It's on the left side of the moon.
No, the Apollo Saturn V rocket was the launch vehicle used in the Apollo program by NASA to send astronauts to the Moon. Apollo 13 was the name of a specific mission within the Apollo program that experienced an in-flight emergency while en route to the Moon.
Polonium-210 was used in the Apollo program to power the lunar module's fuel cells. It is a highly radioactive and toxic element that releases alpha particles, which can be dangerous if ingested or inhaled.
It was the Saturn 5 rocket.
Apollo was the Greco_Roman sun god. Most Nasa missions drew names from Classical mythology, this being no exception. Apollo program was the manned Lunar Program and some predecessors and left-overs- Apollo Command modules were used in the Skylab and Apollo-Soyuz project which were strictly Earth-Orbital.
No the Apollo Program was a set of missions whose purpose was to land men on the moon and return them safely back to Earth. The spacecraft used were the part of that program, and often referred to as the Apollo capsule, LM, etc.
It was an aptly named program, as they used both Apollo and Soyuz vehicles. Apollo on the American side, and Soyuz on the Soviet side.
The deadliest poison used in the Apollo program was potassium cyanide. This poison was part of the astronauts' emergency escape kits in case they landed in a remote area and needed to commit suicide to avoid a prolonged and painful death.
moon buggy used by the first american astronauts who first landed on the moon was invented by a FILIPINO. :)) XD_hevaione
The rocket that was used for Apollo 11 was the Saturn five rocket.
Polonium-210 was used in the Apollo program to power equipment on the lunar surface. It is a highly radioactive substance that can be lethal if ingested or inhaled. Its use in the Apollo program was to provide a long-lasting power source for equipment to operate in the harsh conditions of space.
There were three Apollo lunar landing missions (18, 19 and 20) that were planned, but never completely funded. In particular, there was no funding available to build the additional Saturn V rockets that would have been needed. On September 2, 1970, NASA announced that those missions had been cancelled. The last Saturn V was used to launch Skylab.
Apollo is the name of the NASA program whose mission was to send men to the moon. The rocket used to launch the Apollo crewmembers into space was called the Saturn V.