April 11, 1970.
no it was not.
it made us feel sad
As of now, the best-known and most historically important US space program would be the Apollo missions, from 1967 to 1972. Collectively, they produced the following milestones:The first manned orbit of the moon. (Apollo 10)The first men on the moon. (Apollo 11)The first manned vehicle on the moon. (Apollo 15)The last men on the moon to date. (Apollo 17)The most famous space disaster with a happy ending. (Apollo 13)What at the time was the most famous space-related disaster with a tragic ending. (Apollo 1, since superseded by the Challenger and Columbia space shuttle disasters)
I think his settlement date with the philliines was 1505-13
May 13, 1607.
Apollo 13 was launched on April 11, 1970.
The Apollo 13 mission experienced an explosion during takeoff in 1970. An oxygen tank in the service module ruptured, causing the explosion that led to a critical situation for the crew. Thankfully, the astronauts were able to safely return to Earth after a challenging series of events.
The launch date for the Apollo 13 mission was April 11th 1970 at 13:13 eastern time.
The Apollo 13 splashed down in earth , in the Pacific on 17/4/1970.
"Apollo 13 was the seventh manned mission in the American Apollo space program and the third intended to land on the Moon. The craft was launched on April 11, 1970, at 13:13 CST" -- Wikipedia
The oxygen tank exploded two hours after takeoff. They could not fix it.
April 11, 1970 at 13:13
Apollo 13 was unlucky one ,the date was also 13 and time was 13 minutes.
Apollo 13 did not crash. The mission experienced an oxygen tank explosion on April 13, 1970 that led to the mission being aborted. The crew was able to safely return to Earth on April 17, 1970.
yes there was a Apollo 13 , it followed Apollo 12.
There were no spacecraft named Apollo 2 or 3 Sometimes one of the unmanned test missions is erroneously called Apollo 3. This was the AS202 mission which tested the command and service modules in suborbital flight. This was launched on August 26th 1966.
Launch: April 11, 1970 Splashdown: April 17, 1970