Interactive Saturn V 3D Model
The Saturn V 3D Explorer presents the Apollo-era launch vehicle as an interactive spacecraft model. Users can inspect the S-IC first stage, S-II second stage, S-IVB third stage, Instrument Unit, Lunar Module adapter, Command Module, Service Module, and Launch Escape System.
Switch between assembled, exploded, and separation modes to understand how the Saturn V rocket was structured for lunar missions and how each major vehicle section contributed to launch, translunar injection, crew operations, and abort safety.
Brief History
Saturn V was developed by NASA during the 1960s as the heavy-lift launch vehicle for the Apollo program. It first flew in 1967 and became the rocket that carried astronauts to the Moon, including Apollo 11 in 1969. Its three-stage architecture remains one of the most iconic engineering achievements in human spaceflight.
Interactive Apollo Lunar Module 3D Model
The Lunar Module view focuses on the Apollo spacecraft built specifically for landing on the Moon. Its component list highlights the S-band antenna, reaction control thrusters, landing pads, lunar surface sensing probes, ladder, descent engine, rendezvous radar, VHF antenna, and landing gear.
This standalone view separates the Lunar Module from the Saturn V stack so users can study the lander as its own spacecraft, from touchdown hardware and crew access to communications, radar, and lunar ascent support systems.
Brief History
The Apollo Lunar Module was developed by Grumman for NASA's Apollo program. It first flew crewed in Earth orbit on Apollo 9, then performed the first human Moon landing with Apollo 11 in 1969. It remains the only crewed spacecraft designed to operate solely in space and land humans on another world.