Apollo 11’s journey to the moon, annotated

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  • Опубліковано 20 вер 2024
  • The moon landing was a feat of engineering, accomplished through the careful deconstruction of a 3,000 ton spacecraft.
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    Apollo 11 launched on July 16, 1969, carrying Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins on a journey to pull off humankind’s first moon landing. The eight-day journey was made possible by the careful deconstruction of the Saturn V rocket and Apollo spacecraft, and made use of a technique of docking components of the spacecraft in lunar orbit so the astronauts could land on, and then launch from, the lunar surface.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @Vox
    @Vox  5 років тому +258

    For more space-inspired stories check out these Vox videos:
    🚀 Astronauts left poop on the moon. We should go get it. ua-cam.com/video/VL18F8oHMrU/v-deo.html
    🚀 Astronaut ice cream is a lie ua-cam.com/video/zpkUjrC3-Ds/v-deo.html
    🚀 The font that escaped the Nazis and landed on the moon ua-cam.com/video/SaX_PwxSh5M/v-deo.html

    • @prestonmartina1118
      @prestonmartina1118 5 років тому +5

      Yay

    • @algladyou
      @algladyou 5 років тому +1

      But they traveled more than that since they went around the earth and moon to get sling.

    • @alphaapple1375
      @alphaapple1375 4 роки тому +2

      @Vox, thanks for including metric units in the video. If only you could rely on them more than the U.S. customary units. It is indisputable that the metric system is better, because it is based on the decimal number, 10, as in humans have ten digits on their fingers and toes. The metric system is far simpler and logical. Virtually all countries use the metric system and it is used in every field of occupation.
      Even NASA and the United States Space Force use the metric system in the fields of astronomy, space science and exploration.
      Remember when the Mars Climate Orbiter crashed on Mars, due to not using the metric system.
      1 kilometer is equivalent to 1,000 meters (1 km = 1,000 m)
      1 meter is equivalent to 1,000 millimeters or 100 centimeters (1 m = 1,000 mm = 100 cm)
      1 kilogram is equivalent to 1,000 grams (1 kg = 1,000 g)
      1 cubic meter is equivalent to 1,000 liters (1 m^3 = 1,000 L)
      1 liter is equivalent to 1,000 milliliters or 1,000,000 microliters (1 L = 1,000 mL = 1,000,000 μL)
      The Celsius scale is the temperature that defines the freezing point of water at 0 degrees, and boiling point of water at 100 degrees.

    • @ishworshrestha3559
      @ishworshrestha3559 3 роки тому +2

      Ok

    • @theothertroll
      @theothertroll 3 роки тому +1

      Never mind all the junk, like LMs, they left in space and on the moon ~

  • @afterburnerfox
    @afterburnerfox 5 років тому +5238

    Michael Collins
    The forgotten astronaut

    • @thevineyardbandmaconga3425
      @thevineyardbandmaconga3425 5 років тому +5

      Varun sawant ua-cam.com/video/tNEaDAlXSEY/v-deo.html

    • @josephlouwerse2105
      @josephlouwerse2105 5 років тому +62

      He flew in space twice, so whatever.

    • @giant7454
      @giant7454 5 років тому +265

      Well without him, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin would have been trapped

    • @paradisebreeze1705
      @paradisebreeze1705 5 років тому +135

      Lonliest man ever

    • @patsmith2571
      @patsmith2571 5 років тому +25

      Less well known, but recently did a interview.

  • @mubx4323
    @mubx4323 5 років тому +5678

    Micheal Collins, the most humble astronaut ever

    • @therockgodmalaysia
      @therockgodmalaysia 5 років тому +203

      Curious feel sad for him

    • @evanb.5
      @evanb.5 5 років тому +137

      I don't understand how he could deal with it

    • @DivaInTheWoods
      @DivaInTheWoods 5 років тому +301

      @@evanb.5 I've often thought of that, but in reality, can you imagine how awesome it would be just to travel through space?! Yeah, I'd have a little moon envy 😁, but he's experienced something so few have. So that's pretty awesome in itself.

    • @evanb.5
      @evanb.5 5 років тому +17

      Diva in the Woods true

    • @mikebronicki6978
      @mikebronicki6978 5 років тому +202

      Michael Collins, one of 21 humans to have seen the far side of the moon.

  • @jonas1015119
    @jonas1015119 6 років тому +6181

    Im still amazed the 180° turn and docking with the lunar module mid flight worked without modern computers.

    • @t65bx25
      @t65bx25 6 років тому +488

      Imagine docking after the landing. The amount of skill and even luck to get a rendezvous with those ships would be insane.

    • @gursimransingh4111
      @gursimransingh4111 6 років тому +863

      @@t65bx25 it's not hard it's just rocket science 😂

    • @imranrasyid
      @imranrasyid 6 років тому +291

      *plays no time for caution*

    • @kazsmaz
      @kazsmaz 6 років тому +96

      It was done with pilot skill.

    • @ilsunnylo3562
      @ilsunnylo3562 6 років тому +186

      You need aimbot 9000 and 360 no-scope. But seriously how they reconnect to command module in space with no GPS?!?

  • @tajrian4579
    @tajrian4579 3 роки тому +1076

    The amount of math and calculations the engineers had to do in order to make all of that happen in 1 go makes THEM the real heroes !

    • @tajrian4579
      @tajrian4579 3 роки тому +18

      @@tahaabusaymeh236 Yep.Exactly
      They did it completely on their own

    • @veritateseducational217
      @veritateseducational217 3 роки тому +31

      @@tahaabusaymeh236
      By the Apollo missions, they had computers doing many complex equations.

    • @sspeedd8809
      @sspeedd8809 3 роки тому +25

      @@tahaabusaymeh236 without a single computer, these rockets and the first man on the Moon wouldn't be a big discussion happening on Earth currently. sharpen your mind before spewing random stuff.

    • @Colin-kh6kp
      @Colin-kh6kp 3 роки тому +7

      Neil was one of those aeronautical engineers lol, which is a big reason that he was chosen.

    • @II-mt9de
      @II-mt9de 3 роки тому +13

      @@tajrian4579 The landing was the only thing done on the first try because before the mission there had been missions with astronauts who went around the moon and back.

  • @ThomasG_
    @ThomasG_ 6 років тому +2583

    The idea of splitting your craft in half, spinning one half around, and then reattatching the halves - while flying through space at high speed - terrifies me.

    • @konseq1537
      @konseq1537 6 років тому +467

      The speed of the crafts relative to each other was extremly small while performing those maneuvers. You can think of it like parking your car but even slower. The fact that earth spins all the time and thus moves your car and the parking spot doesn't matter for you, the car, and the parking spot. They and you don't even feel that speed. It is the same as walking around while being on a plane. The plane and thus you are going really fast but you can still walk around and easily are able to move around or sit back down without having to fear to miss the seat because of the speed relative to the ground.

    • @ThomasG_
      @ThomasG_ 6 років тому +268

      Konseq I'm aware that they're basically not moving relative to each other, but my lizard brain isn't.

    • @kazsmaz
      @kazsmaz 6 років тому +11

      @@ThomasG_ everything is so large and far away you wouldn't feel any movement.

    • @ankush-kl2nf
      @ankush-kl2nf 5 років тому +29

      lizard brain?
      oh hello zucc i didnt think you'd be here

    • @andrewmirror4611
      @andrewmirror4611 5 років тому +30

      The scarest part is the final fall, imagine:
      Close space
      You know it's probably melting from the outside
      You can't see outside
      You are in a soda can falling from the sky
      Everybody knows that's almost the most difficult part of the mission if not just the most

  • @iman2341
    @iman2341 6 років тому +2712

    Whoever did the animation and art-style for this video deserves a raise. This is a beautiful updating and utilisation of the visual style of original program.

    • @MosoKaiser
      @MosoKaiser 5 років тому +37

      I was just to make the same comment. Love the art style in the animations!

    • @gxexrxmxaxnx
      @gxexrxmxaxnx 5 років тому +31

      Beautiful art style but kind of misleading trajectory, the burn at 2:29 would actually send the spacecraft about 90° anti-clockwise relative to what was depicted.

    • @krs123247
      @krs123247 5 років тому +33

      bet youre fun at parties

    • @twotone3471
      @twotone3471 5 років тому +8

      @Quasar, it actually showed 5 engines earlier in the video @ 1:16 so don't know why they made that error in the animation, or dropped the orbital insertion burns. I know they wanted to make it simple, but inaccuracies are not educating anyone.

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk 5 років тому +1

      @@twotone3471 It's 5-6 minutes, what do you want in that time frame? People could go to college or university and take a course on orbital mechanics I suppose that would satisfy you?

  • @shotsfiredandmissed9068
    @shotsfiredandmissed9068 5 років тому +2918

    And I'm watching this video with a computer that is a 100x more powerful than what they used to get to the moon. Amazing.

    • @ianbuchanan6444
      @ianbuchanan6444 5 років тому +139

      Unbelievable, in fact.

    • @tanmoysd2721
      @tanmoysd2721 5 років тому +201

      Not only 100 probably million times more powerfull.

    • @protech1987
      @protech1987 5 років тому +132

      Nah nasa scientists are saying that they can’t return to the moon because they don’t have the technologie to do it like they were in 69 so... world!

    • @echezonaazubike8054
      @echezonaazubike8054 5 років тому +20

      probably a million times

    • @protech1987
      @protech1987 5 років тому +24

      Meme Fief hummm!... but they have budget for mars :p

  • @ManofOneGod
    @ManofOneGod 4 роки тому +803

    Imagine accidentally leaving the moon rock samples in the other module.

    • @caav56
      @caav56 4 роки тому +27

      Reminds me of some alternate history I've read, where Soviet cosmonaut DID forget the rock samples on the Moon and only remembered them after blasting off. I think it was either "Ocean of Storms: A Timeline of a Scientific America." or "2001: A Space Time Odyssey", though I might be mistaken.

    • @ManofOneGod
      @ManofOneGod 4 роки тому +7

      caav56 Lol, depression is real.

    • @caav56
      @caav56 4 роки тому +8

      @@ManofOneGod I remember at least cosmonaut was screaming obscenities on the live broadcast upon noticing this.

    • @meesveldhuijzen988
      @meesveldhuijzen988 4 роки тому +4

      “Here come the multi million dollar boxes” one of the astronauts actually said that when they transferred the boxes

    • @dropd1695
      @dropd1695 3 роки тому +7

      Just hold f9
      -KSP joke.

  • @BMarie774
    @BMarie774 4 роки тому +1003

    All this footage makes me so excited for when we go back. Just imagine the photo and video quality we will get.

    • @7heRequiem
      @7heRequiem 4 роки тому +47

      We're going back again! Check out NASA's Artemis program :)

    • @BMarie774
      @BMarie774 4 роки тому +56

      The Requiem Oh I know, and I cannot wait! It’s so cool. My dad watched the first moon landing as a kid and him telling me stories about it, building model rockets with me, and laying out under the stars and moon is what got me in to astronomy and human space flight. Now I get to see one for myself? And watch it with him? I cannot wait!

    • @bilalwaheed1125
      @bilalwaheed1125 4 роки тому +4

      Alas, we need to spend a SHITLOAD of money to go there

    • @twandepan
      @twandepan 4 роки тому +21

      @@bilalwaheed1125 It'll be worth it I promise

    • @bilalwaheed1125
      @bilalwaheed1125 4 роки тому +29

      @@twandepan Yeah I hope the US cuts its military budget for this

  • @jigsaw2561
    @jigsaw2561 5 років тому +1199

    I always wondered, how they returned back to earth, this video made that clear for me, thank you Vox

  • @omarfaruque98xy
    @omarfaruque98xy 4 роки тому +251

    When you're a kid the name Neil Armstrong is one of the first names you learn about in Science class. It's quite amazing the magnitude of what these men accomplished.

    • @MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy
      @MaynardGKrebs-gv4vy 4 роки тому +27

      Mr. Armstrong was a remarkable man. He wanted NO glory from the mission, insisting that all of the over 400,000 people who were involved with making the mission a success were as important as he was. He chose to be buried as sea so his grave wouldn't become a focal point or "shrine'. Men like him come along once in many years. Glad you appreciate that. Refreshing.

    • @IronClique
      @IronClique Рік тому +3

      ​@@MaynardGKrebs-gv4vyNever knew he was buried at sea, kind of sad too. When Osama got wacked they dumped him in the ocean for much the same reason.

  • @matthewclarkson8648
    @matthewclarkson8648 4 роки тому +570

    To think that only 60 years before, we had just invented the airplane.

    • @meuandthelot
      @meuandthelot 4 роки тому +52

      In the next 60 years addicted to big pharma, fast food and a phone, and no-one is close to returning to the Moon =(

    • @apefromthekitchen
      @apefromthekitchen 4 роки тому +7

      Only 9 years left before it's 60 years after the moonlanding. Our species are still stuck on Earth. We need Noah's arc to get out of here as NDA strings.

    • @jackc008
      @jackc008 4 роки тому +5

      Ape from the kitchen of Enki and Enlil. i hope you know we’re going back 2024

    • @DarkTheFailure
      @DarkTheFailure 4 роки тому +12

      @@meuandthelot SpaceX and NASA would love to disagree. They both are building moon rockets currently with NASA planning a test fight for that rocket to be next year

    • @taufiqutomo
      @taufiqutomo 4 роки тому +4

      25 years before this moment, a massive war and a massive massacre was still ongoing. And launching a rocket from Germany to Britain wasn't even a thing.

  • @jeffvines1393
    @jeffvines1393 5 років тому +553

    Neil: "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."
    Buzz: "To infinity and beyond!"

    • @joedaniels2070
      @joedaniels2070 5 років тому +8

      Neil actually said ‘that’s one small step for A man....’ you can’t hear it but people, and Armstrong, have said he uttered an A. Very funny btw :)

    • @paganphil100
      @paganphil100 5 років тому +5

      J Vines: I think the phrase "to infinity and beyond" is from the film "2001 A space odyssey". Buzz said "magnificent desolation".

    • @jeffvines1393
      @jeffvines1393 5 років тому +19

      Philip Fletcher I was actually quoting Buzz Lightyear from Toy Story.

    • @mikebronicki6978
      @mikebronicki6978 5 років тому +5

      @@jeffvines1393 man, the first comments really took away from your marvelous joke. I guess you had to have kids who watched Toy Story 57 times.

    • @jeffvines1393
      @jeffvines1393 5 років тому +7

      @@mikebronicki6978 No kids. I'm actually an animator as well as lectured animation for a decade to university students. I actually saw Toy Story in the cinema when it first came out in the 90's ... and YES ... a simple joke over analysed :p

  • @16bittech
    @16bittech 6 років тому +470

    A correction here (3:10). The apollo craft actually had to light its engines and perform an orbit insertion burn once it got to the moon. Otherwise it would have performed a "s̶l̶i̶n̶g̶s̶h̶o̶t̶" m̶a̶n̶e̶u̶v̶e̶r̶
    free return trajectory around the moon and returned to Earth. This is actually what happened on Apollo 13, and is what allowed that mission to return home without any propulsion.
    It is worth noting that setting up this s̶l̶i̶n̶g̶s̶h̶o̶t̶ free return is actually not the most efficient way to get to the moon in terms of fuel requirements, but it was deemed to be worth the offset cost in case something went wrong, which it obviously did during Apollo 13.

    • @ZiMZiLLA
      @ZiMZiLLA 6 років тому +28

      Glad to see someone point this out. I was hoping they'd give some background on the slingshot maneuver because it's pretty interesting.

    • @kazsmaz
      @kazsmaz 6 років тому +61

      @@ZiMZiLLA its not a slingshot but a free return trajectory. A slingshot would add more velocity and kick them off into deep space. Many deep space missions like voyager used slingshots

    • @ludwig2345
      @ludwig2345 6 років тому +5

      Thanks for pointing that out so i dont have to
      Ps is a gravity brake not a slingshot

    • @markofexcellence5209
      @markofexcellence5209 6 років тому +2

      You’re correct, sir. The SM engine was ignited to send them on their way.

    • @MatthewLuigamma032
      @MatthewLuigamma032 6 років тому +30

      The 2:28 burn is also incorrectly timed. It was on the opposite side of Earth from the moon, to transform the orbit into an elipse (if the moon wasn't in the way). It's the most energy efficient way to make the transfer in this case.
      Called a Hohmann transfer.

  • @Jermaine_Jones
    @Jermaine_Jones 5 років тому +174

    This choreographed engineering feat is still amazing to me. Especially given the technology available at the time.

    • @TheManuel86g
      @TheManuel86g 4 роки тому +4

      You mean like the Zenith TVs still working today? You can got to a antique shop and find many things from the 60's that still work. On/off switches/relays/motors/etc do not need modern computing power.

  • @himmelsamuel4749
    @himmelsamuel4749 3 роки тому +243

    REST IN PEACE MICHAEL COLLINS
    1930-2021

    • @shintaro797
      @shintaro797 3 роки тому +5

      I always felt bad that he and all the other command module pilots never got to walk on the moon

    • @JA-yz8eq
      @JA-yz8eq 3 роки тому +13

      How has his death not been all over the front pages?? 🤔🤔 I didnt even know that

    • @galactic4590
      @galactic4590 3 роки тому +12

      @@JA-yz8eq because most people don’t know he went on the mission. Most people think it was just Neil and buzz

    • @an1mw
      @an1mw 2 роки тому +4

      @@galactic4590 and then even still, Neil Armstrong gets most of the credit because he was the first to step foot, even though all three deserve attention

    • @krishpatel3156
      @krishpatel3156 2 роки тому +1

      @@shintaro797 It's not like that. They're all on a mission. It's not about who gets to do what, it's about the mission itself. That is their Directive and they will carry it out.
      This is basically their mentality.

  • @kartikajaya886
    @kartikajaya886 6 років тому +727

    Every single KSP player have done this so many times

    • @t65bx25
      @t65bx25 6 років тому +53

      Check yo staging!

    • @makemake9247
      @makemake9247 6 років тому +15

      I don't want to gatekeep but try doing this in RO/RP0. I played stock for 560 hrs and it took me at least 20 hrs to land on the moon in RO/RP0.

    • @TheCoquifrog
      @TheCoquifrog 6 років тому +43

      I can make it to the moon but can’t make it back to my planet lol

    • @ReyhanJoseph
      @ReyhanJoseph 6 років тому +2

      Bruh 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂

    • @manetarofl
      @manetarofl 6 років тому +34

      First time I recreated Apollo was an amazing feeling. Doing the 180 maneuver is hard even on a game.
      The actual Apollo mission is a feat.

  • @Mr.SneakyShadow
    @Mr.SneakyShadow 5 років тому +309

    Just think your smartphone you are currently using to watch this video has vastly more processing power than apollo,

    • @coloredimagination1650
      @coloredimagination1650 5 років тому +18

      The moon landing is faked on the moon.

    • @johnanna6047
      @johnanna6047 5 років тому

      it does. how can a small device be powerful than a big device.

    • @johnanna6047
      @johnanna6047 5 років тому +2

      the moon landing is fake and the earth is flat. wake up people.

    • @adamgiunta3594
      @adamgiunta3594 5 років тому +18

      @@johnanna6047 stfu

    • @fabianheden8596
      @fabianheden8596 5 років тому +7

      John Anna just f off

  • @blacksabbath1022
    @blacksabbath1022 5 років тому +428

    The news in 2154
    NASA - "We're finally going back to the moon by 2160."

    • @ojjoooooo
      @ojjoooooo 5 років тому +61

      SpaceX - "We're going to the moon this afternoon."

    • @trillianmcmillian2660
      @trillianmcmillian2660 5 років тому +11

      We went back 13 times one time taking a buggy. Look it up.

    • @trillianmcmillian2660
      @trillianmcmillian2660 5 років тому +4

      I think 11 people have walked on the moon.

    • @radioaktiv2531
      @radioaktiv2531 4 роки тому +8

      @@trillianmcmillian2660 12. All of the missions landed 2 men.

    • @AviChetriArtwork
      @AviChetriArtwork 4 роки тому +6

      2024 for annual trips

  • @jamirimaj6880
    @jamirimaj6880 4 роки тому +195

    "So why didn't we return to the moon then?"
    I can tell you a 150 billion dollar reason why.

    • @jamirimaj6880
      @jamirimaj6880 4 роки тому +36

      @@bruhmentum4034 If Elon Musk can pull that off, that's obviously not only great, but game-changing. But if there's anything I learned from these space explorations, it's that safety has no price.

    • @bruhmentum4034
      @bruhmentum4034 4 роки тому

      @Nature and Physics bet

    • @BGCflyer
      @BGCflyer 4 роки тому +17

      We DID return. We returned 5 more times. Apollo 17 was our last time physically on the moon but it didn’t get a lot of publicity.

    • @jamirimaj6880
      @jamirimaj6880 4 роки тому +3

      @@BGCflyer Exactly, no publicity. And the fact that scientists practically confirmed what moon is: basically a giant rock. That's why it's better for it to become a destination for civilian travelers, which will happen in a few years.

    • @BGCflyer
      @BGCflyer 4 роки тому +3

      @@jamirimaj6880 ...so, your question was why didn't we return to the moon? you gave the impression that you didn't realize we have returned several times after Apollo 11, thus my response in stating we have. Anyway, the current NASA plan is to land on the moon again with human astronauts, then launch from the moon to Mars. They're hoping we can achieve this by 2024. It would be great if we did achieve getting humans to Mars in 2024 but I'm not sure if that's a realistic time frame or not.

  • @BradThePitts
    @BradThePitts 5 років тому +766

    Armstrong: "The Eagle has landed."
    Aldrin: "Great, I have to pee!"

  • @savagesooner4891
    @savagesooner4891 6 років тому +129

    Lance Armstrong, Buzz Lightyear, and that other guy...

  • @salokin3087
    @salokin3087 6 років тому +389

    These kinds of videos, along with borders, is Vox at their best

    • @tubester4567
      @tubester4567 6 років тому +28

      yea, I thought vox was going to blame the white patriarchy and male privilege for not having any women or minorities go to the moon, and therefore the space program was racist and sexist. But they didnt so thats good.

    • @vivigesso3756
      @vivigesso3756 5 років тому +1

      It didnt happen though. Theres not even any stars in the sky.

    • @ishanrai1227
      @ishanrai1227 4 роки тому +1

      @@ashhk10 Thank you for your service

  • @Aurora666_yt
    @Aurora666_yt Рік тому +18

    No, I don't believe we went to the moon...
    I *KNOW* we went to the moon!
    Knowledge ≠ belief

  • @chromearome798
    @chromearome798 5 років тому +2809

    Flat Earthers have left the chat

    • @Megan-gx4wv
      @Megan-gx4wv 5 років тому +9

      chrome Arome 😂😂😂

    • @The_Reality_Filter
      @The_Reality_Filter 5 років тому +32

      what has this got to do with flat earthers?

    • @responsibleparty
      @responsibleparty 5 років тому +149

      @@The_Reality_Filter A lot of them are conspiracy theorists and also believe that Apollo was a hoax propagated by our government.

    • @phantommedia9964
      @phantommedia9964 5 років тому +19

      Flat universers lol?

    • @responsibleparty
      @responsibleparty 5 років тому +78

      @@commanderhandicap Very good. Did you want to explain why I seem like one, or are you in the habit of making random statements like that?

  • @riadinrisanto4766
    @riadinrisanto4766 6 років тому +560

    PLEASE DO MORE SPACE VIDEOS

    • @hafsa7951
      @hafsa7951 6 років тому

      r_risanto I second that

    • @madeonearth3429
      @madeonearth3429 6 років тому

      JEAH

    • @chickenmon
      @chickenmon 5 років тому +10

      Agreed. More space, less politics.

    • @YggdrasilVer101
      @YggdrasilVer101 5 років тому +1

      yes!!! more space stuff please

    • @whosjulez1157
      @whosjulez1157 5 років тому

      No, leave it to people who understand something about that stuff

  • @NoCluYT
    @NoCluYT 5 років тому +731

    Those famous words:
    One small step for man...
    "I didn't get the second phrase"

    • @mostafanahid4669
      @mostafanahid4669 5 років тому +21

      A giant leap for mankind

    • @lapdogs
      @lapdogs 5 років тому +4

      GOAT One Small Step For Man ..... One Giant Leap For Mankind

    • @EnigamiNetshinobi
      @EnigamiNetshinobi 5 років тому

      LOL!

    • @indeo8309
      @indeo8309 4 роки тому +11

      it‘s actually „one small step for a man“. without the „a“ it wouldn’t even make sense if you think about it

    • @oddodyssey7231
      @oddodyssey7231 4 роки тому +5

      Indeo “Man” means people in the context of the quote

  • @lexusdriver1963
    @lexusdriver1963 Рік тому +34

    Even though Michael Collins was all alone onboard the CSM he's always part of the team and still plays the important role of the Apollo 11 mission, piloting the CSM to the Moon and back to Earth.

    • @IronClique
      @IronClique Рік тому +3

      It's unfortunate how he's forgotten quite often. And unfortunate he never walked on the moon. To sacrifice that opportunity for the sake of all three makes him worthy to wield Mjolnir

  • @ben1797
    @ben1797 6 років тому +376

    oh man this video would have been awesome a week ago when i had to give a presentation on apollo 11 in my english course

    • @violante1421
      @violante1421 6 років тому +28

      F

    • @TR2000LT
      @TR2000LT 6 років тому +9

      *F*

    • @madebyawosika2061
      @madebyawosika2061 6 років тому +8

      *F*

    • @przemek8068
      @przemek8068 6 років тому +7

      F

    • @ben1797
      @ben1797 6 років тому +2

      Jacek Placek wow guys what do you all mean?? that my english is bad and i should get an f? lol i don’t get it hahahaha

  • @prem_tamilsiddha8987
    @prem_tamilsiddha8987 5 років тому +797

    Why did Armstrong dislike the moon restaurant?
    It had no atmosphere.

    • @awiseseal7559
      @awiseseal7559 5 років тому +9

      nice

    • @tomservo5007
      @tomservo5007 5 років тому +7

      there's a book we had to read in school, titled: 'this place has no atmosphere' - on the cover, a moody teen girl -- it took place on the moon.

    • @Yuglooc
      @Yuglooc 5 років тому +3

      Why would there be a restaurant on the moon

    • @tomservo5007
      @tomservo5007 5 років тому +18

      @@Yuglooc where else can you get Moon Pies?

    • @paynepersons6147
      @paynepersons6147 5 років тому +3

      Ba dum ch

  • @ArizonaJewell
    @ArizonaJewell 3 роки тому +23

    What’s really astounding about the Apollo missions is the Saturn V was engineered and built by hand. Calculations were done with pen & paper, there weren’t any computer simulations that could be run to see if it would work. The engineering that went into the Saturn V, as well as all the other components of the Apollo missions, is absolutely incredible.

    • @delfininsjezus
      @delfininsjezus 3 роки тому

      ikr

    • @bradwooldidge6979
      @bradwooldidge6979 3 роки тому

      They had primitive computers.

    • @ArizonaJewell
      @ArizonaJewell 3 роки тому +5

      @@bradwooldidge6979 That's correct, but nothing powerful enough to run simulations of how the Saturn V engines would perform or how it would perform in flight, to my knowledge. From what I know most of the calculations were done by hand, but I could be wrong.

    • @gelatinous6915
      @gelatinous6915 Рік тому +4

      Also, those F1 engines (which are still the largest and most powerful liquid-fuel engines ever built) were welded by hand. No fancy machines, just impeccable perfect craftsmanship.

    • @ArizonaJewell
      @ArizonaJewell Рік тому

      @@gelatinous6915 Oh definitely! The rocketdyne F1 is an absolutely INCREDIBLE work of engineering.

  • @elliot7753
    @elliot7753 4 роки тому +181

    “Michael Collins, the forgotten astronaut”
    Not very forgotten if he’s mentioned in the top two comments

  • @SuicideBunny6
    @SuicideBunny6 5 років тому +355

    Whenever I hear about the moonlanding, in my mind it's always this short trip from earth straight to the moon and back. But when watching this video and actually thinking about it, I realised just how much of a technological wonder and historic moment it actually was!

    • @johnnietokyo3711
      @johnnietokyo3711 5 років тому

      Cue up "Wagging the Moondoggie" here on UA-cam.

    • @nizloc4118
      @nizloc4118 5 років тому +18

      I think thats true for most people. Id say the vast majority assume you shoot a rocket straight up, on a straight line, and boom they hit the moon.
      Had no idea they had to circle the earth first.

    • @spencerrr9878
      @spencerrr9878 5 років тому +3

      Watch First Man my dude, itll blow your mind

    • @elyhwhyeti7945
      @elyhwhyeti7945 5 років тому

      The specific data and figuration makes the Moon landing,plus Space travel ever more impossible for humans. Picture the return to Earth, space traveling in an enviroment with no air or atmosphere to protect from the Sun's temperature? Then the ridiculous claim that the Moon has a "gravity pull". Who was the camera man on the Moon when they departed the Moon? Super HoaX, the modern day "Tower of Babel". Awake children. Amein.

    • @gidya5719
      @gidya5719 5 років тому

      Yep.

  • @bobcharlotte8724
    @bobcharlotte8724 5 років тому +29

    If you wanna go to the moon get a VR headset and a game/experience called Apollo 11. Mind blowing stuff.

    • @interstellarguy1434
      @interstellarguy1434 4 роки тому +2

      bobcharlotte i just got that game and I cant land the landing module but anyway really awesome game

  • @Aurora666_yt
    @Aurora666_yt Рік тому +15

    The science denial in these comments is a horrible stain on the legacies of both John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson. What a load of disrespect to all the hard work and dedication they put towards this monumental accomplishment!

    • @Xernive
      @Xernive Рік тому

      Tell that to science & gravity

    • @Aurora666_yt
      @Aurora666_yt Рік тому +1

      @@Xernive
      Exactly, that's my point. The people in these comments don't believe in science nor in gravity, and it's hilarious! 😂😆🤣

    • @Xernive
      @Xernive Рік тому

      @@Aurora666_yt Right! It's amazing how both seem to be disregarded in most topics lol

    • @NCRRANGER2448
      @NCRRANGER2448 Місяць тому

      @@Aurora666_ytong they are the type of people who failed in school.

  • @RainierKine
    @RainierKine 6 років тому +2324

    Yay! Non-partisan, non political, non social justice videos that everyone except moon landing deniers can enjoy!

    • @fochiqui
      @fochiqui 6 років тому +67

      Ernest Choy moon landing is partisan; those that deny it come from the right

    • @scared4704
      @scared4704 5 років тому +52

      just because someone's right-wing doesn't mean their opinions are political. your point makes no sense.

    • @pambrosnan577
      @pambrosnan577 5 років тому +26

      IKR this is the Vox I subscribed for!

    • @Cotonetefilmmaker
      @Cotonetefilmmaker 5 років тому +31

      dude, reporters can talk about issues that certain political parties disagree with, its not journalism's fault.

    • @bretharrell9795
      @bretharrell9795 5 років тому +9

      I strongly agree! Excellent video - thank you for this without a liberal agenda!!!

  • @KiddKoalaz
    @KiddKoalaz 5 років тому +271

    The background music sounds like the Stranger Things theme lol

    • @siddharthnandi8567
      @siddharthnandi8567 5 років тому +3

      KiddKoalaz let me guess you're 11?

    • @gabrielmarchiori5503
      @gabrielmarchiori5503 5 років тому +2

      @@siddharthnandi8567 was that a joke?

    • @WhoisVinnie
      @WhoisVinnie 5 років тому

      I think it does. I'm listening to the theme right now

    • @mawlinzebra
      @mawlinzebra 5 років тому

      @@siddharthnandi8567 LMAO. I know. As soon as people hear synthwave, people say it sounds like stranger things soundtrack

    • @WhoisVinnie
      @WhoisVinnie 5 років тому

      If you mean the last song in this video, then you're correct

  • @kimiesta
    @kimiesta 6 років тому +599

    This is a fake. Everyone k ows the moon landing was actually on a soundstage in Mars

    • @widget3672
      @widget3672 6 років тому +35

      IN Mars? Wow, must've been those evil sky lizards trying to get at our sweet sticky brain matter....

    • @mitchplays9295
      @mitchplays9295 6 років тому +6

      😂😂😂

    • @wholetthedogsout2941
      @wholetthedogsout2941 6 років тому +2

      5KYM0L3CUL3 fake moon wtf?

    • @uss_04
      @uss_04 6 років тому +4

      No, it was Europe. That is why we are to attempt no landings there.
      Been that way since 2010.

    • @mobukar
      @mobukar 6 років тому +2

      😂😂😂. Thank you.

  • @MarvelGamingEDKV2
    @MarvelGamingEDKV2 5 років тому +44

    Just one correction. 2:57
    The third stage(S-IV B) was not 'Useless', It was deliberately crashed to moon to study moonquakes by seismometers left on the lunar surface by astronauts .
    So that stage was smashed to the moon for SCIENCE!

  • @Kludgeware
    @Kludgeware 4 роки тому +166

    What an absolutely amazing feat of engineering, human determination, and the ability to do what no other had done before. Simply breathtaking.

    • @ZY-vw6xl
      @ZY-vw6xl 4 роки тому

      Music?

    • @sprtplt
      @sprtplt 3 роки тому +4

      It didn't happen.

    • @x-creator4460
      @x-creator4460 3 роки тому +1

      Indeed, it would have been an amazing feat of engineering.

    • @robbieaulia6462
      @robbieaulia6462 3 роки тому

      Very true because the payload wasn't humans but it's actually a nuclear bomb

    • @laurinnn
      @laurinnn 3 роки тому +12

      @@sprtplt it did

  • @paradoxward2533
    @paradoxward2533 4 роки тому +91

    Even though I was just a kid when this all happened, it is really no excuse. I am ashamed to admit I never really understood how the moon landing was accomplished until right now. The creation of that spacecraft was truly ingenious. I am embarrassed that I ever even entertained the possibility that the non believers could be right. That there really was no moon landing. I think we all have watched a little too much X-Files..., wonderful show as it was.

  • @Reignor99
    @Reignor99 5 років тому +31

    Hey Vox, keep making this kind of stuff and I'll watch it all day.. even share it too.

  • @ImJustAHacker123
    @ImJustAHacker123 3 роки тому +36

    the fact that Captain America also missed this spectacular event is horrendous

    • @Agarwaen
      @Agarwaen 3 роки тому +1

      MCU cap didn't miss it..

    • @Mark-Wilson
      @Mark-Wilson 3 роки тому

      @@Agarwaen really?

  • @ApolloWeiss
    @ApolloWeiss 4 роки тому +37

    Man imagine leaving your phone in the other part of the Rocket that detaches

  • @jessiewarain2796
    @jessiewarain2796 4 роки тому +34

    im watching this after the Endeavor SpaceX launch and docking

  • @VyacheslavAzarov
    @VyacheslavAzarov 6 років тому +43

    Ok, I've been playing KSP long enough to understand, that retrograde burns after the injections are missing in this video.

    • @kevinshull5856
      @kevinshull5856 5 років тому +4

      Also the injections in the video are shown to be done at the wrong time

    • @J.D....
      @J.D.... 5 років тому +1

      I think thats mostly for ease of watching for non experienced people.

    • @Watchparty123
      @Watchparty123 5 років тому

      IKR

    • @CurtisDensmore1
      @CurtisDensmore1 5 років тому

      Yep

  • @nlgpro
    @nlgpro 2 роки тому +20

    What they were able to do is absolutely incredible. I don't think most people, including myself, can comprehend how this was accomplished.

  • @Lianthian
    @Lianthian 5 років тому +14

    I don't understand how some people cannot be in awe of such an accomplishment!

    • @markwilding3828
      @markwilding3828 5 років тому +5

      Because it's clearly ludicrous.

    • @wset-13archive27
      @wset-13archive27 3 роки тому +4

      @@markwilding3828 How is it ludicrous? It's the Apollo 11 moon landing. Well-documented.
      What's ludicrous are the claims that the world is going to end in 2030. That is what's unbelievable.

    • @jonahsuddeth5893
      @jonahsuddeth5893 3 роки тому +3

      @@markwilding3828 "They built offices worth of blueprints we all saw the rocket launch it was broadcasted live billions were spent 3 lives were lost by that point it would just be easier to go to the moon" Neil tyson

  • @Tintoycar
    @Tintoycar 5 років тому +118

    1969: "Went to the moon, took 1 picture", 2019: "went to the bathroom, took 7 pictures"

    • @aestheticaltwat
      @aestheticaltwat 4 роки тому +4

      50 years of ‘evolution’.

    • @scoot5150
      @scoot5150 4 роки тому +24

      ah yes, boomer humor

    • @mohammedsog7039
      @mohammedsog7039 4 роки тому +3

      1969 : went to the moon in aluminium ships .
      2020: can't seem to pass the van Allen belts of radiation .
      ... makes sense

    • @aestheticaltwat
      @aestheticaltwat 4 роки тому

      Nonagon Infinity, hey! You’re the one with an Akira profile picture!

    • @radioaktiv2531
      @radioaktiv2531 4 роки тому +4

      @Genes I think you mean they took thousands. Check out the Project Apollo Archive on Flickr. It has every single moon photograph taken.

  • @scottmead854
    @scottmead854 3 роки тому +33

    What the clip didn't mention is how many tests and trials were carried out before that success, it costs the lives of quite a number of astronauts along the way. May they rest in peace.

    • @nicolaskiefer8350
      @nicolaskiefer8350 3 роки тому +3

      ​@edward king Don't say that when you have no clue how any of this even works. It's all pure talent and physics (oh, and a bunch of the national budget)

    • @nicolaskiefer8350
      @nicolaskiefer8350 3 роки тому +4

      @edward king You could technically go to the moon without computers, it's kinda like flying a plane but 1000x harder. Space exploration is just very expensive, the reason why we haven't gone back is because the general public doesn't see a need for spending so much money on it. Even with our much more advanced rockets there are alot of things that have to happen for a rocket to lift off.
      Don't you think something like SpaceX, which can freaking land rockets isn't WAY more advanced than what we had in the 60s?

    • @jonahsuddeth5893
      @jonahsuddeth5893 3 роки тому

      3 heros lost their live in the 1st apollo 1 but as. Apollo 1 commander Gus Grissom said sometimes exploration for the good of humanity is worth the cost of human life

  • @kahukura5154
    @kahukura5154 3 роки тому +28

    Vox: So what actually happened between here, and here
    Me (who plays ksp) Let me explain

  • @ChristianMcDonald1
    @ChristianMcDonald1 5 років тому +100

    The moon's gravity didn't pull them into orbit...they had to fire the CSM engine on the far side to slow down enough to enter lunar orbit. Otherwise, they would have just returned to the Earth...hence the concept of "free-return trajectory"

    • @robertproctor7771
      @robertproctor7771 5 років тому +6

      GRAVITY=THEORY=BULLSHIT

    • @realdeal5712
      @realdeal5712 5 років тому +4

      True. That part in video is ridiculous

    • @kipplox7377
      @kipplox7377 5 років тому +10

      That's how Apollo 13 made it back, normal missions used what is called a retroburn to slow themselves down. That's how they got into orbit. If they didn't do that they would have slingshotted around the moon back to earth.

    • @KYCCCGuy
      @KYCCCGuy 5 років тому +5

      @@kipplox7377 Actually, Apollo 13 was the first of the Lunar Missions (8, 10, 11, 12) to NOT be on a free return trajectory. Not shown in the movie is the fact that just after the explosion, they had to complete a burn to put them onto a free return trajectory.

    • @rajatsingh2956
      @rajatsingh2956 5 років тому

      So you mean even at very near the moon, the earths gravity has more pull? Then is there a moon orbit at all?? Because everything would just slingshot towards the earth instead of orbiting around the moon! Trying to understand the concept here.

  • @addaccount9246
    @addaccount9246 6 років тому +184

    Fact since the US flag was bleached by the sun the moon is now an official province of france

    • @OF01975
      @OF01975 6 років тому +4

      I like Dark humor :D us flag is probably not even sanding suns rays took it off the map

    • @allanrichardson1468
      @allanrichardson1468 6 років тому +1

      Actually, one of the flags was planted too close to the spacecraft, and the exhaust gases from the ascent stage engine blew the flag over. IIRC, that was the one broadcast by the remotely controlled camera left on the Moon to view the liftoff. The others, last I heard, are still standing, but the flags have indeed been bleached white.

    • @nishantkamat7492
      @nishantkamat7492 6 років тому +3

      Hahaha 😂 underrated comment

    • @addaccount9246
      @addaccount9246 5 років тому +1

      @@veeeks2938 a bit of am ironic thimg but im moving to canada at Quebec but i need to spesk french

    • @Black_CoreyNFin
      @Black_CoreyNFin 5 років тому +1

      It's almost like the noon surrendered. Unless flags, as symbols, have different meanings on the moon.

  • @DivaInTheWoods
    @DivaInTheWoods 5 років тому +62

    I can't even fathom the level of ingenuity this entire feat required! Just amazing.

    • @aspiknf
      @aspiknf 4 роки тому

      It's not that amazing

    • @imperatorcaesardivifiliusa2158
      @imperatorcaesardivifiliusa2158 4 роки тому +8

      Arran Vid I keep telling people this. The moon landing was, if anything, the _opposite_ of amazing. When they ask me, what then _is_ amazing? I say Arran Vid, whose mere existence is just too impressive to put into words

    • @aspiknf
      @aspiknf 4 роки тому +2

      @@imperatorcaesardivifiliusa2158 Thank you dear Emperor, you are the true Emperor. Your words are full of wisdom and knowledge, I bow down to you Oh Great One for you know the truth.

    • @DarkTheFailure
      @DarkTheFailure 4 роки тому +1

      @Dan Shetler the descent engine had no where near that much thrust

    • @DarkTheFailure
      @DarkTheFailure 4 роки тому +1

      @Mike Dias landing on the moon is a much easier task then earth due to no atmosphere and lesser gravity. Also these guys are test pliots that have been doing this kind of stuff for most of their lives

  • @aarn4v
    @aarn4v 4 роки тому +11

    NASA: Hey you're selected for our mission to the moon!
    Michael Collins: Wow! So I'm going to the moon?
    NASA: Nah, you're just gonna stay in the orbit.

    • @meesveldhuijzen988
      @meesveldhuijzen988 4 роки тому +2

      You clearly don’t know anything about it, do you?

    • @Tim22222
      @Tim22222 4 роки тому +1

      I've heard that Collins was offered command of a future moon mission but turned it down. Didn't want to do another 2 years of intensive training away from his family.

    • @meesveldhuijzen988
      @meesveldhuijzen988 4 роки тому

      TimReed22222 yeah he said that in his book

    • @Tim22222
      @Tim22222 4 роки тому +1

      @@meesveldhuijzen988 Cool, thanks. I suppose I should read it!

  • @allthingsfascinating
    @allthingsfascinating 6 років тому +837

    Capitalising on the release of First Man? Nevertheless, thanks for making top notch content and inspiring small UA-camrs like me. You guys are just too good.

    • @NickMattia44
      @NickMattia44 6 років тому +5

      I just subbed pal :)

    • @DOUCH3AG
      @DOUCH3AG 6 років тому +2

      FFS Don't subscribe to vox media.

    • @nrabchenuk
      @nrabchenuk 6 років тому +34

      the 50th anniversary of the moon landing is in 8 months. Everyone is capitalizing on it.

    • @jeffersonnoble8921
      @jeffersonnoble8921 6 років тому +1

      me too

    • @NickMattia44
      @NickMattia44 6 років тому +3

      @@DOUCH3AG I subbed to his channel not Vox 😂 I know vox has some faulty information.

  • @Ragingcap1212
    @Ragingcap1212 3 роки тому +49

    Is this the greatest piece of human engineering ever?? I agree...anyone with me?

    • @atlas8827
      @atlas8827 3 роки тому +4

      Yes.

    • @Ragingcap1212
      @Ragingcap1212 3 роки тому +4

      @@atlas8827 this, aeroplane and antibiotics are the greatest science marvels of 20th century..

    • @nusratparveen82
      @nusratparveen82 3 роки тому

      Yes

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 2 роки тому

      It’s many pieces. It was perhaps the greatest in that it employed the greatest number of engineers for a single project. But why try to rank great achievements. I prefer to recognize any achievement for what it did.
      The Panama Canal was a great achievement which was a far greater benefit to humankind than the Apollo Project.
      The defeat of the Axis powers in WW II was a great achievement, in large part due to engineering.

  • @abraxamovic
    @abraxamovic 3 роки тому +7

    Literally watched Apollo 11 (2019) yesterday. One of the most beautiful movies I’ve ever seen. Also it instantly tied with Yann Arthus-Bertrand’s Home (2009) as my all time favorite documentary

  • @greetenmax
    @greetenmax 3 роки тому +6

    Michael Collins was not only a nice man but also a very good well balanced astronaut. He originally was destined to be the CSM pilot for Apollo 8 but due to health issues had to give up his place to Jim Lovell who almost made a catastrophic mistake during that flight by punching a wrong button of the computer. Not without reason he was chosen to be the CSM pilot for Apollo 11 and being so was second in command! He was the actual pilot for the mission as were all the csm pilots. Very underrated position with all the attention going to Armstrong and Aldrin. I felt sad by his death.

    • @willoughbykrenzteinburg
      @willoughbykrenzteinburg 3 роки тому +3

      Jim Lovell's error was not catastrophic. It wasn't "almost" catastrophic. He punched something in the computer that made the computer think it was on the launch pad which caused it to change orientation. It also caused the guidance system to lose its orientation. The simple fix was to use stars to punch in the correct orientation, and they had prepared for such a condition and that's precisely what they did, and it fixed the issue. It caused zero actual problems that could have resulted in a catastrophe. Lovell was subsequently selected as commander of Apollo 13, so obviously no confidence was lost. In fact, Lovell had to do the exact same thing to reorient the platform due to the explosion on Apollo 13, so his "error" actually made him uniquely qualified to utilize the very procedure he had on Apollo 8 to realign the Apollo 13 guidance platform.

  • @vrixmorr
    @vrixmorr 6 років тому +25

    Just from this video I can count twenty things that could have gone wrong with this whole operation. This remains the biggest science and engineering feat of all humanity.

    • @ManAndMachine23
      @ManAndMachine23 5 років тому +1

      Dhruv Goel yup except it was all a hoax

    • @albertguo868
      @albertguo868 5 років тому +11

      @@ManAndMachine23 ahhhhhhhhhhhhh No

    • @sciblastofficial9833
      @sciblastofficial9833 5 років тому +1

      ManAndMachine
      "prove" it and we can unprove it.
      give us what you got, moon fakers!

    • @stifler4eva1
      @stifler4eva1 2 роки тому +1

      Biggest Sci fi movie of the century.

    • @stifler4eva1
      @stifler4eva1 2 роки тому

      @@sciblastofficial9833 use common sense, with 5 kb of memory they managed to go to moon returned back, transmit signals, clicked photos, videos. Moreover. While launching a satellite to space all countries failed and it takes 10 attempts to do so.. That too when we have all facilities on earth. And with such poor technology they managed to launch satellite from moon? 🤣🤣 And succeeded to return back to earth. Use some common sense. It was just a hoax, a movie directed by USA govt to win space race

  • @vinzent1992
    @vinzent1992 5 років тому +14

    Such an amazing feat of engineering. I take my hat off to the engineers who made all this possible even without the aid of modern computers.

  • @lily-xj3hv
    @lily-xj3hv 5 років тому +13

    actually mad how they do all this i cant imagine how stressful redocking with the columbia must have been it looks so complex!! also micheal collins deserves so much praise for being able to orbit for that long completely on his own id be so scared

    • @avatansdubey
      @avatansdubey 5 років тому

      It indeed is rocket science 😄

  • @salehahmed9222
    @salehahmed9222 Рік тому +6

    Huge respect to the scientists and engineers involved in Apollo 11. Now let's hope for the best for the Artemis. 🚀🚀

  • @TheExoplanetsChannel
    @TheExoplanetsChannel 5 років тому +534

    I recommend watching the movie 'First man'

    • @theredstonehive
      @theredstonehive 5 років тому +7

      Me too!

    • @fallenleavesamv776
      @fallenleavesamv776 5 років тому +71

      FYI for anyone who wants to see First Man, its more about Neil Armstrong than the moon landings. So beware. Dont expect a documentary type story cause its nothing like that. More of a character analysis. Beautiful movie though. Ending killed my little heart.

    • @moegreene3192
      @moegreene3192 5 років тому +9

      I reccomend you get a lobotomy

    • @danieldossantos5868
      @danieldossantos5868 5 років тому +9

      Nah they took out the American flag, one of the most important moments in the landing, signaling the US defeating the USSR at the space race.

    • @Twister915
      @Twister915 5 років тому +8

      Daniel dos Santos the movie is still super patriotic. I’m not sure why they removed the flag, if they did so intentionally, but the rest of the movie accurately reflects Armstrong’s patriotism and the race against the USSR. It also portrays America in a very positive way.

  • @NessieAndrew
    @NessieAndrew 5 років тому +31

    Thanks for bringing more attention to space travel. We really need to make people excited for the future.

  • @Biffchicken
    @Biffchicken 5 років тому +10

    They weren't "pulled" into the moons orbit, they had to perform a separate burn with the SM Module engine twice around the moon in order to get into a circularized orbit. The SM engine was actually fired 6 times in total.

  • @IsmashedtoRedbone
    @IsmashedtoRedbone 4 роки тому +7

    Most people forget about Micheal Collins but in reality his job was just as important, documented his findings and did crucial system checks. Micheal Collins actually quit NASA after Apollo 11 because of the strain it would cause on his family.He could’ve gone on Apollo 17 but instead basically left while he was ahead. He stayed married to his wife because of this and is one of the only astronauts to actually stay married after the mission.

    • @stephanhaak50
      @stephanhaak50 Рік тому

      Collins knew it was a Hollywood cartoon. He couldn't lie anymore.

  • @charliepea
    @charliepea 2 роки тому +7

    Even if it's on 1969, the engineering of the project is astonishing. This is the best space project ever proposed.

  • @geetikaverma5683
    @geetikaverma5683 4 роки тому +5

    as an engineer, I am amazed like a baby by the engineering that rocket had at that time !!

  • @Abhi-cb7eh
    @Abhi-cb7eh 6 років тому +5

    This is the best video explaining the moon landing that i can find on UA-cam. Kudos Vox.

  • @chandankumar-lv7jc
    @chandankumar-lv7jc Рік тому +5

    Hats off to all the Engineers, Scientists and Astronauts involved in this mission 🙌🏼 Greatest accomplishment of Humankind🚀

  • @0ctoLover
    @0ctoLover 6 років тому +55

    Make a video debunking all the theories that claim it didn’t happen.

    • @callummack7098
      @callummack7098 6 років тому +14

      we don't have to, anyone with a shred of common sense would know that it did happen

    • @Wingo537
      @Wingo537 6 років тому +3

      The right be like "NASA don't science good, they hoaxing bout climate change"

    • @JesusProtects
      @JesusProtects 6 років тому +5

      Impossible, there is too much evidence for their fakery. Better learn to let go your space fantasies.

    • @JesusProtects
      @JesusProtects 6 років тому

      @@callummack7098 how's so?

    • @shortkari
      @shortkari 6 років тому +2

      Van Allen Belts, cosmic radiation and solar flares. Nuff said.

  • @NatureShy
    @NatureShy 5 років тому +11

    I met Buz Aldrin once when I was very young, by chance. It was at the Evergreen Air Museum in Oregon.

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 5 років тому +3

      Awesome. I ran into Armstrong in an airport about ten years ago.

    • @rajatsingh2956
      @rajatsingh2956 5 років тому

      Pics or it didn't happen! 😜😜

    • @avatansdubey
      @avatansdubey 5 років тому

      You are so lucky. Happy for you 🙂

    • @avatansdubey
      @avatansdubey 5 років тому +1

      @@rajatsingh2956 there were no cell phones those days

  • @kenzokenzo
    @kenzokenzo 6 років тому +330

    In b4 people saying the moon landing is fake.

    • @ginasabater6861
      @ginasabater6861 6 років тому +65

      Well how did they land on the moon if the moon didn’t exist

    • @MEzZ117
      @MEzZ117 6 років тому +5

      @@ginasabater6861 woaaahhh whaaaattt???

    • @uss_04
      @uss_04 6 років тому +34

      Took place on a soundstage on Mars.

    • @kimiesta
      @kimiesta 6 років тому

      @@uss_04 c'mon breh?

    • @bojidarmartinov5949
      @bojidarmartinov5949 6 років тому

      @@ginasabater6861 i know you probably think you made a funny comment..but no, your comment was not funny

  • @TheStuport
    @TheStuport 2 роки тому +3

    Fifty Three years and two days after this happened...and I STILL LOVE watching anything and everything about this historic Flight, Landing and Return! Mt Dad was a 30 USAF Officer with 12 of those years as a Pilot. He actually knew quite a few people who were immersed in NASA. So when my Parents had some Military friends over to watch "The Original Moon Dance", me and my siblings watched too. This was Tattooed on my heart and soul back in 1969 and forever a staple of my youth! Cheers From The Home Of Neil Armstrong....OHIO!

  • @thenomad9963
    @thenomad9963 4 роки тому +6

    Okay, but what's gonna be the first quote on Mars? Ahahha, that's gotta be a lot of pressure. Neil's moon landing quote is beautifully concise and legendary!

    • @DarkTheFailure
      @DarkTheFailure 4 роки тому

      " another step for a man , another leap for mankind" might be something like that idk

  • @NHSSHINOBI
    @NHSSHINOBI Рік тому +3

    So many pieces that were probably only used once and done. No wonder it was so expensive.

  • @ByMerch
    @ByMerch 4 роки тому +8

    This is seriously amazing. The amount of calculations, work, genius and imagination that made that all come together. Perfect plan executed perfectly.

    • @fanshi5302
      @fanshi5302 4 роки тому

      And all of them made by hand!

  • @NYFL2156
    @NYFL2156 5 років тому +4

    A beautifully highly accurate and concise narration of the whole mission in a nutshell. Thank you.

  • @AriePratamaSatriadi
    @AriePratamaSatriadi 4 роки тому +46

    Soviet union:
    First object in space
    First dog in space
    First man in space
    First woman in space
    First space station
    First object orbiting the moon
    USA:
    First man in the moon
    Winner the space race

    • @justsomevikingwhodiscovere1026
      @justsomevikingwhodiscovere1026 4 роки тому +6

      (I know this is a meme but...)
      The Soviet Union did successfully land an object on the moon with no humans. so technically the Americans won when Russia tried landing on the moon.
      and its also a race to prove who has better technology. so going to the moon is the only way to prove it which is at least 240,000 miles from Earth and putting humans there is one heck of an accomplishment.

    • @alexsiemers7898
      @alexsiemers7898 4 роки тому +10

      First object, dog, man, and woman could be done with the same rocket, and a modest one at that. And sending probes without means to return wouldn’t take much more rocket power. But three people to land and return from the moon is a major step up.

    • @imperatorcaesardivifiliusa2158
      @imperatorcaesardivifiliusa2158 4 роки тому +4

      tu tu There was no pre-designated end point, was there. The space race ended when everybody got tired and public enthusiasm disappeared. By the end of the space race, the Americans were the furthest along, which is why the Americans are considered the winners of the space race

    • @caav56
      @caav56 4 роки тому

      @jimmyfly The finish line was wherever a contender got the furthest. We've stopped at the Moon. But there were plans (and even hardware) for Mars missions too.

    • @RealDuckyVr
      @RealDuckyVr 4 роки тому

      That was the goal tho

  • @ARichardP
    @ARichardP 4 роки тому +3

    I remember watching this launch, moon landing and splashdown in 1969 as a young lad. It was fascinating then and still is. Never could get enough of it.

  • @zoppie
    @zoppie 6 років тому +16

    Few people know this but Alice Kramden was the first actual person to land on the moon.
    We don't like to talk about how she got there.

  • @Retarmy1
    @Retarmy1 6 місяців тому +2

    I was 9 years old in 1969 and I can remember watching the landing on a black and white TV in the kitchen with a TV that had rabbit ears for the antenna 😊

  • @AshwinT24
    @AshwinT24 5 років тому +8

    We never heard of Michael Collins. In fact he is the guy who got Armstrong and Aldrin back home.

  • @daffidavit
    @daffidavit 5 років тому +8

    We, (they) were geniuses. The NASA Apollo mission also launched a large group of "Astronaut wannabees" who went to schools in droves like FIT in Melbourne Fl. and other places. Little did we know as 18-year-old freshmen that the Apollo years were over. I went to FIT (Florida Tech) to obtain a degree in "Space Technology". Yeah, they actually had a curriculum in a field of study called "Space Technology". I was accepted as a student in 1970 to become an astronaut. I was so prepared I even had my private pilot's license by age 17 after having soled at age 16. In fact, my mom had to drive me to Caldwell Airport, because I was too young to drive there myself.
    After 1972 as a student at FIT, it became clear the space program under Apollo was over. I was proud to have been a student but too bad it didn't work out. However, after watching the "geniuses" in these videos, like Gene Krantz, Rocco Patrone and the like, I'm so honored to have lived during a time I "almost" had a very slim chance of becoming an unlikely astronaut.

  • @mathbrown9099
    @mathbrown9099 5 років тому +5

    Really well done. Very faithful to the facts of the vehicle and the journey of the astronauts. Truly grateful for the work done on this momentous feat.

  • @TheLiamster
    @TheLiamster 5 років тому +8

    It amazes how 50 years ago we were able to go the moon.

  • @shubh_007
    @shubh_007 4 роки тому +14

    Engineering Masterpiece and an unbelievable achievement. That was the day of celebration for the whole mankind. The Apollo 11 mission to Moon. Thanks *Vox* for a great visualization. Loved it 💙

  • @LordHeath1972
    @LordHeath1972 5 років тому +4

    This was a perfectly condensed version which was explained very well. It's incredible to think how, when you look at it, this actually happened!

    • @Incomudro1963
      @Incomudro1963 5 років тому

      I've been searching for something like this - and it is exactly what I was looking for.

  • @joseph4500
    @joseph4500 4 роки тому +12

    "that's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.".... Chills down my spine..

  • @TheBadMoJoe
    @TheBadMoJoe Рік тому +1

    I still can’t wrap my mind around it! Every calculation had to be absolutely precise and all those complex pieces of equipment had to function flawlessly.

  • @Gassiba
    @Gassiba 4 роки тому +5

    Who made the graphics? They’re gorgeous

  • @Pagong27
    @Pagong27 5 років тому +4

    R.I.P Neil Armstrong. :( 1930-2012.
    Press F to pay respects to him.

  • @kushagra64
    @kushagra64 3 роки тому +12

    Nell Armstrong: small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.
    That one guy: I didn't get the last part?

  • @PacoOtis
    @PacoOtis 3 місяці тому +1

    You might have mentioned the weight of the recovery capsule. Also, you might have explained that the astronauts did leave at 25,000 mph but it took them days to get to the moon which is only 240,000 miles away and it sounds like they should have gotten there in ten hours. It was a ballistic flight and the gravity of earth tugged on them constantly and they were great slowed as math shows us. Thanks for sharing your video and best of luck!

  • @grimsdespise6774
    @grimsdespise6774 4 роки тому +10

    Before we go to the moon... We'd like to thank our sponsor, Raid Shadow Legends

  • @andreasc9570
    @andreasc9570 3 роки тому +3

    I'm blown away by the fact that they actually pulled this off back then with a calculator running the spacecraft and when the smallest mistake would cost their lives. Nerves of steel. Legends.

    • @willoughbykrenzteinburg
      @willoughbykrenzteinburg 3 роки тому +1

      The comparison of the Apollo Guidance Computer to a modern calculator is pretty absurd. A calculator would be incapable of the tasks the AGC did. Clock speed is the only metric used when people make this comparison. That's the "power" they refer to. The I/O capability of the AGC makes it far better at the specific task of guiding a mission to and from the moon than a calculator. It was a phenomenal piece of equipment designed for an extremely specific task, and it did it very well.
      The "smallest" mistake COULD cost their lives, but it depended entirely on the circumstances - because TONS of small mistakes were in fact made. The notion that there was zero room for any error whatsoever is patently false. This is not to take away from the nerves of steel bit, because they did have those. The circumstances just weren't nearly as dire as you are attempting to make them out to be.

  • @surjithctly
    @surjithctly 5 років тому +54

    Watching this After Chandrayaan - 2 lost connectivity to the lander (India's Moon Mission by ISRO)

    • @AkashSingh-uq2qf
      @AkashSingh-uq2qf 5 років тому +9

      But did you notice unlike Indian Media , American media didn't spread hatred about others on their success

    • @zshan4445
      @zshan4445 5 років тому +11

      Indians spread hate about muslims and Pakistanians the minute they get a chance on their cheap internet service

    • @mapuna5007
      @mapuna5007 5 років тому +8

      There is every possibility that isro scientists do have a person among them who's faith is Islam. And a nation born out have hate against Hindu is really the best person to question on hate.

    • @crazymaniac7474
      @crazymaniac7474 5 років тому

      Bragshit people

    • @milansajan1001
      @milansajan1001 5 років тому +1

      I M AMazed on both the side...!!
      :Decades ba¢K American where Abel 2 Land hüManized Vehicle on The Moon...!!
      Now in This MoDern era.. With hughlY Good CoMpüter Machine Facilities Available CoMpare 2 :Decades ba¢K CoMpü†inG LeVeL. oür ChandraYaan-2 was nøt able 2 "SaFelY" Land NonhüManized Vehicle On The Moon…!!

  • @harildd
    @harildd 3 роки тому +1

    fun fact: Armstrongs quote is actually "That's one small step for *a* man, one giant leap for mankind" which was misheard and later given in interviews without the a