User:Milton Beychok/Sandbox: Difference between revisions

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*[http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/57xx/doc5772/09-02-NASA.pdf Congressional Budget Office Study: A Budgetary Analysis of NASA’s New Vision for Space Exploration] September 2004
The total cost of the program in 2005 dollars was about $170 billion. That total included all research and development (R&D) costs; the cost of procuring 15 Saturn V rockets, 16 command service modules (C/SMs), and 12 lunar modules; program support and management costs; expenses for facilities and their upgrading; and the cost of conducting flight
operations.
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Project Apollo forced the people of the world to view the planet Earth in a new way. Apollo 8 was critical to this fundamental change, for on its outward voyage the crew focused a portable television camera on Earth and for the first time humanity saw its home from afar, a tiny, lovely, and fragile "blue marble" hanging in the blackness of space.  
Project Apollo forced the people of the world to view the planet Earth in a new way. Apollo 8 was critical to this fundamental change, for on its outward voyage the crew focused a portable television camera on Earth and for the first time humanity saw its home from afar, a tiny, lovely, and fragile "blue marble" hanging in the blackness of space.  
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The Apollo space program was the largest technical undertaking of the twentieth century. In three short years, from 1969-1972, nine missions headed to the moon, and six of them landed men on its surface and safely returned home.
The Apollo space program was the largest technical undertaking of the twentieth century. In three short years, from 1969-1972, nine missions headed to the moon, and six of them landed men on its surface and safely returned home.
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*[http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/57xx/doc5772/09-02-NASA.pdf Congressional Budget Office Study: A Budgetary Analysis of NASA’s New Vision for Space Exploration] September 2004
The total cost of the program in 2005 dollars was about $170 billion. That total included all research and development (R&D) costs; the cost of procuring 15 Saturn V rockets, 16 command service modules (C/SMs), and 12 lunar modules; program support and management costs; expenses for facilities and their upgrading; and the cost of conducting flight
operations.
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Revision as of 15:43, 27 June 2011


http://history.nasa.gov/Apollomon/Apollo.html

Project Apollo in general, and the flight of Apollo 11 in particular, should be viewed as a watershed in the nation's history. It was an endeavor that demonstrated both the technological and economic virtuosity of the United States and established technologically preeminence over rival nations--the primary goal of the program when first envisioned by the Kennedy administration in 1961. It had been an enormous undertaking, costing $25.4 billion (about $95 billion in 1990 dollars), with only the building of the Panama Canal rivaling the Apollo program's size as the largest non-military technological endeavor ever undertaken by the United States and only the Manhattan Project to build the atomic bomb in World War II being comparable in a wartime setting.

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Project Apollo forced the people of the world to view the planet Earth in a new way. Apollo 8 was critical to this fundamental change, for on its outward voyage the crew focused a portable television camera on Earth and for the first time humanity saw its home from afar, a tiny, lovely, and fragile "blue marble" hanging in the blackness of space.

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The Apollo space program was the largest technical undertaking of the twentieth century. In three short years, from 1969-1972, nine missions headed to the moon, and six of them landed men on its surface and safely returned home.

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The total cost of the program in 2005 dollars was about $170 billion. That total included all research and development (R&D) costs; the cost of procuring 15 Saturn V rockets, 16 command service modules (C/SMs), and 12 lunar modules; program support and management costs; expenses for facilities and their upgrading; and the cost of conducting flight operations.

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