List of Apollo missions


The Apollo program was the third United States human spaceflight program carried out by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, which accomplished landing the first humans on the Moon from 1969 to 1972. During the Apollo 11 mission, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed their Apollo Lunar Module and walked on the lunar surface, while Michael Collins remained in lunar orbit in the command and service module, and all three landed safely on Earth on July 24, 1969. Five subsequent Apollo missions also landed astronauts on the Moon, the last in December 1972. In these six spaceflights, twelve men walked on the Moon.
Apollo ran from 1961 to 1972, with the first crewed flight in 1968. It achieved its goal of crewed lunar landing, despite the major setback of a 1967 Apollo 1 cabin fire that killed the entire crew during a prelaunch test. After the first landing, sufficient flight hardware remained for nine follow-up landings with a plan for extended lunar geological and astrophysical exploration. Budget cuts forced the cancellation of three of these. Five of the remaining six missions achieved successful landings, but the Apollo 13 landing was prevented by an oxygen tank explosion in transit to the Moon, which damaged the CSM's propulsion and life support. The crew returned to Earth safely by using the Lunar Module as a "lifeboat" for these functions. Apollo used Saturn family rockets as launch vehicles, which were also used for an Apollo Applications Program, which consisted of Skylab, a space station that supported three crewed missions from 1973 through 1974, and the Apollo–Soyuz Test Project, a joint Earth orbit mission with the Soviet Union in 1975.
Apollo set several major human spaceflight milestones. It stands alone in sending crewed missions beyond low Earth orbit. Apollo 8 was the first crewed spacecraft to orbit another celestial body, while the final Apollo 17 mission marked the sixth Moon landing and the ninth crewed mission beyond low Earth orbit. The program returned of lunar rocks and soil to Earth, greatly contributing to the understanding of the Moon's composition and geological history. The program laid the foundation for NASA's subsequent human spaceflight capability. Apollo also spurred advances in many areas of technology incidental to rocketry and crewed spaceflight, including avionics, telecommunications, and computers.
The Apollo program used four types of launch vehicles. The first was the Little Joe II, which was used for uncrewed suborbital launch escape system development. The second was the Saturn I, which was used for uncrewed suborbital and orbital hardware development. The third was the Saturn IB which was used for preparatory uncrewed missions and Apollo 7. Last, the Saturn V which was used for uncrewed and crewed Earth orbit and lunar missions. The Marshall Space Flight Center, which designed the Saturn rockets, referred to the flights as Saturn-Apollo, while Kennedy Space Center referred to the flights as Apollo-Saturn. This is why the uncrewed Saturn I flights are referred to as SA and the uncrewed Saturn IB are referred to as AS.

Alphabetical mission types

The Apollo program required sequential testing of several major mission elements in the runup to a crewed lunar landing. An alphabetical list of major mission types was proposed by Owen Maynard in September 1967. Two "A-type" missions performed uncrewed tests of the CSM and the Saturn V, and one B-type mission performed an uncrewed test of the LM. The C-type mission, the first crewed flight of the CSM in Earth orbit, was performed by Apollo 7.
The list was revised upon George Low's proposal to commit a mission to lunar orbit ahead of schedule, an idea influenced by the status of the CSM as a proven craft and production delays of the LM. Apollo 8 was reclassified from its original assignment as a D-type mission, a test of the complete CSM/LM spacecraft in Earth orbit, to a "C-prime" mission which would fly humans to the Moon. Once complete, it obviated the need for the E-type objective of a medium Earth orbital test. The D-type mission was instead performed by Apollo 9; the F-type mission, Apollo 10, flew the CSM/LM spacecraft to the Moon for final testing, without landing. The G-type mission, Apollo 11, performed the first lunar landing, the central goal of the program.
The initial A-G list was expanded to include later mission types: H-type missions—Apollo 12, 13 and 14—would perform precision landings, and J-type missions—Apollo 15, 16 and 17—would perform thorough scientific investigation. The I-type objective, which called for extended lunar orbital surveillance of the Moon, was incorporated into the J-type missions.
Mission TypeMissionsDescription
AApollo 4
Apollo 6
"Unmanned flights of launch vehicles and the CSM, to demonstrate the adequacy of their design and to certify safety for men."
BApollo 5"Unmanned flight of the LM, to demonstrate the adequacy of its design and to certify its safety for men."
CApollo 7"Manned flight to demonstrate performance and operability of the CSM."
C'Apollo 8"Command and service module manned flight demonstration in lunar orbit."
DApollo 9"Manned flight of the complete lunar landing mission vehicle in low Earth orbit to demonstrate operability of all the equipment and to perform the maneuvers involved in the ultimate mission."
E"Manned flight of the complete lunar landing mission vehicle in Earth orbit to great distances from Earth."
FApollo 10"A complete mission except for the final descent to and landing on the lunar surface."
GApollo 11"The initial lunar landing mission."
HApollo 12
Apollo 13
Apollo 14
"Precision manned lunar landing demonstration and systematic lunar exploration."
I"Reserved for lunar survey missions."
JApollo 15
Apollo 16
Apollo 17
"Extensive scientific investigation of Moon on lunar surface and from lunar orbit."

Test flights

Uncrewed test missions

From 1961 to 1968, the Saturn launch vehicles and components of the Apollo spacecraft were tested in uncrewed flights.
There was some incongruity in the numbering and naming of the first three uncrewed Apollo-Saturn, or Apollo flights. This is due to AS-204 being renamed to Apollo 1 posthumously. This crewed flight was to have followed the first three uncrewed flights. After the fire which killed the AS-204 crew on the pad during a test and training exercise, uncrewed Apollo flights resumed to test the Saturn V launch vehicle and the Lunar Module; these were designated Apollo 4, 5 and 6. The first crewed Apollo mission was thus Apollo 7. Simple "Apollo" numbers were never assigned to the first three uncrewed flights, although renaming AS-201, AS-202, and AS-203 as Apollo 1-A, Apollo 2 and Apollo 3, had been briefly considered.
Mission Serial NoLaunchRemarksRefs
SA-1Saturn I
SA-1
27 October 1961
15:06 GMT
Launch Complex 34
Test of Saturn I first stage S-I; dummy upper stages carried water
SA-2Saturn I
SA-2
25 April 1962
14:00 GMT
Launch Complex 34
Dummy upper stages released of water into upper atmosphere, to investigate effects on radio transmission and changes in local weather conditions
SA-3Saturn I
SA-3
16 November 1962
17:45 GMT
Launch Complex 34
Repeat of SA-2 mission
SA-4Saturn I
SA-4
28 March 1963
20:11 GMT
Launch Complex 34
Test premature shutdown of a single S-I engine
SA-5Saturn I
SA-5
29 January 1964
16:25 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
First flight of live second stage. First orbital flight.
AS-101Saturn I
SA-6
28 May 1964
17:07 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
Tested first boilerplate Apollo command and service module for structural integrity
AS-102Saturn I
SA-7
18 September 1964
17:22 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
Carried first programmable-in-flight computer on the Saturn I vehicle; last launch vehicle development flight
AS-103Saturn I
SA-9
16 February 1965
14:37 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
Carried first Pegasus micrometeorite satellite in addition to boilerplate CSM
AS-104Saturn I
SA-8
25 May 1965
07:35 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
Carried Pegasus B and boilerplate CSM
AS-105Saturn I
SA-10
30 July 1965
13:00 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
Carried Pegasus C and boilerplate CSM
AS-201Saturn IB AS-20126 February 1966
16:12 GMT
Launch Complex 34
First test of Saturn IB. First flight of Block I Apollo CSM. After a suborbital flight the CM landed in the Atlantic Ocean demonstrating the heat shield; however a propellant pressure loss caused premature SM engine shutdown.
AS-203Saturn IB AS-2035 July 1966
14:53 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
No Apollo spacecraft carried; successfully verified restartable S-IVB stage design for Saturn V. Additional testing designed to rupture the tank inadvertently destroyed the stage.
AS-202Saturn IB AS-20225 August 1966
17:15 GMT
Launch Complex 34
Longer duration suborbital to Pacific Ocean splashdown. CM heat shield tested to higher speed and successful SM firings.
Apollo 4Saturn V AS-5019 November 1967
12:00 GMT
Launch Complex 39A
First flight of Saturn V rocket; successfully demonstrated S-IVB third stage restart and tested CM heat shield at lunar re-entry speeds.
Apollo 5Saturn IB AS-20422 January 1968
22:48 GMT
Launch Complex 37B
First flight of LM; successfully fired descent engine and ascent engine; demonstrated "fire-in-the-hole" landing abort test.
Apollo 6Saturn V AS-5024 April 1968
16:12 GMT
Launch Complex 39A
Second flight of Saturn V; severe "pogo" vibrations caused two second-stage engines to shut down prematurely, and third stage restart to fail. SM engine used to achieve high-speed re-entry, though less than Apollo 4. NASA identified vibration fixes and declared Saturn V man-rated.

Uncrewed launch escape system tests

From August 1963 to January 1966 a number of tests were conducted for development of the launch escape system. These included simulated "pad aborts", which might occur while the Apollo-Saturn space vehicle was still on the launch pad, and flights on the Little Joe II rocket to simulate Mode I aborts which might occur while the vehicle was in the air.
MissionLaunch date
and vehicle if used
Launch timeRemarksRefs
QTV28 August 1963
Little Joe II
13:05 GMTLittle Joe II qualification test
Pad Abort Test 17 November 196316:00 GMTLaunch escape system abort test from launch pad
A-00113 May 1964
Little Joe II
13:00 GMTLES transonic test, success except for parachute failure
A-0028 December 196415:00 GMTLES maximum altitude, Max-Q abort test
A-00319 May 196513:01 GMTLES canard maximum altitude abort test
Pad Abort Test 229 June 196513:00 GMTLES pad abort test of near Block-I CM
A-00420 January 196615:17 GMTLES test of maximum weight, tumbling Block-I CM

Thermal-vacuum tests

NumberDateVehicleCrewNotesRefs
1July 26, 1966spacecraft 008

  • Flight time of 94 hours.
2August 2, 1966spacecraft 008Volunteers from MSC
  • Flight time of 183 hours
3October 26, 1966spacecraft 008Two astronauts and one military pilot
  • Flight time of 173 hours
4June 10, 19682TV-1
  • 29 hours of mission simulation
5June 16, 19682TV-1
  • Joe Kerwin
  • Vance Brand
  • Joe Engle
  • 177 hours of mission simulation
  • 6August 24, 19682TV-1
    • 61 hours simulation time
    7September 4, 19682TV-1Military pilots assigned to NASA
    • 102 hours simulation time
    8April 1, 1968LTA-8
    • 193 hours
    9May 5, 1968LTA-8
    • Jim Irwin
    • Gerald Gibbons
    • Glennon Kingsley
    • Joseph Gagliano
  • 84 hours simulation time
  • 10May 24, 1968LTA-8
    11May 30, 1968LTA-8
    • 118 hours simulation time
    • Uncrewed, except for Jim Irwin, Gerald Gibbons, Glennon Kingsley, Joseph Gagliano on:
    • * May 31, 1968–9 hours
    • * June 1, 1968–14 hours
    12June 5, 1968LTA-8
    • Jim Irwin
    • Gerald Gibbons
    • Glennon Kingsley
    • Joseph Gagliano
    21 hours simulation time

    Crewed Apollo missions

    The Block I CSM spacecraft did not have capability to fly with the LM, and the three crew positions were designated Command Pilot, Senior Pilot, and Pilot, based on U.S. Air Force pilot ratings. The Block II spacecraft was designed to fly with the Lunar Module, so the corresponding crew positions were designated Commander, Command Module Pilot, and Lunar Module Pilot regardless of whether a Lunar Module was present or not on any mission.
    A total of fifteen Saturn V vehicles were ordered, which would have been enough for three more Moon landing missions through Apollo 20. This flight was cancelled around the time of the Apollo 11 first landing mission to make the launch vehicle available for the Skylab space station. Shortly thereafter, Apollo 18 and 19 were cancelled in response to Congressional cuts in NASA's budget.
    Several of the missions involved extravehicular activity, spacewalks or moonwalks outside of the spacecraft. These were of three types: testing the lunar EVA suit in Earth orbit, exploring the lunar surface, and retrieving film canisters from the Scientific Instrument Module stored in the Service Module.
    MissionPatchLaunch dateCrewLaunch vehicleCM nameLM nameDurationRemarksRefs
    Apollo 121 February 1967
    Launch Complex 34
    Gus Grissom
    Ed White
    Roger B. Chaffee
    Saturn IB
    Never launched. On 27 January 1967, a fire in the command module during a launch pad test killed the crew and destroyed the module. This flight was originally designated AS-204, and was renamed to Apollo 1 at the request of the crew's families.
    Apollo 711 October 1968
    15:02 GMT
    Launch Complex 34
    Wally Schirra
    Donn F. Eisele
    Walter Cunningham
    Saturn IB
    10d 20h
    09m 03s
    Test flight of Block II CSM in Earth orbit; included first live TV broadcast from American spacecraft.
    Apollo 821 December 1968
    12:51 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    Frank Borman
    James Lovell
    William Anders
    Saturn V
    06d 03h
    00m 42s
    First circumlunar flight of CSM, had ten lunar orbits in 20 hours. First crewed flight of Saturn V.
    Apollo 93 March 1969
    16:00 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    James McDivitt
    David Scott
    Rusty Schweickart
    Saturn V
    GumdropSpider10d 01h
    00m 54s
    First crewed flight test of Lunar Module; tested propulsion, rendezvous and docking. EVA tested the Portable Life Support System.
    Apollo 1018 May 1969
    16:49 GMT
    Launch Complex 39B
    Thomas P. Stafford
    John Young
    Eugene Cernan
    Saturn V
    Charlie BrownSnoopy08d 00h
    03m 23s
    "Dress rehearsal" for lunar landing. The LM descended to 8.4 nautical miles from lunar surface.
    Apollo 1116 July 1969
    13:32 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    Neil Armstrong
    Michael Collins
    Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin
    Saturn V
    ColumbiaEagle08d 03h
    18m 35s
    First crewed landing in Sea of Tranquility; including a single surface EVA.
    Apollo 1214 November 1969
    16:22 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    Charles Conrad
    Richard F. Gordon Jr.
    Alan Bean
    Saturn V
    Yankee ClipperIntrepid10d 04h
    36m 24s
    First precise Moon landing in Ocean of Storms near Surveyor 3 probe. Two surface EVAs and returned parts of Surveyor to Earth.
    Apollo 1311 April 1970
    19:13 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    James Lovell
    Jack Swigert
    Fred Haise
    Saturn V
    OdysseyAquarius05d 22h
    54m 41s
    Intended Fra Mauro landing cancelled after SM oxygen tank exploded. LM used as "lifeboat" for safe crew return. First S-IVB stage impact on Moon for active seismic test.
    Apollo 1431 January 1971
    21:03 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    Alan Shepard
    Stuart Roosa
    Edgar Mitchell
    Saturn V
    Kitty HawkAntares09d 00h
    01m 58s
    Successful Fra Mauro landing. Broadcast first color TV images from lunar surface. Conducted first materials science experiments in space. Conducted two surface EVAs.
    Apollo 1526 July 1971
    13:34 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    David Scott
    Alfred Worden
    James Irwin
    Saturn V
    EndeavourFalcon12d 07h
    11m 53s
    Landing at Hadley–Apennine. First extended LM, three-day lunar stay. First use of Lunar Roving Vehicle. Conducted 3 lunar surface EVAs and one deep space EVA on return to retrieve orbital camera film from SM.
    Apollo 1616 April 1972
    17:54 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    John Young
    Ken Mattingly
    Charles Duke
    Saturn V
    CasperOrion11d 01h
    51m 05s
    Landing in Descartes Highlands. Conducted 3 lunar EVAs and one deep space EVA.
    Apollo 177 December 1972
    05:33 GMT
    Launch Complex 39A
    Eugene Cernan
    Ronald Evans
    Harrison Schmitt
    Saturn V
    AmericaChallenger12d 13h
    51m 59s
    Landing at Taurus–Littrow. First professional geologist on the Moon. First night launch. Conducted 3 lunar EVAs and one deep space EVA.

    Canceled missions

    Several planned missions of the Apollo program of the 1960s and 1970s were canceled for a variety of reasons, including changes in technical direction, the Apollo 1 fire, hardware delays, and budget limitations.
    Mission name/designationCommanderCommand Module PilotLunar Module PilotMission dateDate of cancellationRemarksRefs
    AS-205 Walter SchirraDonn EiseleWalter CunninghamAugust 196722 December 1966Deemed unnecessary; crew flew on Apollo 7
    Apollo 18Richard GordonVance BrandHarrison SchmittFebruary 19722 September 1970Budget cuts
    Apollo 19Fred HaiseWilliam PogueGerald CarrJuly 19722 September 1970Budget cuts
    Apollo 20Pete Conrad or Stuart RoosaPaul WeitzJack LousmaDecember 19724 January 1970Launch vehicle needed to launch Skylab

    Post-Apollo missions using Apollo hardware

    There were several missions that used Apollo hardware after the cancellation of Apollo 18, Apollo 19, and Apollo 20.
    OrderLaunchMissionLaunch vehicleCommanderPilotScience PilotDurationRemarksRefs
    114 May 1973
    17:30 UTC
    Launch Complex 39A
    Skylab 1
    Saturn V
    Uncrewed launch of the Skylab space station. The space station was later crewed by missions Skylab 2, Skylab 3 and Skylab 4.
    225 May 1973
    13:00 GMT
    Launch Complex 39B
    Skylab 2
    Saturn IB
    Pete ConradPaul J. WeitzJoseph P. Kerwin28d 00h
    49m 49s
    First crew of the Skylab space station.
    328 July 1973
    11:10 GMT
    Launch Complex 39B
    Skylab 3
    Saturn IB
    Alan BeanJack R. LousmaOwen K. Garriott59d 11h
    09m 34s
    Second Skylab station crew. Reaction Control System thruster malfunction nearly necessitated a Rescue Mission.
    4
    14:01 GMT
    Launch Complex 39B
    Skylab 4
    Saturn IB
    Gerald P. CarrWilliam R. PogueEdward Gibson84d 01h
    15m 31s
    Third and final Skylab crew. Penultimate flight of Apollo.
    515 July 1975
    12:20 GMT
    Launch Complex 39B
    Apollo-Soyuz Test Project
    Saturn IB
    Thomas P. StaffordVance D. BrandDeke Slayton09d 01h
    28m
    Final flight of both Apollo and the Saturn IB. Rendezvous and docking with Soyuz 19 spacecraft. The inadvertent entry of toxic gases into the cabin atmosphere created a potentially life-threatening health risk to the astronauts during re-entry.