i think it was the Apollo 17, but im not exactly sure, so don't count on it!
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.
Yes, people even landed on the Moon.
The Gemini spacecraft carried two astronauts to the moon.
The Lunar Module, also known as the LM or "Eagle" on the Apollo 11 mission, was the part of the spacecraft that landed on the Moon. It was designed to carry astronauts from lunar orbit to the lunar surface and back.
Apollo 11 was designed to carry about 47,000 pounds (21,400 kg) of spacecraft, including the lunar module, command module, and service module. This weight was necessary for the mission to transport crew, equipment, and supplies to the Moon and back to Earth.
They fly in a rocket People haven't left Earth orbit since 1972. But, when humans did go to the Moon (between 1969 and 1972), the only vehicles to take them were (boosters) Saturn V rockets, and (spacecraft) Apollo Command and Service Modules (CSM) and Lunar Modules (LM). To date, only NASA astronauts have been to the Moon.
No person was on a planet that was not earth, only the moon
The Russian vehicle Luna 2 was the first spacecraft to land on the moon.
It was Apollo 17 and it was launched on December 7th, 1972.
India's first moon mission sends the unmanned spacecraft is named Chandrayaan-1 to the moon.
Rockets... The first one was Apollo 11
Micheal Collins was left in orbit of the Moon to make sure the command module, the spacecraft that would carry them back to Earth, was still functioning.