That's a hard number to state with any real accuracy. The first three missions took place on foot, making the walked distance slightly easier to chart, but the final three had LRV's, so while they certainly did walk quite a bit, the distance was not captured or recorded.
the following distances were taken from NASA's history website (see Related Links below)
A-11: 1km (3,300 ft)
A-12: 2.3 km (7600 ft)
A-14: 4 km (13,100 ft)
A-15 [LRV]: 27.9km (15.1 nautical mi)
A-16 [LRV]: 26.9km (14.5 nautical mi)
A-17 [LRV]: 35.7km (19.3 nautical mi)
Total walking distance: 7.3km (4.5 statute mi)
Total driving distance: 90.5km (56.2 statute mi)
Total combined traverse distance: 97.8km (60.7 statute mi)
Nope, in fact no astronauts have gone to the moon since December, 1972. These days astronauts never get further than 150 or so miles above the Earth's surface.
astronauts leave earth by the liftoff of the space shuttle and rockets, it is called force of the rocket. The engine starts and liquid fuel comes out of the rocket and pushes them up.
The lunar module that carried Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the surface of the moon and back to the command module was called 'Eagle". The command module that remained in orbit around the moon and eventually carried all three astronauts back to earth was called "Columbia".
At what altitude does the Earth's gravity no longer have an effect on the astronauts or the space shuttle?
They use parachutes on their module to slow down and then land safely in the water to be fished out later.
All the astronauts used by N.A.s.A have walked on the surface of the earth.
The Eagle landing module was abandoned in the moons orbit after the astronauts returned to the Columbia command module. When the Columbia and crew returne dto Earth the Eagle crashed back to the the moons surface. The Columbia module is in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC.
After the Lunar Module "Eagle" separated from the Lunar Module, it remained in lunar orbit while the astronauts aboard "Columbia" prepared for their return to Earth. The "Eagle" was intentionally left in lunar orbit and eventually crashed onto the moon's surface. Its final resting place is now part of the lunar landscape, serving as a historical artifact of the Apollo 11 mission. Meanwhile, "Columbia" successfully returned the astronauts to Earth on July 24, 1969.
It was called the Eagle, after the Jules Verne novel. From the earth to the moon.
Because the gravity of the moon is only 1/3 of that on Earth.
Oh but it does affect astronauts on its surface. When Apollo astronauts traveled tothe moon and worked there, they landed, stood, hopped, walked, kneeled, drove, andset their tools on the surface. None of that would have been possible without thefamiliar effects of gravity, albeit 84 percent weaker than on earth.
Nope, in fact no astronauts have gone to the moon since December, 1972. These days astronauts never get further than 150 or so miles above the Earth's surface.
During the Apollo moon missions, astronauts lived and worked in the Apollo Command Module while traveling to and from the moon. Once in lunar orbit, they transferred to the Lunar Module to descend to the lunar surface. While on the moon, astronauts explored the surface on foot and conducted experiments before returning to the Command Module for the journey back to Earth.
The Eagle was the lunar module that carried astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin to the surface of the moon during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969. It was part of NASA's Apollo program that aimed to land humans on the moon and bring them back safely to Earth.
During the Apollo 11 landing, the lunar module "Eagle" separated from the command module, with astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin onboard. Armstrong piloted the lunar module to a safe landing on the Moon's surface on July 20, 1969. Armstrong then famously radioed back to Earth, "The Eagle has landed."
The astronauts in the space shuttle experience less centripetal acceleration compared to a person standing on the surface of the Earth. This is because the centripetal acceleration experienced depends on the speed of rotation and radius of the orbit, which are greater on the surface of the Earth than in space.
Apollo 11 landed on the moon on July 20, 1969 using the Lunar Module named "Eagle." Astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin piloted the Lunar Module down to the surface while Michael Collins remained in orbit in the Command Module. Armstrong famously uttered the words "The Eagle has landed" upon a successful landing.