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Apollo 7

{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="right"\n|+Apollo 7\n|-\n!colspan="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" bgcolor="#FFDEAD"|Mission Insignia\n|-\n|colspan="2" align="center"|\n|-\n!colspan="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" bgcolor="#FFDEAD"|Mission Statistics\n|-\n|Mission Name:||Apollo 7\n|-\n|Call Sign:||Command module:
Apollo 7\n|-\n|Number of
Crew:
||3\n|-\n|Launch:||October 11, 1968
15:02:45 UTC
Kennedy Space Center
LC 34\n|-\n|Apogee:||297 km\n|-\n|Perigee:||231 km\n|-\n|Period:||89.78 m\n|-\n|Inclination:||31.63\n|-\n|Landing:||October 22, 1969
11:11:48 UTC
27° 38' N - 64° 09' W\n|-\n|Duration:||260 hours - 09 minutes
03 seconds\n|-\n|Number of
Orbits:
||163\n|-\n|Mass:||CSM 14,781 kg\n|-\n!colspan="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" bgcolor="#FFDEAD"|Crew Picture\n|-\n|colspan="2" align="center"|\n|-\n!colspan="2" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="2" bgcolor="#FFDEAD"|Apollo 7 Crew\n|} Apollo 7 was the first manned mission in the Apollo program to be launched. It was an eleven-day earth-orbital mission, the first manned launch of the Saturn IB launch vehicle, and the first three-man American space mission.

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

Crew

\n*Walter Schirra , commander\n*Donn Eisele, command module pilot\n*Walter Cunningham, lunar module pilot

Mission Parameters

\n*
Mass: 14,781 kg\n*Perigee: 231 km\n*Apogee: 297 km\n*Inclination: 31.63° \n*Period: 89.78 min

See also

\n*
Splashdown

Mission Highlights

\nApollo 7 was a confidence-builder. After the January 1967
Apollo launch pad fire, the Apollo command module had been extensively redesigned. Schirra, the only astronaut to fly Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions, commanded this Earth-orbital shakedown of the command and service modules. With no lunar lander, Apollo 7 could use the Saturn IB booster rather than the giant Saturn V. The Apollo hardware and all mission operations worked without any significant problems, and the Service Propulsion System (SPS) ­ the all-important engine that would place Apollo in and out of lunar orbit-made eight nearly perfect firings. Even though Apollo's larger cabin was more comfortable than Gemini's, eleven days in orbit took its toll on the astronauts. The food was bad, and all three developed colds. But their mission proved the spaceworthiness of the basic Apollo vehicle. Goals for the mission included the first live television broadcast from an American spacecraft (Gordon Cooper had broadcast slow scan television pictures from Faith 7 in 1963) and testing the lunar module docking maneuver. First orbit: Perigee 231 km, Apogee 297 km, Period 89.78 m, Inclination 31.63 deg. Weight: C/SM 14,781 kg. The splashdown point was 27 deg 32 min N, 64 deg 04 min W, 200 nautical miles SSW of Bermuda and 13 km (8 mi) north of the recovery ship USS Essex.
Launched: October 11, 1968 16:02:45 UT from Pad 34\n:Returned: October 22, 1968 11:11:48 UT (retrieved by the USS Essex)\n:Crew members: Wally Schirra (commander), Donn Eisele (senior pilot) and Walter Cunningham (pilot).
For nearly 30 years the Apollo 7 module was on loan (renewable every two years) to the National Museum of Science and Technology of Canada, in Ottawa, along with the space suit worn by Wally Schirra. In November 2003 the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C. said it wanted them back, presumably to put into the new Smithsonian annex at Dulles International. \n

Reference

\n*
NASA NSSDC Master Catalog\n*APOLLO BY THE NUMBERS: A Statistical Reference by Richard W. Orloff (NASA) {| align=none\n|
\n|}
\n\n:\n:\n\n\n\n\n\n
Preceded by :
Apollo 6
Apollo programFollowed by :
Apollo 8

External link

\n*
Apollo 7 entry in Encyclopedia Astronautica\n*The Apollo Spacecraft: A Chronology\n*Apollo Program Summary Report \nApollo 07\nApollo 07

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