No you can not see the moon landing sites with your naked eye from earth.
Chat with our AI personalities
No, the Apollo moon landing sites cannot be seen from Earth with telescopes. The distances are too great and the objects too small to be resolved from our vantage point.
No, the Apollo landers are not visible from Earth. They are too small and far away to be seen with the naked eye from our planet.
Apollo 11 left Earth on July 16, 1969 for a manned landing on the Moon. It successfully landed on the Moon on July 20, 1969.
Apollo 7, Apollo 9, and Apollo 10 did not land on the moon. Apollo 7 was the first crewed mission in the program, testing the spacecraft in Earth orbit. Apollo 9 tested lunar module systems in Earth orbit. Apollo 10 performed a dress rehearsal for the moon landing, orbiting the moon but not landing.
Men went to the moon 9 times, and walked on the moon 6 times. Apollo 8: Lunar Orbit Apollo 10: Landing rehearsal Apollo 11: Landing Apollo 12: Landing Apollo 13: Failed mission Apollo 14: Landing Apollo 15: Landing Apollo 16: Landing Apollo 17: Landing
The Apollo moon landing was not shot by anyone, as the landing itself was conducted by NASA astronauts on the Apollo missions. The events were recorded by cameras on the lunar module and by cameras remotely operated from Earth.