it was launched in 1958
The Saturn V rocket was designed by Wernher von Braun and his team of engineers at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. Von Braun is often credited as the chief architect of the Saturn V rocket, which was crucial for the success of the Apollo missions to the Moon.
—the Saturn v had two stages both parts would burn its engines until the fuel ran out then it would come off the rocket
No, we cannot rebuild Saturn V rocket today. There are many reasons to support it too.Reason no. 1 Eventhough, the parts of Saturn V were well documented, some of the companies that made the parts have either closed down or stopped producing the parts.Reason no. 2 We can easily say that the parts that were used at the time were less advanced than what we have today. We easily have better technology today than good old 1960's:)Reason no.3 Lastly, more advanced missions have started as mission Artemis. Private companies as Spacex and the governments NASA have started to make advanced rockets than Saturn V.
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.
None! NASA decomissioned Saturn V years ago - see: "How many humours are there in the human body?"
zero
Yes. Saturn 5, V or Five was the rocket that sent man to the Moon. The V is the Roman numeral for 5.
It was the fifth rocket in the Saturn-class, named after the planet Saturn, or the Mythological god Saturn.
No part of the Saturn V rocket was reusable.
The Saturn 5 was used from Apollo 8 to Apollo 17, so there were ten Apollo missions with the Saturn .
My 2002 Saturn 3.0 L, v 6 takes 5 quarts.
The Saturn V rocket was 363 feet (111 meters) tall.
The Saturn V rocket was first launched on November 9, 1967.
5 Million Newtons was the pressure exerted by Saturn v rocket
Just one, used to launch Skylab
The Saturn V rocket did not land on the moon itself, but it was the launch vehicle that carried the Apollo spacecraft to the moon. The Apollo spacecraft then separated from the Saturn V rocket and landed on the moon during the Apollo missions. The first successful manned moon landing was Apollo 11 in 1969.