Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Search this
Materials:
Aluminum, titanium, aluminized Mylar and aluminized Kapton blankets
Dimensions:
Overall: 21 ft. 5 1/2 in. × 21 ft. 5 1/2 in., 8499.9lb. (654 × 654cm, 3855.5kg)
Type:
SPACECRAFT-Crewed-Test Vehicles
Country of Origin:
United States of America
Summary:
The Apollo Lunar Module (LM) was a two-stage vehicle designed by Grumman to ferry two astronauts from lunar orbit to the lunar surface and back. The upper ascent stage consisted of a pressurized crew compartment, equipment areas, and an ascent rocket engine. The lower descent stage had the landing gear and contained the descent rocket engine and lunar surface experiments.
LM 2 was built for a second unmanned Earth-orbit test flight. Because the test flight of LM 1, performed as part of the Apollo 5 mission, was so successful, a second unmanned LM test mission was deemed unnecessary. LM-2 was used for ground testing prior to the first successful Moon-landing mission. In 1970 the ascent stage of LM-2 spent several months on display at the "Expo '70" in Osaka, Japan. When it returned to the United States, it was reunited with its descent stage, modified to appear like the Apollo 11 Lunar Module "Eagle," and transferred to the Smithsonian for display.
Alternate Name:
Lunar Module LM-2
Key Accomplishment(s):
Landed Astronauts on the Moon
Impact or Innovation:
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 total of 12 American astronauts on the Moon. This lunar module, LM-2, never flew in space. It is configured as LM-5, Apollo 11’s lunar module Eagle.
Credit Line:
Transferred from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration