There were, in total, fourteen Apollo missions, beginning
with Apollo 4 and ending with Apollo 17. The first three were unmanned flight tests.
The next three were manned tests in low Earth orbit, with the exception that
the fifth mission, Apollo 8, which was rerouted to circumnavigate the Moon to
put the final nail in the coffin of any Soviet aspirations. The remaining eight
missions went to the Moon itself; and of those eight, six landed men on its
surface.
Each mission had a designation letter, A through J. Each letter
stood for a mission objective, and each mission objective progressed logically and
sequentially to the next up to the final goal, which was not just a lunar landing,
but maximized lunar exploration.
Here are the designations:
A – Unmanned tests of the Saturn V and the Command Module
These missions were
Apollo 4 and Apollo 6.
B – Unmanned tests of the Saturn V with the Lunar Module
This was done once,
with Apollo 5.
C – Manned tests of the Command Module in low Earth orbit
This was done once,
Apollo 7.
D – Manned tests of the Lunar Module in low Earth orbit
Done once, Apollo 9.
E – Further D missions in high Earth altitude
These were never
done.
F – Scouting landing area and a dress rehearsal for landing
This was the Apollo
10 mission.
G – Lunar landing
Accomplished by
Armstrong and Aldrin in Apollo 11.
H – Missions using the same basic equipment as G but landing
in new areas and exploring farther
These were the Apollo
12 and 14 missions (and what 13 was supposed to be).
I – Lunar orbital missions – via a Command Module but
without a Lunar Module
These missions were
skipped due to time and budgetary constraints.
J – Extended missions with modifications to double the amount
of surface time
The Apollo 15, 16, and
17 missions. For the J missions, the Lunar Module was different. It held more
equipment, had bigger tanks and improved landing engines. More fuel and more
water and oxygen – enough to double the lunar stay from about 36 hours to 68
hours. Astronauts could remove their spacesuits in the Lunar Module, something
the men on Apollo 12 and 14 could not.
Additionally, for
the Command Module Pilot astronaut, who stayed in lunar orbit while his two
associates descended to the Moon’s surface, there was something new to look
forward to: retrieval of film from the SIM (Scientific Instrument Module), which
required an EVA – an extra-vehicular activity, in this case, a space-walk – in trans-lunar
space.
What about Apollos 1, 2, and 3 – why aren’t they listed
above? And what was the scoop with Apollo 8? Well, check back, I’ll get to all
that in the next couple of days …
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