Posts Tagged Saturn V Rocket

The Apollo program: One massive rocket designed by young engineers

Posted by on Sunday, 19 July, 2009

revellapollooldThere has been a good deal of focus on the Moon lately. First, the LRO sent back high-res photos of the surface, which was followed by the 40th anniversary of Apollo 11 and the release of restored video footage from the Moon. Then the LRO produced the first photos of the equipment left behind from the Apollo missions and Walter Cronkite, the trusted voice who informed America about the events, passed away.

The LA Times is keeping the buzz alive with a fantastic article about the construction of the Saturn V rocket that shot the astronauts to the Moon.

“What set us apart was our ability to build a very big rocket to get us to the moon,” said Roger Launius, the Smithsonian Institution’s space historian, reflecting on the U.S.’ race with the then-Soviet Union to reach the moon first. “The Russians were never able to do that.”

If you think about it, that’s about as accurate as it gets. Our engineers who were backed by a massive budget, out-developed the Soviets with the Saturn V rocket. Well done, boys. Well done.



Watch the Saturn V rocket blast the Apollo 11 crew into space “live”

Posted by on Thursday, 16 July, 2009

ld_sr_01_080421_ssvHurry, open a new tab and direct your web browser to WeChooseTheMoon.org to experience the Apollo 11 mission as if it was happening live. Right now, the site is counting down to lift-off which will happen at 9:30am EST. If you can’t have the flash-heavy site open, at least listen to the Mission Control audio that’s being streamed by Shoutcast. Or you can follow everything on Twitter. Or use the desktop app. Your choice, but at least spend a bit of your day to relive this historic event.