Armstrong, 1930 - 2012 Manufacturer North American Rockwell Country of Origin United States of America Title Command Module, Apollo 11 Materials Primary Materials: Aluminum alloy, Stainless steel, Titanium Dimensions Overall: 8 ft. See more items in National Air and Space Museum Collection Inventory Number A19700102000 Credit Line Transferred from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Astronaut Buzz Aldrin Michael Collins Neil A. Alternate Name Apollo 11 Command Module Columbia Key Accomplishment(s) First Lunar Landing Mission Brief Description The Apollo 11 Command Module, Columbia, carried astronauts Neil Armstrong, Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin and Michael Collins to the Moon and back on the first lunar landing mission in July, 1969. The Apollo CM Columbia has been designated a "Milestone of Flight" by the Museum. It was physically transferred to the Smithsonian in 1971 following a NASA-sponsored tour of American cities. The Command Module is the only portion of the spacecraft to return to Earth. The other two parts were the Service Module and the Lunar Module, nicknamed "Eagle." The Service Module contained the main spacecraft propulsion system and consumables while the Lunar Module was the two-person craft used by Armstrong and Aldrin to descend to the Moon's surface on July 20. The latest UAD software is compatible with Windows 10 64-bit Edition, Windows 11 and all Thunderbolt-equipped Apollo and UAD-2 products (Apollo X series, Apollo 8, Apollo 8p, Apollo 16 MkII, Apollo Twin, Apollo Twin MkII, Apollo Solo, Arrow, UAD-2 Satellite Thunderbolt, and first-generation silver Apollo/Apollo 16 models. 107, manufactured by North American Rockwell, was one of three parts of the complete Apollo spacecraft. About UAD Thunderbolt Compatibility with Windows 10 and 11 Systems. On July 16, 1969, Neil Armstrong, Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin and Michael Collins were launched from Cape Kennedy atop a Saturn V rocket. ![]() Object Details Summary The Apollo 11 Command Module, "Columbia," was the living quarters for the three-person crew during most of the first crewed lunar landing mission in July 1969.
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