The Apollo missions typically lasted around 8-12 days. The duration varied depending on the specific mission goals and objectives.
The mission lasted 10 days, 4 hours, 36 minutes and 24 seconds.
The Apollo 13 mission lasted approximately 5 days, from April 11 to April 17, 1970. It was scheduled to be longer, but had to be cut short due to an oxygen tank explosion on the spacecraft.
Apollo 13's mission lasted a total of 6 days. The crew experienced an oxygen tank explosion which led to the mission being aborted and they returned to Earth safely.
Apollo 13 was in space for a total of 5 days, from April 11 to April 17, 1970. However, the mission was intended to last longer but was cut short due to an oxygen tank explosion on the spacecraft.
The Apollo missions typically lasted around 8-12 days. The duration varied depending on the specific mission goals and objectives.
The mission lasted 10 days, 4 hours, 36 minutes and 24 seconds.
The Apollo 13 mission lasted approximately 5 days, from April 11 to April 17, 1970. It was scheduled to be longer, but had to be cut short due to an oxygen tank explosion on the spacecraft.
Apollo 13's mission lasted a total of 6 days. The crew experienced an oxygen tank explosion which led to the mission being aborted and they returned to Earth safely.
Apollo 13 was in space for a total of 5 days, from April 11 to April 17, 1970. However, the mission was intended to last longer but was cut short due to an oxygen tank explosion on the spacecraft.
The Apollo 11 space mission took about 3 days to travel from Earth to the Moon. It launched on July 16, 1969, and entered lunar orbit on July 19, before landing on the Moon's surface on July 20.
There were a total of 17 Apollo missions, with Apollo 7 being the first manned mission and Apollo 17 being the final mission that landed on the Moon.
The Apollo 11 mission took about 3 days to travel from Earth to the moon. The spacecraft launched on July 16, 1969, and landed on the moon on July 20, 1969.
There were a total of 19 Apollo missions: Apollo-1A : Unmanned suborbital flight Apollo - 2 : Unmanned orbital flight Apollo - 3 : Unmanned suborbital flight Apollo - 1 : Manned orbital mission, cancelled due to fatal accident. Apollo - 4 : Unmanned orbital flight Apollo - 5 : Unmanned orbital flight Apollo - 6 : Unmanned orbital fligth Apollo - 7 : Manned orbital mission Apollo - 8 : Manned lunar orbit mission Apollo - 9 : Manned orbital mission Apollo -10 : Manned lunar orbit mission Apollo- 11 : Lunar Landing mission Apollo- 12 : Lunar Landing mission Apollo- 13 : Lunar Landing mission, aborted due to accident Apollo- 14 : Lunar Landing mission Apollo- 15 : Lunar Landing mission Apollo- 16 : Lunar Landing mission Apollo- 17 : Lunar Landing mission Apollo -18 : Space rendevous mission with Soviet Soyuz spacecraft (Apollo-Soyuz)
There were a total of 15 Apollo missions that had crewed spacecrafts, with Apollo 7 being the first crewed mission and Apollo 17 being the final crewed mission.
There were 5 unmanned missions following the ill-fated Apollo 1 disaster. After that, there were 2 earth orbital missions (Apollo 7 & Apollo 9), and 9 lunar missions (Apollo 8, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, and 17). There were 3 long duration earth orbital missions after Apollo 17 that used the Apollo hardware and spacecraft. Skylab 1 was the workshop itself where the astronauts lived for months at a time. Skylab 2 lasted 28 days, Skylab 3 lasted 56 days and Skylab 4 lasted 84 days in space. The last mission to use Apollo spacecraft was the first joint mission with the Soviet Union. An American Apollo docked with a Soviet Soyuz spacecraft. The 2 vehicles stayed docked for 44 hours before parting ways. The last Apollo spacecraft splashed down on July 24, 1975. So total there were 19 "Apollo" missions. 13 manned missions and 6 unmanned.
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