News

The Saturn V rocket is now iconic for carrying the Apollo 11 crew to the moon in 1969. The projection-mapping artwork will occupy 363 of the monument's 555 vertical feet.
Rocket Mortgage has partnered with Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex to install a new bronze statue of the Apollo 11 astronauts in honor of the moon landing mission's 50th anniversary.
WASHINGTON – Fifty years ago, men were launched to the moon on a Saturn V rocket. Only three of this type of rocket still exist, and none has ever been to D.C. Until now. A 363-foot Saturn V ...
The 363-foot projection of the rocket will also be flashed on the monument Wednesday and Thursday from 9:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. It’s part of the Apollo 50 Festival, which includes performances ...
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos plans to raise sunken Apollo 11 moon rocket engines from the ocean floor. Learn more about the Saturn V rocket's F-1 engines in this SPACE.com infographic.
A rocket engine that was built to launch the historic Apollo 11 mission to the moon more than 40 years ago is again rumbling across the Southern landscape. The engine, known to NASA engineers as ...
A veteran diver who was almost a passenger on the missing Titan submersible says equipment used to retrieve Apollo 11 rocket engines in 2013 should be used in rescue operations.
NASA expected 15,000 to jam the launch site, with thousands more lining the beaches and roads outside the gates, to witness NASA’s long-awaited sequel to Project Apollo, when 12 astronauts ...
NASA’s mightiest rocket, Artemis, lifts off on lunar mission 50 years after Apollo NASA’s mightiest moon rocket, Artemis, lifts off from its launchpad at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape ...
NASA's new moon rocket sits on Launch Pad 39-B under stormy skies Sunday, Nov. 13, 2022, in Cape Canaveral, Fla. The 21st-century moon-exploration program is named Artemis, after Apollo's ...
At NASA, that means looking to the Apollo program for ideas on how to develop the next generation of rockets for future missions to the moon and beyond. Skip to content Coronavirus ...
NASA is waiting until this test flight is over before introducing the astronauts who will be on the next one and those who will follow in the bootsteps of Apollo 11′s Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin.