As of this writing, NASA has only three (3) working SPACESHIPS (as opposed to total number of SPACECRAFT owned or operating), the space shuttle orbiter vehicles, OV-103 Discovery, OV-104 Atlantis and OV-105 Endeavor.
However, NASA has previously announced its plan to "mothball" the costly space shuttle fleet following the STS-133 shuttle mission to deliver supplies to the International Space Station. The shuttle Discovery is slated to blast off in September 2010 on the eight-day trek that - if NASA's current plan holds - will mark the end of the shuttle era after 29 years of spaceflight.
NASA's lower-cost replacement for the space shuttle fleet has been dubbed Project Constellation.
NASA sends out spaceships to various destinations in the solar system, including the International Space Station, the Moon, Mars, and beyond. They also launch robotic missions to study other planets, asteroids, and comets.
NASA spaceships typically launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This location was chosen for its proximity to the equator, which provides the spacecraft with an extra boost from Earth's rotation to help reach orbit.
Sending robot spaceships to the moon was known as the Surveyor program. They sent seven robotic spaceships to the surface of the moon from June 1968 to January 1968. The primary purpose was to demonstrate the feasibility of soft landings on the moon.
The space shuttles were owned by NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration), a government agency in the United States. The space shuttle program was managed and operated by NASA for space missions and exploration.
The plural form of the noun 'spaceship' is spaceships.
spaceships that went to the moon
NASA's program produced 134?æspace shuttles. Out of all of the shuttles only two crashed. NASA had a 98.7% success rate.?æ
Discovery, Atlantis, & Endeavour are the remaining NASA Shuttles. Russian Spaceships - Soyuz, Progress
NASA sends out spaceships to various destinations in the solar system, including the International Space Station, the Moon, Mars, and beyond. They also launch robotic missions to study other planets, asteroids, and comets.
NASA spaceships typically launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This location was chosen for its proximity to the equator, which provides the spacecraft with an extra boost from Earth's rotation to help reach orbit.
Well, a lot of spaceships were named for Apollo. (Apollo 13, 11, etc.)
Yes, NASA owns all the successful Mars rovers.
He flew the X-15 for NACA, and later, with NASA, he flew Gemini 8 and Apollo 11.
it's under the american governments control
Sending robot spaceships to the moon was known as the Surveyor program. They sent seven robotic spaceships to the surface of the moon from June 1968 to January 1968. The primary purpose was to demonstrate the feasibility of soft landings on the moon.
Zero.
2.