Latest News About Apollo 10 Reentry Speed

Updated 2026-04-18 09:04

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Apollo 10 Flight Journal - Day 8, part 34: Awake on Splashdown day

This velocity will increase dramatically in the last couple of hours prior to Entry Interface. At 2 hours prior to entry, the speed will be about 14,500 feet per second [4,030 m/s]. One half hour later it will have increased by 2,000 feet per second [556 m/s], up to about 16,120 [fps, 4,478 m/s], and in another half hour, 1 hour prior to entry, the velocity will be up to 18,696 feet per second [5,193 m/s]. Then in the final hour, the velocity will double, nearly double, reaching 36,314 feet...

www.nasa.gov

Apollo 10 Flight Journal - Day 8, part 35: Entry Preparations

This is Apollo Control at 187 hours, 11 minutes Ground Elapsed Time. Apollo 10 now 36,136 nautical miles [66.924 km] out from Earth. Velocity continuing to build up; now 10,709 feet per second [3,264 m/s]. Estimated velocity at Entry Interface, or 400,000 feet [121,920 metres] above the surface; 36,314 feet per second [11,070 m/s]. Ignition time for midcourse correction number 7, 1 hour and 37 minutes away. Entry Interface 4 hours, 36 minutes away.

www.nasa.gov

Apollo ten re-entry speed? - Answers

Apollo 10 re-entered the atmosphere on May 26, 1969 at almost 40,000 km per hour, which is 11.08 km/second or 24,791 miles per hour. To date, Apollo 10 holds the record for the fastest manned reentry in history.

qa.answers.com