There was no crew on Apollo 4. It was an unmanned test flight, and the first flight of the Saturn V booster rocket.
The Apollo missions had different crew sizes, with the majority of missions having a crew of three astronauts. However, the first two Apollo missions (Apollo 7 and Apollo 9) were crewed by three astronauts, while Apollo 8 and Apollo 10 had crews of four. Apollo 11, which famously landed on the moon, had a crew of three.
Apollo 3 was a test flight and therefore had no crew.
Jim Lovell's crew was originally scheduled for Apollo 14, but due to medical reasons, the original Apollo 13 crew had to be replaced. Lovell and his crew were then re-assigned to Apollo 13.
Alan Shepard and his crew was supposed to fly Apollo 13, but he got an ear infection close to the launch, so the crew of Apollo 14 were moved up a place allowing Alan Shepard to fly Apollo 14. The reason the whole crew switched was because they trained with each other and were put together to compliment each others skills.
Jim Lovell and his crew were bumped up from Apollo 14 to Apollo 13 after the original crew of Apollo 13 was exposed to measles. Lovell's crew was already in training and considered the backup crew, making them the natural choice to take over the mission.
Apollo 4 was a test flight of the Saturn V/Apollo spacecraft. There was no crew.
Apollo 4 was a test flight that did not have a crew. It launced November 9, 1967.
The Apollo missions had different crew sizes, with the majority of missions having a crew of three astronauts. However, the first two Apollo missions (Apollo 7 and Apollo 9) were crewed by three astronauts, while Apollo 8 and Apollo 10 had crews of four. Apollo 11, which famously landed on the moon, had a crew of three.
Apollo 3 was a test flight and therefore had no crew.
Jim Lovell's crew was originally scheduled for Apollo 14, but due to medical reasons, the original Apollo 13 crew had to be replaced. Lovell and his crew were then re-assigned to Apollo 13.
Alan Shepard and his crew was supposed to fly Apollo 13, but he got an ear infection close to the launch, so the crew of Apollo 14 were moved up a place allowing Alan Shepard to fly Apollo 14. The reason the whole crew switched was because they trained with each other and were put together to compliment each others skills.
Jim Lovell and his crew were bumped up from Apollo 14 to Apollo 13 after the original crew of Apollo 13 was exposed to measles. Lovell's crew was already in training and considered the backup crew, making them the natural choice to take over the mission.
The Apollo 1 crew consisted of Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee
what did the Apollo 13 do after there trip to the moon
Yes, two of the Apollo 13 crew members flew on other missions. Jim Lovell later commanded Apollo 16, and Fred Haise flew on the Apollo 19 mission, which was ultimately canceled, but he also participated in the Space Shuttle program. Ken Mattingly, the third crew member, flew on Apollo 16 and later commanded the STS-4 Space Shuttle mission.
The original Apollo 13 crew had to be replaced due to health concerns. Ken Mattingly was removed from the flight because he was exposed to German measles, and Jack Swigert took his place. Alan Shepard, Edgar Mitchell, and Stuart Roosa were then assigned as the new Apollo 14 crew.
Apollo 13