NO!! EECOM is an acronym for "Electrical, Environmental Consumables Manager. In the case of Apollo 13, that would be Sy Liebergot. The EECOM is one of the controllers in Mission Control who feed mission critical information to the Flight Director, who is in charge of the mission. In the case of Apollo 13, the EECOM was critical in the successful return of the crew. He was able to stretch 2 days worth of oxygen and 2 hours worth of battery power into 4 days.
No, Apollo 1 was not the first Apollo mission. The first manned Apollo mission was Apollo 7, which launched on October 11, 1968. Apollo 1 was initially designated AS-204 and was scheduled to be the first manned mission, but a cabin fire during a pre-launch test on January 27, 1967, resulted in the loss of the crew.
The average Apollo mission cost about $500,000,000, however, Apollo 1 was much cheaper since it didn't launch. It burned a month before the scheduled launch, killing the crew.
Apollo 11 landed there in 1969, but other Apollo missions orbited it before that. Apollo 8 was the first manned mission to the moon, and the astronauts participating orbited the moon but did not land on it.
No, there was no Apollo 1 mission. Apollo 1 was planned to be the first crewed mission in the Apollo program, but a tragic accident during a pre-launch test on January 27, 1967, resulted in the loss of the crew: Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee.
Apollo 1 and its crew were destroyed in a fire while still on the pad weeks before the mission was scheduled to launch. While there were changes in NASA brought about by this tragedy, there were technically no mission accomplishments as the mission never took place.
No, Apollo 1 was not the first Apollo mission. The first manned Apollo mission was Apollo 7, which launched on October 11, 1968. Apollo 1 was initially designated AS-204 and was scheduled to be the first manned mission, but a cabin fire during a pre-launch test on January 27, 1967, resulted in the loss of the crew.
The average Apollo mission cost about $500,000,000, however, Apollo 1 was much cheaper since it didn't launch. It burned a month before the scheduled launch, killing the crew.
Apollo 1 was the name of the first mission of NASA's Apollo program. The mission ended when the command module and the crew were destroyed in a fire during a routine test weeks before launch.
Apollo 11 landed there in 1969, but other Apollo missions orbited it before that. Apollo 8 was the first manned mission to the moon, and the astronauts participating orbited the moon but did not land on it.
The question is not clear. is it Apollo 9 and 10. Or are you referring to the Mercury and Gemini mission.
No, there was no Apollo 1 mission. Apollo 1 was planned to be the first crewed mission in the Apollo program, but a tragic accident during a pre-launch test on January 27, 1967, resulted in the loss of the crew: Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee.
Apollo 1 was a mission that failed before it even began. The spacecraft and her crew were destroyed by fire while on the launchpad weeks before the vehicle was scheduled for launch.
There was no real Apollo 5 mission. All flights before Apollo 7 were unmanned equipment test flights that never left Earth orbit.
It was Apollo 8 on their mission to be the first men to orbit the moon . It was a reading from the bible Genesis chapter 1 verse 1. It was read just before Apollo 8 went to the back side of the moon.
Apollo 1 and its crew were destroyed in a fire while still on the pad weeks before the mission was scheduled to launch. While there were changes in NASA brought about by this tragedy, there were technically no mission accomplishments as the mission never took place.
The last mission to the moon was Apollo 17, which landed on the lunar surface in December 1972. This mission was the sixth and final crewed lunar landing of the Apollo program, and the astronauts conducted a series of experiments and explorations during their stay on the moon before returning to Earth.
AS-203 (informally called Apollo 2) was an unmanned mission on July 21, 1966 to test aspects of the Saturn V rocket. Officially, there is no Apollo 2. NASA administrators were not sure they wanted to continue with the Apollo name after the Apollo 1 tragedy. Before they made a decision there were two unmanned test flights, officially named AS-203 and AS-202