Apollo 18 is a fictional movie, nothing more or less. There was never anything to hide, as there wasn't any mission.
While it may be easy enough to hide any given space mission, it's impossible to hide the launch of a vehicle as large as the Saturn V rocket, which helped carry and propel the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon on all its missions.
The US Space Station is Apollo/Nasa..
NASA has made all the Apollo information available.
Apollo 18 never flew. The Apollo program was originally scheduled for missions up through Apollo 20, but the last three missions were cancelled due to budget cuts, making Apollo 17 the final mission.
The US National Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA)
because your mom
Apollo 18 was a planned mission in NASA's Apollo program, however it was ultimately canceled due to budget constraints and a shift in focus towards the Skylab and Apollo-Soyuz Test Project missions. There is no evidence to suggest that Apollo 18 secretly went ahead as a classified mission or encountered supernatural events as portrayed in the 2011 mockumentary film "Apollo 18".
"Apollo 18" is a science fiction film released in 2011, which presents a fictional narrative that suggests a secret moon mission. The premise of the movie is that the mission was hidden from the public due to the discovery of extraterrestrial life. In reality, Apollo 18 was never a sanctioned mission; the Apollo program ended with Apollo 17 in 1972, and the film's storyline is purely a creative work rather than a reflection of actual events.
No country besides the US has successfully put a man on the moon. The only manned missions to the moon were conducted by NASA's Apollo program.
Yes, all Apollo missions were conducted by NASA in the US.
The last Apollo Missions (Sky Lab) were in the early to mid 1970's. Richard Nixon was president when the Apollo Program was cancelled, so he played a prominent role. The US/NASA began development of the STS (Space Shuttle) shortly afterwards.
The rocket that took humans to the moon was called Saturn V. It was used by NASA's Apollo program for the lunar missions in the 1960s and 1970s.
As of 2021, NASA's total budget since Apollo 13 is estimated to be over $800 billion. This amount includes funding for various space missions, research programs, and infrastructure development. NASA continues to receive funding from the US government to support its exploration efforts and scientific missions.