The lunar module was designed by Thomas J. Kelly, an American aerospace engineer. It was built by Grumann Craft Engineering.
Lunar module is the landing craft design to transport astronaut from Moon's orbit down to surface and return astronaut back to orbit. Lunar module is the key part in Apollo project led by NASA.
.
Let's move on to the the next module.
Lunar poles:data from Lunar Prospector indicated the presence of large quantities of water in craters at lunar poles :)
They are impact basins that have been flooded with (once-molten) lunar basaltic lavas, which are naturally dark in color.
The lunar module pilot drives the lunar module and lands on the surface of the moon(Luna).
There was a hatch in the lunar module.
The purpose of the Lunar module was to carry the astronauts, from the command module to the Lunar surface and back from the moon.
There was two parts, the command module and the lunar module. The command module was used to take them to Lunar orbit, and then the Lunar module was used to land them on the Moon. The Lunar module then lifted the astronauts off the Moon and into Lunar orbit. They then docked with the command module and then got rid of the lunar module. Then the final trip home, they were safely inside the command module.
The Lunar module, is a spacecraft part of the Apollo spacecraft, the job is they use the Lunar module to transfer astronauts to and from the moon.
The Apollo 9 was the first to test a lunar module in space. Apollo 10 tested the lunar module in lunar orbit.
Edwin Aldrin was the Lunar module pilot.
Of, or pertaining to the moon.
The lunar module of Apollo 11 was called Eagle.
The Apollo lunar module was heated electrically. from batteries and an electric fuel cell.
The Apollo spacecraft had two parts, the Command Module and the Lunar Module. The Lunar Module was designed to land on the moon, and to take off to lunar orbit, to a rendez-vous with the Command Module. So it was composed by two parts: the lander, and the ascender. The lander served as a base to the lauching of the ascender.
Yes, there is a Lunar Module at the Smithsonian, which never flew. No lunar modules which landed on the moon ever made it back to earth.