Details, Explanation and Meaning About Apollo 17

Apollo 17 Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Apollo 17
Mission Insignia
Mission Statistics
Mission Name: Apollo 17
Call Sign: Command module:
America
Lunar module:
Challenger
Number of
Crew:
3
Launch: December 7, 1972
05:33:00 UTC
Kennedy Space Center
LC 39A
Lunar Landing: December 11, 1972
19:54:57 UTC
20° 11' 26.88" N - 30° 46' 18.05" E
Taurus-Littrow
Lunar EVA
length:
1st: 7 h 11 min 53 s
2nd: 7 h 36 min 56 s
3rd: 7 h 15 min 8 s
Total: 22 h 3 min 57 s
CMP EVA: 1 h 5 min 44 s
Lunar Surface
Time:
74 h 59 min 40 s
Lunar Sample
Mass:
110.52 kg
Landing: December 19, 1972
19:24:59 UTC
17° 53' S - 166° 7' W
Duration: 12 d 13 h 51 min 59 s
Number of
Lunar Orbits:
75
Time in
Lunar Orbit:
147 h 43 min 37.11 s
Mass: CSM 30,369 kg;
LM 16,456 kg
Crew Picture
Apollo 17 Crew

Apollo 17 was the eleventh manned space mission in the NASA Apollo program, and was the sixth and last mission to date to land on the Moon. It was the first night launch, and the final mission, of the Apollo program.

Table of contents
1 Crew
2 Mission parameters
3 Mission Highlights
4 External link

Crew

(1) number of spaceflights each crew member has completed, including this mission.

Mission parameters

Docking

Moon walk

  • Cernan and Schmitt - EVA 1
  • EVA 1 Start: December 11, 1972, 23:54:49 UTC
  • EVA 1 End: December 12, 07:06:42 UTC
  • Duration: 7 hours, 11 minutes, 53 seconds

  • Cernan and Schmitt - EVA 2
  • EVA 2 Start: December 12, 1972, 23:28:06 UTC
  • EVA 2 End: December 13, 07:05:02 UTC
  • Duration: 7 hours, 36 minutes, 56 seconds

  • Cernan and Schmitt - EVA 3
  • EVA 3 Start: December 13, 1972, 22:25:48 UTC
  • EVA 3 End: December 14, 05:40:56 UTC
  • Duration: 7 hours, 15 minutes, 08 seconds

  • Evans - Transearth EVA 4
  • EVA 4 Start: December 17, 1972, 20:27:40 UTC
  • EVA 4 End: December 17, 21:33:24 UTC
  • Duration: 1 hour, 05 minutes, 44 seconds

See also

The splashdown point was 17 deg 53 min S, 166 deg 7 min W, 350 nautical miles SE of the Samoan Islands and 6.5 km (4 mi) from the recovery ship USS Ticonderoga.

Mission Highlights

The last man to set foot on the Moon was also the first scientist-astronaut/geologist Harrison Schmitt. While Evans circled in "America," Schmitt and Cernan collected a record 108.86 kilograms of rocks during three Moonwalks. The crew roamed for 33.80 kilometers through the Taurus-Littrow valley in their rover, discovered orange-colored soil, and left behind a plaque attached to their lander Challenger, which read: "Here Man completed his first exploration of the Moon, December 1972 A.D. May the spirit of peace in which we came be reflected in the lives of all mankind." The Apollo lunar program had ended.

Introduction

Crew members were Gene Cernan, commander; Ron Evans, command module pilot; and Harrison Schmitt, lunar module pilot.

A J-class mission, featuring the Lunar Rover, they conducted three lunar surface excursions, lasting 7.2, 7.6 and 7.3 hours. The mission returned 110.5 kg of samples from the Moon.

The Command module is currently on display at NASA's Johnson Space Center, in Houston, Texas. The lunar module impacted the Moon on 15 December 1972 at 06:50:20.8 UT (1:50 AM EST) at 19.96 N, 30.50 E.

On this mission the astronauts took a famous photograph of the earth known as "The Blue Marble".

Mission notes

  • Schmitt, a geologist, was the first scientist on the moon.

  • Like the astronauts of Apollos 10, 12, 13, and 14 before it, the Apollo 17 crew were recovered in Pacific waters near American Samoa, and were flown from the recovery ship to the airport at Tafuna where they were greeted with an enthusiastic (and well practiced!) Samoan reception before being flown on to Honolulu, thence to Houston.

's umbrella-shaped high-gain antenna near the beginning of their third and final excursion across the lunar surface. The prominent Sculptured Hills lie in the background while Schmitt's reflection can just be made out in Cernan's helmet.]]



Preceded by :
Apollo 16
Project Apollo Followed by :
Skylab 2
Skylab 1

Reference

External link


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