
Also known as AS-204, Apollo I
Apollo 1, initially designated AS-204, was planned to be the first crewed mission of the Apollo program, the American undertaking to land the first man on the Moon. It was planned to launch on February 21, 1967, as the first low Earth orbital test of the Apollo command and service module. However, the mission never flew; a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test at Cape Kennedy Air Force Station Launch Complex 34 on January 27, 1967 killed all three crew members—Command Pilot Gus Grissom, Senior Pilot Ed White, and Pilot Roger B. Chaffee—and destroyed the command module (CM). The name Apollo 1, chosen by the crew, was made official by NASA in their honor after the fire.
Apollo 1 was meant to be the first crewed test flight of NASA's Apollo spacecraft in Earth orbit, a critical step toward landing humans on the Moon, but it never flew because a cabin fire during a launch rehearsal test on January 27, 1967, killed all three crew members—Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee. The tragedy became a turning point for the Apollo program, leading to significant safety improvements that ultimately enabled the Moon landings in the years that followed.
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أبولو 1 هو الاسم الرسمي للمركبة أبولو/ساتورن 204 بعد تحطمها أثناء تمرين على الأرض في 27 يناير 1967 والذي أدى لهلاك طاقمها المتواجد في جزء التحكم المسمى أبولو (آنذاك). المراجعة الكلية للصاروخ ساتورن 5 لتصحيح الأخطاء وتفادي الكوارث نجم عنها تأخيرا لبرنامج أبولو.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).