Apollo program

The Apollo program was a series of space missions conducted by the Earth's United States of America during the latter half of the 20th century. The Apollo missions were conducted with several manned and unmanned Apollo spacecraft, including several astronauts, and would lead to man's eventual, and subsequent landings on the moon.

Two partial diagrams of the Apollo mission profile were scanned by the Talosians as they reviewed the library computer files on board USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) in 2254.

One of the two diagrams depicted the both launch of the Apollo spacecraft and included the initial maneuvering (and repositioning) of the Command/Service Module (CSM) with the Lunar Module (LM), as well as the return of the Command/Service Module to Earth's orbit, concluding with the Command Module's landing on Earth.

The second diagram depicted the arrival of the CSM/LM to the moon, followed with the landing of the Lunar Module on the moon's surface. ( remastered)

When James T. Kirk argued in favor of having Sargon and his companions take over the bodies of the crew, in 2269, and emphasized the benefits that it might possibly have on mankind, he explained, "they used to say if man could fly, he'd have wings. But he did fly. He discovered he had to. Do you wish that the first Apollo mission hadn't reached the moon or that we hadn't gone on to Mars or the nearest star?"

In the 2140s, a number of mission patches and insignia from the Apollo missions were displayed in the 602 Club, including those from Apollo 1, Apollo 7, and Apollo 8. 

Apollo program personnel

 * Buzz Aldrin (Apollo 11)
 * Neil Armstrong (Apollo 11)
 * Alan Shepard (Apollo 14)

Background
Starfleet Academy's motto, "Ex Astris, Scientia", is based the motto, "Ex Luna, Scientia". The Academy motto, which had first appeared in, had a grammatical error, and had initially read "Ex Astra, Scientia" before being subsequently corrected.

The original version of Colonel Stephen G. Richey's Charybdis mission patch was actually an patch, bearing the names of that mission's astronauts,, , and. A slight change was made the to original mission patch, the letters "Apollo" were removed, however, the Roman numerals "XVII" were still present. The patch was redesigned in the TNG Season 2 Blu-ray release of, removing the roman numerals and the names of the astronaut crew.

External link


Programme Apollo