The fuel was liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen.
according to Boeing the Saturn V contained 5.6 million pounds of propellant (or 960,000 gallons).
The Saturn V rocket used a liquid fuel system, with a combination of liquid oxygen (LOX) and RP-1 (a refined form of kerosene) as its propellants for the first stage. This combination provided the necessary thrust to lift the massive rocket off the ground and into space.
No, the Saturn V rocket did not use solid fuel. It used liquid propellants in its first stage (RP-1 and liquid oxygen) and upper stages (liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen).
i do not know many people never know
Homer used moonshine as the fuel for his rocket.
it uses rocket fuel
according to Boeing the Saturn V contained 5.6 million pounds of propellant (or 960,000 gallons).
rocket fuel
It used liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen.
No, the Saturn V rocket did not use solid fuel. It used liquid propellants in its first stage (RP-1 and liquid oxygen) and upper stages (liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen).
The Saturn V rocket used a liquid fuel system, with a combination of liquid oxygen (LOX) and RP-1 (a refined form of kerosene) as its propellants for the first stage. This combination provided the necessary thrust to lift the massive rocket off the ground and into space.
i do not know many people never know
Homer used moonshine as the fuel for his rocket.
The amount of fuel a rocket carries can vary greatly depending on its size, purpose, and destination. For example, the Saturn V rocket used in the Apollo program carried over 3 million kilograms of fuel. Today's Falcon 9 rocket from SpaceX typically carries around 400,000 kilograms of fuel.
They use hydrogen
From the Saturn rocket booster. The word SATURN on the paperwork from the manufacturer use the same typestyle as NASA.
The space shuttle is a reusable vehicle. With the Saturn V and other rockets, the stages are just fuel containers, and only a small part of the entire rocket (the crew module) ever came back to Earth, and even that couldn't be used again. The shuttle has the orbiter's engines with a single-use fuel tank and two recoverable solid-fuel boosters. The orbiter returns and lands on Earth, and the solid-fuel boosters are recovered from the ocean and refilled.