Apollo 11 was a mission, Saturn V was a rocket. The Apollo 11 mission was the first Apollo mission to land man on the moon, it use a Saturn V rocket to take off from earth and get in to orbit.
The type of rocket that launced Apollo 11 into space is the same type of rocket that was used for all Apollo launchings. The Saturn V (five) multistage rocket was used.
Cape Canaveral, Florida, launch pad 39-A aboard the Saturn V on July 16, 1969.
The Saturn V rocket was used to carry astronauts to the moon during the Apollo missions. This rocket remains the largest and most powerful rocket ever built and was essential for launching the spacecraft from Earth's surface to lunar orbit.
The mammoth Saturn V 3-stage liquid fueled Lunar Launch Vehicle was responsible for the successful launch of all of the Apollo spacecraft (except of course Apollo 1, destroyed by fire on the launch pad during testing). The Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida, was specifically designed and built to assemble and service the Saturn V. When being rolled out on the crawler to the launch pad, the tip of the nose cone cleared the top of the doorway by only 6'. With the Apollo spacecraft aboard, the Saturn V was 363' tall and 33' wide, and weighed 6,699,000 lbs. It was just 1 foot shorter than St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
Apollo 11 was a mission, Saturn V was a rocket. The Apollo 11 mission was the first Apollo mission to land man on the moon, it use a Saturn V rocket to take off from earth and get in to orbit.
Saturn V was a type of rocket used by NASA in the Apollo and Skylab programs in the 1960s and 1970s. It remains the most powerful rocket ever built, known for its ability to propel astronauts to the Moon.
The type of rocket that launced Apollo 11 into space is the same type of rocket that was used for all Apollo launchings. The Saturn V (five) multistage rocket was used.
The Apollo moon missions used Saturn-5 rockets.
Cape Canaveral, Florida, launch pad 39-A aboard the Saturn V on July 16, 1969.
The Saturn V rocket was used to carry astronauts to the moon during the Apollo missions. This rocket remains the largest and most powerful rocket ever built and was essential for launching the spacecraft from Earth's surface to lunar orbit.
The mammoth Saturn V 3-stage liquid fueled Lunar Launch Vehicle was responsible for the successful launch of all of the Apollo spacecraft (except of course Apollo 1, destroyed by fire on the launch pad during testing). The Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral, Florida, was specifically designed and built to assemble and service the Saturn V. When being rolled out on the crawler to the launch pad, the tip of the nose cone cleared the top of the doorway by only 6'. With the Apollo spacecraft aboard, the Saturn V was 363' tall and 33' wide, and weighed 6,699,000 lbs. It was just 1 foot shorter than St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
The Saturn V
Saturn 5
It depends on the size and type of the rocket. Some rockets like the SpaceX Crew Dragon can carry up to 7 astronauts, while others like the NASA Space Launch System can carry up to 4 astronauts for deep space missions.
The same rocket design that launched Apollo 2-17. Apollo 1 was just a unfueled test for the astronauts. (The command module caught on fire, perishing the men.) The name of the rocket is Saturn V. If you go to any search engine, go to images and type in, Saturn V. You will see many pictures of it. It was a rather simple rocket.
If you are talking about rocket salad or arugula, yes it is a type of food plant.If you are talking about the rockets used to launch spacecraft or nuclear warheads, no these are machines.