Question:
Was it Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, Rory Emerald, or Michael Collins who stepped foot on the moon first?
snowy dragon
2006-06-17 22:43:05 UTC
How many astronauts flew to the moon on Apollo 11? What can you tell me about this extraordinary moon landing? Was it a hoax like some folks speculate?
Fourteen answers:
2006-06-19 11:20:17 UTC
In July of 1969, Armstrong of Apollo 11 was the first man to set foot on the moon. Aldrin and Collins were fellow astronauts on the historic flight. Rory Emerald, the well known celebrity, had always wanted to be an astronaut. If it wasn’t for severe problems with flatulence and incontinence, he may well have been the first man on the moon. He was highly regarded by both NASA and the US Air force, and his ability to withstand punishment made him an ideal candidate. His discharge from the Space Program was reluctantly made, as his flatulence made him a “high risk” space traveler. Rory Emerald took the discharge badly, and for years was bitter about the whole space program, speaking out against it on many occasions. When Armstrong and Aldrin received special medals from the President, Rory Emerald was violently discharged from the proceedings for “mooning” all the delegates, which he felt was the ultimate ironic statement. His untimely flatulence while in the act of mooning was met with disgust by several attendees of the festivities.



Later, while Rory Emerald worked for Fox TV Network, he produced the highly watched television event, “Man on the Moon?” which attempted to prove that the moon landing was a giant hoax. It had a lot of telling footage, most of it generated by Rory Emerald himself. He has since produced the best selling non-fiction work entitled “Man on the Moon – NOT!!!!”.
campbelp2002
2006-06-18 10:13:27 UTC
Three Astronauts flew on Apollo 11, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. While Collins stayed in orbit in the command module, Armstrong and Aldrin landed in the lunar module, becoming the first people to walk on the Moon. Armstrong was the first to step out of the lunar module so he gets all the press, but personally I think Aldrin was more worthy of the honor, given how Armstrong has kept to himself and Aldrin has been an active advocate for space exploration ever since.



After that, Apollos 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 took eighteen more men to the Moon, ten of whom walked on the surface (Apollo 13 did not land due to a mechanical failure which was portrayed very accurately in the movie "Apollo 13"). Read all about it in the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal.
visheshonthenet
2006-06-17 23:04:06 UTC
have u seen photographs of niel armstrong on the moon ???????

Then u wud have noticed ......





There are no stars in the background from pictures taken on the Moon.



Issue 4 :







In some images, a huge light source can be seen reflected in the astronaut's visors. This has to be a very bright, nearby source. There is no possibility of external light source in moon.

- How could NASA take TV images of the LM ascending on Apollo 15, 16, and 17 if there was no one on the Lunar surface to man the camera?





ISSUE 6 - There can't be any pictures taken on the Moon because the film would melt in the 250� temperatures. Any film exposed to 250� would indeed melt at that temperature.

Issue-7 : The LM engine was very powerful. How come it did not leave a crater below the spacecraft? Why didn't it kick up any dust when it landed?





issue 8: The footprints left by the astronauts are proof that the Moon landings are fake.

This one is also essentially a two pronged argument. First, the Fox show charged that the LM engine was so powerful that the upper layer of dust should have been blown away around the LM, so there should not be any footprints. Others have charged that the footprints should not be there since in the absence of water as a bonding agent, they should not maintain coherent shapes and sharp outlines.







issue 9: There is no dust on LM footpads. -- According to Kaysing and Fox, this is the strongest evidence that the Moon landings are faked. They allege that with the swirling dust from LM descent engine, the foot pads should be covered with dust.









issue 11 :



The pictures below show that flags are waving. And they never will. The flag was on the airless Moon, just as we all knew.



















THERE ARE MANY MORE ISSUES ON THIS,

BUT

THOSE ARE TOO TECHNICAL FOR US.



�..NEIL ARMSTRONG WAS NOT THE FIRST PERSON TO LAND ON MOON
eagle1uset
2006-06-18 12:00:24 UTC
Neil Armstrong was The First Man to set foot on the Moon, Buzz Aldrin & Michael Collins were the 2 other members of the Apollo11 Crew that made the first Lunar Landing on July 20th 1969 Rory Emerald was NOT part of that crew.
quntmphys238
2006-06-17 23:56:21 UTC
Armstrong was the first one out of the lunar lander. Buzz Aldrin went with him and was second, while Michael Collins got stuck orbiting the moon in the command module waiting for them to come up from the surface and all go home.



To refute the idiotic notions that some people have that no one ever went to the moon:

... There is no possibility of external light source in moon. --

-What about that thing we have called the Sun?!?!? Yeah it's huge too relative to the moon or earth.

...How could NASA take TV images of the LM ascending on Apollo 15, 16, and 17 if there was no one on the Lunar surface to man the camera?

-How can anyone ever take pictures without being behind the camera...never happens oh wait yeah it can with timers and programming.

...There can't be any pictures taken on the Moon because the film would melt in the 250� temperatures.

- Even cameras can be insulated just like most equipment was.

...Why didn't it kick up any dust when it landed?

-Gee, remember the radio transmissions: "...drifting a little...kicking up some dust...Tranquility base here... the eagle has landed.

...the footprints left by the astronauts are proof that the Moon landings are fake.

-Um what? I remember walking in the desert and leaving footprints in all sorts of sand from grit to baby powder consistency. No water, but still footprints.

...There is no dust on LM footpads. -- According to Kaysing and Fox, this is the strongest evidence that the Moon landings are faked. They allege that with the swirling dust from LM descent engine, the foot pads should be covered with dust.

--How the heck is dust going to swirl without air to swirln in?

...The pictures below show that flags are waving. And they never will.

-No video shows an untouched flag "waving" . The flags used had a rod through the top to keep the canvas spread out. Everytime an astronaut touched it, it sent vibrations through the metal shaking the whole thing.



YES People HAVE been to the moon and Armstrong was the first one to walk on its surface.
2016-05-20 03:53:44 UTC
The Apollo 11 mission was the first manned mission to land on the Moon. It was the fifth human spaceflight of Project Apollo and the third human voyage to the Moon. It was also the second all-veteran crew in manned spaceflight history. Launched on July 16, 1969, it carried Commander Neil Alden Armstrong, Command Module Pilot Michael Collins and Lunar Module Pilot Edwin Eugene 'Buzz' Aldrin, Jr. On July 20, Armstrong and Aldrin became the first humans to land on the Moon, while Collins orbited above. The mission fulfilled President John F. Kennedy's goal of reaching the moon by the end of the 1960s, which he expressed during a speech given before a joint session of Congress on May 25, 1961: "I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth."
Bru
2006-06-18 07:00:29 UTC
Buzz Aldrin was supposed to step on the moon first but his senior officer Neil Armstrong pulled rank and the rest as they say is history.
2006-06-17 22:48:59 UTC
if its a hoax can't be said but if it was true-

three people went up

1st neil armstrong then edwin aldrin stepped on moon and michaelcollins was orbiting the moon in the rocket
Dan Soschin
2006-06-17 22:45:38 UTC
Armstrong was first; there were three on apollo 11.
alohachief77
2006-06-17 22:47:30 UTC
Armstromg
nora
2006-06-18 02:54:53 UTC
its neil armstrong
scott s
2006-06-17 22:50:21 UTC
armstrong was--the whole one step thing remember?
2006-06-17 22:46:17 UTC
Neil was first...wikipedia is your friend.
mo-z
2006-06-17 22:47:54 UTC
Apollo 11

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Apollo 11 Mission insignia



Mission statistics[1]

Mission name Apollo 11

Call sign: Command module:

Columbia

Lunar module:

Eagle

Number of crew members: 3

Launch pad: Kennedy Space Center, Florida

LC 39A

Launch: July 16, 1969

13:32:00 UTC

Lunar landing: July 20, 1969

20:17:40 UTC

Sea of Tranquility

0° 40' 26.69" N,

23° 28' 22.69" E

(based on the IAU

Mean Earth Polar Axis

coordinate system)

Lunar EVA length: 2 h 31 min 40 s

Lunar surface time: 21 h 36 min 20 s

Lunar sample mass: 21.55 kg (47.5 lb)

Landing: July 24, 1969

16:50:35 UTC

13°19′N 169°9′W

Duration: 195 h 18 min 35 s

Time in lunar orbit: 59 h 30 min 25.79 s

Mass: CSM: 30,320 kg

LM: 16,448 kg

Crew photo



L-R: Armstrong, Collins, and Aldrin

Navigation

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Apollo 10 Apollo 12



Apollo 11 was the fifth human spaceflight of the Apollo program, the third human voyage to the moon, and the first manned mission to land on the Moon. It launched on July 16, 1969 carrying Commander Neil Armstrong, Command Module Pilot Michael Collins and Lunar Module Pilot Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin. On July 21, Armstrong and Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on the Moon, while Collins orbited above.



The mission fulfilled President John F. Kennedy's goal of "landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to the Earth" by the end of the 1960s.



Contents [show]

1 Crew

1.1 Backup crew

1.2 Support crew

2 Mission highlights

2.1 Launch and lunar landing

2.2 Lunar surface operations

2.3 Lunar ascent and return

3 Contingency television address

4 Gallery

5 Communications link

6 Mission insignia

7 Mission trivia and urban legends

7.1 Trivia

7.2 Folklore

8 See also

9 External links

10 References







[edit]

Crew

Neil Armstrong (flew in Gemini 8 & Apollo 11), commander

Michael Collins (flew in Gemini 10 & Apollo 11), command module pilot

Edwin 'Buzz' Aldrin (flew in Gemini 12 & Apollo 11), lunar module pilot

[edit]

Backup crew

James Lovell (flew in Gemini 7, Gemini 12, Apollo 8, Apollo 13), commander

Bill Anders (flew in Apollo 8), command module pilot

Fred Haise (flew in Apollo 13), lunar module pilot

[edit]

Support crew

Ron Evans (flew in Apollo 17)

Ken Mattingly (flew in Apollo 16, STS-4, STS-51-C)

Jack Swigert (flew in Apollo 13)

Bill Pogue (flew in Skylab 4)

[edit]

Mission highlights

[edit]

Launch and lunar landing

The Apollo 11 Saturn V launched from the Kennedy Space Center on July 16, 1969 at 13:32 UTC (9:32 A.M. local time) and entered Earth's orbit 12 minutes later.[1] After one and a half orbits, the S-IVB third-stage engine pushed the spacecraft onto its trajectory toward the Moon. About 30 minutes later, the command/service module pair separated from the last remaining Saturn V stage, turned around, and docked its nose to the top of the lunar module still nestled in the Lunar Module Adaptor.



Apollo 11 passed behind the Moon on July 19 and soon after fired its main rocket, entering lunar orbit. In the several orbits that followed, the crew got passing views of their landing site.



The first Apollo landing site (0.67408N,23.47297E), in the southern Sea of Tranquility about 20 km (12 mi) southwest of the crater Sabine D, was selected in part because it had been characterized as relatively flat and smooth by the automated Ranger 8 and Surveyor 5 landers, as well as by Lunar Orbiter mapping spacecraft, and therefore unlikely to present major landing or Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) challenges[citation needed]. Armstrong bestowed the name Tranquillity Base on the landing site immediately after touchdown.[2]





Buzz Aldrin bootprint. It was part of an experiment to test the properties of the lunar regolith.On July 20, 1969, while on the far side of the Moon, the lunar module, called Eagle, separated from the Command Module, named Columbia (Some internal NASA planning documents referred to the callsigns as Snowcone and Haystack; these were quietly changed before being announced to the press.[3]). Collins, now alone aboard Columbia, carefully inspected Eagle as it pirouetted before him. Soon after, Armstrong and Aldrin fired Eagle's engine and began their descent. They soon saw that they were "running long"; Eagle was 4 seconds further along its descent trajectory than planned, and would land miles west of the intended site. The LM navigation and guidance computer reported several unusual "program alarms" as it guided the LM's descent. These alarms tore the crew's attention away from the scene outside as the descent proceeded. In NASA's Mission Control Center in Houston, Texas, a young controller named Steve Bales told the flight director that it was safe to continue the descent in spite of the alarms. Once they returned their attention to the view outside, the astronauts saw that their computer was guiding them toward a landing site full of large rocks scattered around a large crater. Armstrong took manual control of the lunar module at that point, and guided it to a landing at 20:17 UTC on July 20 with about 15 seconds of fuel left.[2]





The Saturn V carrying Apollo 11 took several seconds to clear the tower on July 16, 1969.The program alarms were "executive overflows", indicating that the computer could not finish its work in the time allotted. The cause was later determined to be the LM rendezvous radar being left on during the descent, causing the computer to spend unplanned time servicing the unused radar.[4] Steve Bales received a Medal of Freedom for his "go" call under pressure. Although Apollo 11 landed with less fuel than other missions, they also encountered a premature low fuel warning. It was later found caused by the lunar gravity permitting greater propellant 'slosh', uncovering a fuel sensor; extra baffles in the tanks were subsequently added.[2]



Shortly after landing, before preparations began for the EVA, Aldrin broadcast that:



This is the LM pilot. I'd like to take this opportunity to ask every person listening in, whoever and wherever they may be, to pause for a moment and contemplate the events of the past few hours and to give thanks in his or her own way.[5]

He then took Holy Communion, privately. At this time, NASA was still fighting a lawsuit brought by Madalyn Murray O'Hair (who had objected to the Apollo 8 crew reading from the Book of Genesis), which demanded that their astronauts refrain from religious activities while in space. As such, Aldrin (an Episcopalian) chose to refrain from directly mentioning this. He had kept the plan quiet, not even mentioning it to his wife, and did not reveal it publicly for several years[citation needed].



[edit]

Lunar surface operations



Neil Armstrong takes his first step onto the MoonAt 2:56 UTC on July 21, six and a half hours after landing, Armstrong made his descent to the Moon surface and took his famous "one giant leap for mankind".[1] Aldrin joined him, and the two spent two-and-a-half hours drilling core samples, photographing what they saw and collecting rocks.



Buzz Aldrin steps onto the Moon (file info)

Problems viewing the video? See media help.

They planned placement of the Early Apollo Scientific Experiment Package (EASEP) and the U.S. flag by studying their landing site through Eagle's twin triangular windows, which gave them a 60° field of view. Preparation required longer than the two hours scheduled. Armstrong had some initial difficulties squeezing through the hatch with his PLSS. According to veteran moonwalker John Young, a redesign of the LM to incorporate a smaller hatch was not followed by a redesign of the PLSS backpack, so some of the highest heart rates recorded from Apollo astronauts occurred during LM egress and ingress.[citation needed]





Buzz Aldrin poses on the Moon allowing Neil Armstrong to photograph both of them using the visor's reflection.The Remote Control Unit controls on Armstrong's chest prevented him from seeing his feet. While climbing down the nine-rung ladder, Armstrong pulled a D-ring to deploy the Modular Equipment Stowage Assembly (MESA) folded against Eagle's side and activate the TV camera.[6] The first images used a Slow-scan television system and were picked up at Goldstone in the USA but with better fidelity by Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station in Australia. Minutes later the TV was switched to normal television, and the feed was switched to the more sensitive radio telescope station at the Parkes Observatory in Australia. Despite some technical and weather difficulties, ghostly black and white images of the first lunar EVA were received and were immediately broadcast to at least 600 million people on Earth[citation needed].



After describing the surface dust ("fine and powdery ... I only go in a small fraction of an inch, but I can see the footprints of my boots"[6]), Armstrong stepped off Eagle's footpad and into history as the first human to set foot on another world, famously describing it as "one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind." He reported that moving in the Moon's gravity, one-sixth of Earth's, was "even perhaps easier than the simulations ... It's absolutely no trouble to walk around".[6]



In addition to fulfilling President John F. Kennedy's mandate to land a man on the Moon before the end of the 1960s, Apollo 11 was an engineering test of the Apollo system; therefore, Armstrong snapped photos of the LM so engineers would be able to judge its post-landing condition. He then collected a contingency soil sample using a sample bag on a stick. He folded the bag and tucked it into a pocket on his right thigh. He removed the TV camera from the MESA, made a panoramic sweep, and mounted it on a tripod 12 m (40 ft) from the LM. The TV camera cable remained partly coiled and presented a tripping hazard throughout the EVA.





Photo of the actual plaque left on the moon (attached to the ladder of the LM Descent Stage).Aldrin joined him on the surface and tested methods for moving around, including two-footed kangaroo hops. The PLSS backpack created a tendency to tip backwards, but neither astronaut had serious problems maintaining balance. Loping became the preferred method of movement. The astronauts reported that they needed to plan their movements six or seven steps ahead. The fine soil was quite slippery. Aldrin remarked that moving from sunlight into Eagle's shadow produced no temperature change inside the suit, though the helmet was warmer in sunlight, so he felt cooler in shadow.[6]





A visible shockwave formed as the Saturn V encountered Maximum Dynamic Pressure (Max Q) at about 1 minute 20 seconds into the flight (altitude 12.5 km, 4 km downrange, velocity 440 m/s).Together the astronauts planted the U.S. flag, then took a phone call from President Richard Nixon.



The MESA failed to provide a stable work platform and was in shadow, slowing work somewhat. As they worked, the moonwalkers kicked up gray dust which soiled the outer part of their suits, the integrated thermal meteoroid garment.



They deployed the EASEP, which included a passive seismograph and a laser ranging retroreflector. Then Armstrong loped about 120 m (400 ft) from the LM to snap photos at the rim of East Crater while Aldrin collected two core tubes. He used the geological hammer to pound in the tubes - the only time the hammer was used on Apollo 11. The astronauts then collected rock samples using scoops and tongs on extension handles. Many of the surface activities took longer than expected, so they had to stop documented sample collection halfway through the allotted 34 min.





Neil Armstrong works at the LM in one of the few photos taken of him from the lunar surface. NASA photo as 11-40-5886During this period Mission Control used a coded phrase to warn Armstrong that his metabolic rates were high and that he should slow down. He was moving rapidly from task to task as time ran out. Rates remained generally lower than expected for both astronauts throughout the walk, however, so Mission Control granted the astronauts a 15-minute extension.[7]



[edit]

Lunar ascent and return

Aldrin entered Eagle first. With some difficulty the astronauts lifted film and two sample boxes containing more than 22 kg (48 lb) of lunar surface material to the LM hatch using a flat cable pulley device called the Lunar Equipment Conveyor. Armstrong then jumped to the ladder's third rung and climbed into the LM. After transferring to LM life support, the explorers lightened the ascent stage for return to lunar orbit by tossing out their PLSS backpacks, lunar overshoes, one Hasselblad camera, and other equipment. They then repressurised the LM, and settled down to sleep.[8]



While moving in the cabin Aldrin accidentally broke the circuit breaker that armed the main engine for lift off from the moon. There was initial concern this would prevent firing the engine, which would strand them on the moon. Fortunately a felt-tip pen was sufficient to activate the switch.[8] Had this not worked, the Lunar Module circuitry could have been reconfigured to allow firing the ascent engine.[9]



After about seven hours of rest, they were awoken by Houston to prepare for the return flight. Two and a half hours later, at 17:54 UTC, they lifted off in Eagle's ascent stage, carrying 21.5 kilograms of lunar samples with them, to rejoin CMP Michael Collins aboard Columbia in lunar orbit.[1]



After more than 2½ hours on the lunar surface, they had left behind scientific instruments such as a retroreflector array used for the Lunar Laser Ranging Experiment. They also left an American flag and a plaque (mounted on the LM Descent Stage ladder) bearing two drawings of Earth (of the Western and Eastern Hemispheres), an inscription, and signatures of the astronauts and Richard Nixon. The inscription read Here Men From Planet Earth First Set Foot Upon the Moon, July 1969 A.D. We Came in Peace For All Mankind.



After rendezvous with Columbia, Eagle was jettisoned and left in lunar orbit. Later NASA reports mentioned that Eagle's orbit had decayed resulting in it impacting in an "uncertain location" on the lunar surface.[citation needed]



The astronauts returned to earth on July 24, welcomed as heroes. The splashdown point was 13°19′N 169°9′W, 2,660 km (1,440 nm) east of Wake Island, or 380 km (210 nm) south of Johnston Atoll, and 24 km (15 mi) from the recovery ship, USS Hornet. President Nixon was aboard the vessel to welcome the astronauts as they entered a trailer which would serve as a quarantine facility. They had been picked up after an hour afloat.[1]



The command module is displayed at the National Air and Space Museum, Washington, D.C.



The three Apollo 11 astronauts would later be welcomed by the American public on August 13, 1969, in triumphant parades through New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles on the same day. That evening in Los Angeles there was an official State Dinner to celebrate Apollo 11, attended by Members of Congress, 44 Governors, the Chief Justice, and ambassadors from 83 nations. President Nixon and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew honored each astronaut with a presentation of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. This celebration was the beginning of a 45-day "Giant Leap" tour that brought the astronauts to 25 foreign countries and included visits with prominent leaders such as Queen Elizabeth II of Great Britain. Many nations would honor the first moon landing by issuing Apollo 11 commemorative postage stamps or coins.



[edit]

Contingency television address

The National Archives in Washington, D.C. has a copy of a contingency memo titled "In Event of Moon Disaster" and dated July 18, 1969, which was prepared by William Safire for President Nixon to read on television, in the event the Apollo 11 astronauts were stranded on the Moon. Following this address, radio communications with the moon would have been cut off, the astronauts left alone to die, while a clergyman was to commend their souls to "the deepest of the deep" in the fashion of a burial at sea.[10]



[edit]

Gallery



Aldrin stands next to the Passive Seismic Experiment Package with the Lunar Module in the background.



Aldrin inspects the LM landing gear.



Aldrin unpacks experiments from the LM.



Aldrin with the U.S. flag





Panoramic Assembly of East Crater



Panoramic Assembly showing Neil Armstrong



Armstrong on lunar surface with gold visor raised. From 16 mm film (NASA).



The crew of Apollo 11 in quarantine after returning to earth, visited by Richard Nixon.



[edit]

Communications link

Early in the planning of Project Apollo, NASA decided to combine all communications between spacecraft and Earth into a single multiplexed feed called 'The Unified S-Band System', including audio communications, television images, crew medical telemetry and the spacecraft systems telemetry.



The signal was picked up by three purpose-built stations, Goldstone (California), Honeysuckle Creek (Australia) and Fresnedillas (Spain), and backed-up by deep space network stations (known as 'wing stations') in Australia, Spain and the United States. At first, the signal was routed to Greenbelt, Maryland, by way of submarine telephone cables, using twelve voice circuits. The signal was divided into twelve parts using inverse multiplexing, sent onto the circuits, and reintegrated in Maryland, before being sent on to NASA in Houston.



Intelsat satellites began taking over the trans-oceanic transmissions toward the end of the 1960s, and NASA ended its contracts for the submarine telephone circuits, which were then reallocated by telephone administrations for normal voice use.



On 14 July 1969, the Intelsat satellite over the Atlantic failed. A replacement was launched on 16 July, but went into a useless orbit and would not be reoriented in time to be used. The Early Bird satellite was activated, but there were concerns that it might not have enough power to get a signal to the United States. The Australia station was vital to picking up the signal during the moonwalks, or keeping the astronauts waiting on the moon eight hours before venturing out. A communications team was dispatched to Spain to begin setting up the telephone circuits for NASA's inverse multiplexed signal.



European telecommunications administrators, mostly government post offices, were not accustomed to doing the business required: they would normally require telegram messages to be exchanged, with top level administrative approval, but the twelve circuits had to be recovered from six countries to be made available to NASA, which had set a time limit two hours before launch, or the launch would be canceled. Other launch windows had been missed due to spacecraft equipment problems. An official with the Spanish communications authority helped the team secure the circuits with his own personal list of contacts.



The last circuit using inverse multiplexing was accepted by NASA just minutes before the time limit. Three days later, the transmissions from the Moon were picked up in Spain, relayed to the United States over the undersea circuits, and made available by NASA to the Americas. They were beamed across the Pacific Ocean, and from the Far East were carried on the Indian Ocean satellite.



The postal/telephone authority in West Germany turned a large radio dish to aim at the Indian Ocean satellite, picking up the signal from Australia and providing it to Western Europe, therefore, viewers in Western Europe saw Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon a full half second later than those in the United States, and some 1.8 seconds after it actually happened.



Had this vital communications link not been restored, the pledge of President John F. Kennedy to land a man on the moon by the end of the decade would have been missed.



[edit]

Mission insignia

The familiar patch of Apollo 11 was designed by Collins, who wanted a symbol for "peaceful lunar landing by the United States". He picked an eagle as the symbol, put an olive branch in its beak, and drew a moon background with the earth in the distance. (Collins drew the light shining on the earth from the wrong direction; it would have shone from the top of the patch.) NASA officials said the talons of the eagle looked too "warlike" and after some discussion, the olive branch was moved to the claws. The crew decided the Roman numeral XI would not be understood in some nations and went with Apollo 11; they


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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