Saturn I
Saturn I (also known as Cluster's Last Stand) was the name of the kind of rockets used by NASA in the Apollo program. Although German engineer and scientist Wernher von Braun intended it as the launch vehicle for crewed Apollo flights. NASA used the original Saturn I ten times and more often used a bigger version, the Saturn IB.[1]
Saturn I Media
A 1/20th-scale model of first-stage Saturn is prepared for testing in the 16-foot transonic wind tunnel at Arnold Air Force Base in the early 1960s
Von Braun, with JFK pointing at Saturn I at Cape Canaveral on 16 November 1963, weeks prior to its launch
- S-I rocket stage (9801761).jpg
Diagram of the S-I first stage of the Saturn I
- S-IV rocket stage.jpg
Diagram of the S-IV second stage of the Saturn I
- Saturn I Block II IUs.jpg
The version 1 (top) and the version 2 (bottom) of the Instrument Unit.
- Saturn-I Instrument unit.jpg
The version 2 of the Instrument Unit under construction for use on SA-8 in the foreground, with the version 3 for the Saturn V and IB in the background.
Image of the S-V stage on the Saturn I SA-4 rocket
- Saturn I profiles.jpg
Saturn I rocket profiles SA-1 through SA-10
- Saturn I test article.jpg
SA-T, located on the north side of MSFC Static Test Stand, 1965.
- CLOSE-UP VIEW OF THE FIRST STAGE OF THE SATURN I ROCKET, SHOWING A DETAIL VIEW OF THE ENGINE CLUSTER. THE SATURN I ROCKET WAS THE FIRST UNITED STATES ROCKET TO HAVE MULTIPLE HAER ALA,45-HUVI.V,7D-6.tif
- CLOSEUPVIEWOFTHEFIRSTSTAGEOFTHESATURNIROCKET,SHOWINGADETAILVIEWOFTHEENGINECLUSTER.THESATURNIROCKETWASTHEFIRSTUNITEDSTATESROCKETTOHAVEMULTIPLEHAERALA,HUVI.V,D
Related pages
References
- ↑ "Saturn I". Encyclopaedia Astronautica. Retrieved 2019-05-21.
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 62: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).. |