Mission type | Crewed lunar orbiter |
---|---|
Operator | NASA |
COSPAR ID | 1968-118A |
SATCAT no. | 3626 |
Mission duration | 6 days, 3 hours, 42 seconds[1] |
Spacecraft properties | |
Spacecraft |
|
Manufacturer | North American Rockwell |
Launch mass | |
Landing mass | 4,979 kilograms (10,977 lb) |
Crew | |
Crew size | 3 |
Members | |
Callsign | Apollo 8 |
Start of mission | |
Launch date | December 21, 1968, 12:51:00 | UTC
Rocket | Saturn V SA-503[n 1] |
Launch site | Kennedy LC-39A |
End of mission | |
Recovered by | USS Yorktown |
Landing date | December 27, 1968, 15:51:42[5] | UTC
Landing site | North Pacific Ocean 8°8′N 165°1′W / 8.133°N 165.017°W[5] |
Orbital parameters | |
Perigee | 184.40 kilometers (99.57 nmi) |
Apogee | 185.18 kilometers (99.99 nmi) |
Inclination | 32.15 degrees |
Period | 88.19 minutes |
Epoch | December 21, 1968, ~13:02 UTC |
Revolution no. | 2 |
Lunar orbiter | |
Spacecraft component | CSM |
Orbital insertion | December 24, 1968, 9:59:20 UTC[6] |
Orbital departure | December 25, 1968, 6:10:17 UTC[5] |
Orbits | 10 |
Orbit parameters | |
Periselene | 110.6 kilometers (59.7 nmi) |
Aposelene | 112.4 kilometers (60.7 nmi) |
Inclination | 12 degrees |
Left to right: Lovell, Anders, Borman |
Apollo 8 was a mission in the Apollo program in December 1968. It was the first crewed spaceflight to leave Earth orbit and first to orbit the Moon. Commander Frank Borman, Pilot Jim Lovell and Bill Anders transmitted a television show while they were in orbit. The Apollo Lunar Module that could land on the Moon had not yet been built, so they went in the Apollo Command/Service Module and photographed and studied the Moon from above. Ten orbits around the Moon took twenty hours. After that, they fired their rockets and returned to Earth.
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