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The Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum has Lunar Module 2 in its collection. The module, which was used for ground testing before the Apollo 11 mission, doesn’t even look like it would fly.
The museum's 8,650-pound, nearly 23-foot tall lander, LM-2 (shorthand for Lunar Excursion Module), was a test-vehicle, but a previous test of LM-1 aboard Apollo 5 in 1968 went off without a hitch.
Our fourth and final installment in our series is about Grumman, the company which built the Lunar Module (LEM) which made the historic manned landing on the Moon's surface on July 20, 1969.
The 2.5-acre recreation site, on a former Grumman Corp. property and previously known as Park B 22, is now officially “Apollo Park.” The road leading up to it is now “Lunar Module Way.” ...
The Lunar Module (LM) was a key part of NASA’s Apollo program, responsible for carrying astronauts from lunar orbit to the ...
The replica of the Apollo 11 plaque, left behind on the lunar surface. The original read "Here men from the planet Earth first set foot upon the Moon, July 1969 A.D. We came in peace for all mankind" ...
In July 1969, when Apollo 11’s rendition of the LEM, Eagle, touched down on a vast lunar plain — named Mare Tranquillitatis, or the Sea of Tranquility, centuries before by two Italian ...
The Apollo 11 lunar module traveled through space after being propelled toward the moon by a powerful rocket. Astronauts made the journey in a different, attached module − called the command module.
This lunar module represents one of humanity’s greatest achievements: landing people on another heavenly body. Brief Description Between 1969 and 1972, six lunar modules identical to this one landed a ...
Bid now on Apollo 11, Lunar Module (Vintage Oversize Photograph) by NASA. View a wide Variety of artworks by NASA, now available for sale on artnet Auctions.