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The Saturn series
of launch vehicles are large-scale rockets developed for NASA's Apollo lunar landing
program. This type of rocket was originally proposed by Wernher Von Braun in 1957, who at
that time was assigned to the Army Ballistic Missile Agency (ABMA). Following its
establishment in 1958, Von Braun and other U.S. Army scientists were transferred to NASA,
with the Saturn rocket development program subsequently becoming a NASA endeavor.
Saturn 1B
The initially developed Saturn I adopted cluster of 8 engines
essentially the same as used in the Jupiter rocket.
Test firing of the Saturn I began in 1961. From 1966, the Saturn IB was developed,
incorporating the hydrogen fuel J-2 engine for the rocket second stage. In 1968, this
rocket was used for the first manned flight under the Apollo Program, placing Apollo 7
into Earth orbit. The Saturn IB version was also used to launch the manned Skylab 2,3 and 4 missions in 1972 and 73, and for the
Apollo-Soyuz Program carried out jointly with the
Soviet Union in 1975. The most famous of the Saturn Missiles is the Saturn V, that launched man to the moon. |