Mission patch

  Apollo 14
Facts

 

Apollo 14
Mission Summary
Apollo 14 Facts
Apollo 14 Crew
Spacecraft
Landing Site
Mission Objectives
Lunar Surface Science
MET (Modularized Equipment Transporter)
Images
Audio/Video

 

The Apollo Program
Lunar Module: Antares
Command and Service Module: Kitty Hawk
Crew: Alan B. Shepard, Jr, commander,
Stuart A. Roosa, command module pilot
Edgar D. Mitchell, lunar module pilot
Launch: January 31, 1971
21:03:02 UT (4:03:22 p.m. EST)
Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39A
Landing Site: Fra Mauro (3.65 S, 17.47 W)
Landed on Moon:

February 5, 1971
9:18:11 UT (04:18:11 a.m. EST)

EVA duration:

9 hours 23 minutes
( EVA 1: 7 hr 12 min, EVA 2: 7 hr 37 min.)

Time on Lunar Surface:

33 hr. 31min.
[9:18:11 UT February 5, 1971 - 18:48:42 UT February 6, 1971]

Moon Rocks Collected: 42.9 kilograms
LM Departed Moon: February 6, 1971
18:48:42 UT (1:48:42 p.m. EST)
Returned to Earth: February 9, 1971
splashdown at 21:05:00 UT (4:05:00 p.m. EST)
Mission Duration: 216 hrs. 1 min. 58 sec.
Retrieval site: Pacific Ocean 27° 1' S, 172° 39' W
Retrieval ship: U.S.S. New Orleans
Special Payload:
  • MET Modularized Equipment Transport
  • ALSEP (Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package)
  • Flags carried on this mission and returned to Earth included 25 United States flags, state and territories flags and flags of all the United Nations members, each four by six inches.

 

Highlights/Notes:
  • CSM/LM docking took six tries due to docking mechanism problem.
  • The Apollo 14 landing site is the same site selected for the aborted Apollo 13 mission.
  • Alan Shepard hit two golf balls on the Moon at the end of the last EVA.
  • The crew remained in quarantine for 21 days from completion of the second EVA.