not the first ever US spacecraft to land on the moon, though it was the first spacecraft to successfully carry people to the moon.